The midrange jumper, once a staple of the NBA and in particular the Timberwolves, has become a rare and vilified shot in today's game.
Properly decried for its general inefficiency — compared, say, to a three-pointer just a couple steps back, or a two-pointer near the basket — it has been all but eradicated from the Wolves' repertoire during this season of shot value maximization.
Only 4.3% of Wolves shots this season have come from between 16 feet and the three-point line entering play Monday, per Basketball Reference. Only the similarly analytically driven Rockets and Nets (both 3.9%) have attempted fewer long twos this season.
Compare that to four years ago, when the Wolves led the NBA by attempting a full 23.9% of their shots from between 16 feet and the three-point line, and it's a pretty startling change.
This year, it's so rare to see a Wolves player pull up or spot up from that distance and shoot that my face contorts and I immediately find myself saying "bad shot" when it happens.
All of this, though, makes the Wolves' prized trade-deadline acquisition all the more interesting.
The trade for D'Angelo Russell has meant the return of the midrange jumper for the 2019-20 Wolves.
He's attempted 13 shots from between 16 feet and the three point line in just four games with Minnesota, out of 71 tries — 18.3% of his total shots. Russell connected on just one of the first seven of those before trying six more in Monday's loss at Dallas — making three.