By far the most thrilling three-point shot Shabazz Muhammad hit this season came late in the third quarter Monday night against Orlando at Target Center. Evan Fournier missed a jumper, and Muhammad got the rebound with 3.9 seconds left. He dribbled to midcourt and let it go, high and through the net to give the Timberwolves a one-point lead heading into the fourth quarter of an eventual overtime victory.
But he's been hitting all kinds of threes lately.
The Wolves have won two in a row, five of six and eight of 11 heading into Wednesday's game against LeBron James and the Cavaliers in Cleveland.
And Muhammad's numbers have mirrored the team's of late.
In his fourth season, Muhammad is the designated scorer among the Wolves reserves. For much of his career his go-to move is that two-dribble, quick-spin push hook off the glass, one that seems hard to stop even when the opponent knows it's coming. Muhammad is the 6-6 post presence on the Wolves bench.
"It's about timing on that shot,'' he said. "When they're leaning a certain way, I think I have 'em. That's why I do the two dribbles, to figure out when they want to lean that way.''
But now he's doing more. He is becoming a real three-point threat. In 14 January games, Muhammad hit 19 of 35 three-pointers, a 54.3-percent clip. In 29 games since the start of December he is 30-for-62 (48.4 percent) on three-pointers.
This is the product of hours of work on his shot that began over the summer, went through camp and into the season. A career 34.5-percent three-point shooter, Muhammad was only 29.4 percent from long range last season. After a 3-13 start there through November, he has taken off.