Utah Jazz: Shhhhh, Kyle Korver leading the NBA in 3-point shooting

Published: Wednesday, March 17 2010 12:05 a.m. MDT

SALT LAKE CITY — You know how Harry Potter's friends at Hogwarts flipped out and cringed whenever anybody dared to blurt out the name of He Who Must Not Be Named?

Kyle Korver might not freak out when hearing a certain villain's name, but the Jazz guard had a Ron Weasley-like reaction when his place amongst the NBA's 3-point shooters was mentioned.

(Don't say it around Korver, but he leads the NBA in 3-point accuracy by, well, a long shot. He is shooting an insanely spot-on 57 percent, going 45-for-79 from beyond the arc, which is far ahead of No. 2 Mike Miller's 49.5 percent clip.)

"Shhhhhh," Korver quickly said when asked about being the NBA's top 3-point shooter.

Korver then hurriedly knocked on a wooden part of his locker while teasingly (or maybe not) adding, "C'mon!"

In other words: Talking about leading the league from long range is his Voldemort.

(Bwaaaaaah!)

The hot streak of the career 41 percent 3-point shooter, who only shot .352 in 2007-08 and .386 last year from outside, is not exactly a secret.

"He can just flat-out shoot the basketball," Jazz swingman C.J. Miles said.

It helps, Korver claimed, that his body feels as healthy as it has in years going into tonight's home game against Minnesota. The right-handed shooter's wrist and his left knee are both at full strength and properly functioning after being surgically repaired in the past year.

Having a healthy wrist has really helped tweak and tune up Korver's shot. It had bothered him since he missed the final eight games of his final full season in Philadelphia in 2006-07 before he was traded to Utah. It's finally feeling like it should almost a year after having surgery last May.

"I look back and I'm just like, 'Man, my shooting percentages are so low, like, what was going on here?' " Korver said. "That surgery really cured a lot of things for me."

Good news for the Jazz, whose offense opens up when Korver and other 3-point shooters pull defenders out.

Bad news for opponents, who have seen him hit treys in seven of nine games and bury multiple threes in 12 of 37 outings.

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