1. J.J. Redick on team Duke with 457 shots.
2. Keydren Clark on team St. Peter's with 435 shots
3. Curtis Staples on team Virginia with 413 shots
4. Keith Veney on team Lamar/Marshall with 409 shots
5. Doug Day on team Radford with 401 shots
6. Gerry McNamara on team Syracuse with 400 shots
7. Michael Watson on team UMKC with 391 shots
8. Ronnie Schmitz on team UMKC with 378 shots
9. Mark Alberts on team Akron with 375 shots
10. Brett Blizzard on team UNC Wilmington with 371 shots
OR Kyle Korver on team Creighton with 371 shots
JJ Redick has the most career 3 pointers, making 457. However, he only shot 40%. Jaycee Carroll of Utah State made 369 career 3 pointers, shooting a incredible 46.5% for his career.
In the season 2009-2010, the top three people with the most threes made is Donald Sims from Appalachian State, E.J. Kusnyer from Mercer, and Robbie Harman from Central Michigan.
JJ Redick
Yes, there is a 3-point shot in NCAA basketball.
1
Dukes's J.J.Redick
100
Ty Lawson
For the 2007 season, the NBA three point line is 4 feet longer from the goal than the NCAA three point line at the top of the key (23 feet, 9 inches for the NBA to 19 feet 9 inches for the NCAA). However, starting in the 2008 season, the NCAA's three point line will be lengthened to 20 feet 9 inches at the top of the key.
The back of the NCAA three point line is 20 feet 9 inches from the center of the goal as measured horizontally.
The NCAA's Southern Conference became the first collegiate conference to use the three-point rule, adopting a 22-foot line in 1980. Over the following five years, NCAA conferences differed in their use of the rule and the distance they required for a three-point shot. The NCAA adopted the 19-foot, 9-inch line nationally in 1986. On May 3, 2007 the NCAA rules committee decided to lengthen the three point line to 20 feet 9 inches. This rule will come into effect at the beginning of the 2008-09 season. J.J. Redick currently holds the NCAA Division I record with 457 three-point field goals while shooting 40.4% from three-point range for his career.
20 feet 9 inches, same as all NCAA three point lines
Gerry Mcnamara
In 1986