Rather than just showing the best player in each zone, I used shot-chart data to show shot frequency within the region. The dividing lines are not perfect, as some shots were on the border between two zones. I also included the counting stats for FGs and FGAs, and the player's FG% compared to league average. The darker the shade, the more efficient that player is compared to league average. The size of the hexagonal point indicates shot frequency from that spot.

To create this I cropped the player's shots from each zone, and then put each on a blank court design. There were also minimum thresholds for shot attempts in order to qualify. For example, Wesley Matthews, Hollis Thompson, and Steph Curry all shot over 50% from the right corner. Yet none of them attempted over 60 such shots, and were thereby deemed ineligible.

Most interesting is the case of Redick, whose efficiency stands out even alongside Steph. He had a dominant season, comparable to Kyle Korver's virtuoso 2014-2015 campaign. The right side above the break was not even Redick's most dominant area of the court. In a combined 83 attempts from the corners, he shot a ridiculous 55.4%.

Trevor Ariza's appearance may surprise some, who perhaps have confused him with Corey Brewer (coincidentally 2nd worst from the left corner). While his FG% spikes to nearly 51% on left corner threes, Ariza predominantly hoists from the right corner. He took 146 such shots this season, opposed to his mere 63 from the left side. In fact, he attempted 49 more right corner threes than second place (Klay Thompson).

Ariza's gap in attempts is not statistical noise either. Last year he took 137 right corner threes, and just 77 from the left. In 2013-2014 (with Washington), he took 103 from the right corner, but just 77 from the left. While his left corner dominance this season may be skewed by the small sample size, his preference for the right side is not.

Finally, there is Steph. It is hardly surprising to see him reign over two plots of three-point land. His unprecedented volume manifested itself in above the break 3's. He attempted 745 of them this season, 161 more than runner-up James Harden. And his 45.5% mark on these shots was the best of anyone with over 350 attempts (~4 per game).

Curry's 45.1% shooting from straightaway crushes nearly everyone, from high-volume scorers to fungible rotation players. Omri Casspi actually had the same 45.1% mark, albeit in 133 fewer attempts. As for the larger-scale guys, Damian Lillard (32.4%) does not come close to Curry's efficiency. Klay Thompson (36.5%), CJ McCollum (37.6%), James Harden (39.9%), Kyle Lowry (39.7%), Kemba Walker (38.1%), and Paul George (37.2%) are all above league average, but still not in Curry's neighborhood. Mirza Teletovic attempted the 6th-most straightaway threes of anyone in the league, and he was nearly 10% off Steph's league-leading pace.

Of all the high-usage guys, Kevin Durant comes closest to matching Steph. In 173 attempts, he shot 41.6% from straightaway. And Curry's reign over the left side above the break is even more one-sided. Other than Steph, the most trigger-happy guys from the that zone were Lillard (41.2%), JR Smith (39.7%), Klay (39.9%), Robert Covington (36.2%), and Lowry (40.2%). They all finished above league average, but none could approach Steph's torrid 49.1% mark.

The only player who was in the realm of Curry's efficiency from that zone was Doug McDermott, who shot 46.6% from the left side above the break. But the former All-American did so in only 73 attempts. In many ways, this shot map confirmed what many already knew: no shooter can come close to Curry's feats.

While the first chart focused on the best shooters in the league, there is always the downside to high-volume shooting. So which players were most detrimental to their team from the outside?