The 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 club is a statistical achievement used to distinguish players as excellent shooters in the National Basketball Association (NBA), NBA G League, Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA), and college basketball. It requires a player to achieve the criteria of 50% field goal percentage, 40% three-point field goal percentage, and 90% free throw percentage over the course of a regular season, while meeting the minimum thresholds to qualify as a league leader in each category.
In NBA, WNBA, and NBA G League history, only 12 players have recorded a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season, with nine in the NBA, two in the WNBA, and one in the NBA G League. The most recent player to achieve a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season was Napheesa Collier in 2025. Thirteen collegiate players have recorded a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season, with Salim Stoudamire and Matt Kennedy recording 50âÂÂ50âÂÂ90 seasons.
The 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season has only been a possibility since the introduction of the three-point field goal in the 1979âÂÂ80 NBA season.
Steve Nash, Larry Bird, and Kevin Durant are the only players who have had multiple 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 seasons. Bird recorded consecutive 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 seasons in 1986âÂÂ87 and 1987âÂÂ88, while Nash recorded four such seasons between 2005 and 2010. Nash narrowly missed five consecutive 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 seasons by shooting at 89.9% from the free throw line during the 2006âÂÂ07 season, one made free throw short of the 90% mark. Durant's two 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 seasons are notably separated by 10 years, having been recorded in 2012âÂÂ13 and 2022âÂÂ23.
Stephen Curry is the only player to record a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season while averaging over 30 PPG. He is also the only player in NBA history to join the club and lead the league in scoring in the same season. Curry recorded 30.1 PPG on 50âÂÂ45âÂÂ91 splits in the 2015âÂÂ16 season.
Elena Delle Donne became the first WNBA player to record a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season in 2019.
Kevin Durant (2012âÂÂ13) and Mark Price (1988âÂÂ89), at the age of 24, are the youngest players to join the 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 club.
Quinn Cook became the first NBA G League player to record a 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season in 2018.
Similar to baseball batting averages, official NBA shooting statistics are calculated to the third decimal place (thousandths) but are referred to as percentages. While the NBA officially uses a three-digit number, it reports shooting statistics in a shortened and rounded form as a percentage, so that .899 to the third decimal place is simplified as a two digit "90%" in most of its reporting. Thus, a true 50âÂÂ40âÂÂ90 season requires a player to achieve or exceed 50.0 percent field goal efficiency, 40.0 percent three-point field goal efficiency and 90.0 percent free-throw shooting efficiency. The NBA requires a player to make at least 300 field goals, 82 three-pointers, and 125 free throws to be a leader in the respective category. For shortened seasons, stats are prorated to an 82-game season. Dirk Nowitzki qualifies for the club despite having fewer than 82 three-pointers because the NBA only required 55 three-point field goals made at the time of his attainment in 2007.