Getting your release right is just as essential as catching the ball well. Sloppy or inconsistent releases will wreck everything you built with your catch and base. As you begin your upward motion, keep your shooting elbow tucked straight under the ball with no flaring out, and your wrist relaxed but ready to flick. Your guide (non-shooting) hand should peel off just before the ball leaves your fingers. It’s only there to stabilize the ball early, not to push it, this usually causes misses when your off hand stays on the ball to long. At the top, snap your wrist with a clean, soft flick so the ball rotates forward. Don’t try to muscle it. The release should feel smooth, like a whip, not stiff. Another thing is to shoot the ball with just your 4 fingers, don’t shoot with your thumb, this is another little reason that shots miss left or right, is when players get their thumb on the ball. Your eyes need to stay locked on your target (back of the rim) all the way through your release. If your eyes drift, your body will follow and the shot will suffer. Last thing is your shot must be one smooth motion it can’t be two different parts, the release has to be fluid with your bringing up of the ball, atleast on regular shots, pull ups are a different story. Make sure you’re release is as similar to the last one as possible to consistently sink shots, don’t constantly change your form either, all you need is reps not a new jumpshot, unless you have a serious hitch or other issue.

Other shooting tips:https://drillmindhoops.com/shooting-drills/shooting-tips-the-catch/ https://drillmindhoops.com/shooting-drills/shooting-tipsthe-base/