Having managed over 1,600 matches as the Miami Heat’s leading strategist, Erik Spoelstra admitted that Tuesday’s game was unlike any he had witnessed.
Following Miami’s exceptional 150-129 triumph against the Washington Wizards, Spoelstra informed journalists, “This evening was truly beyond belief. Naturally, we’ve been fortunate to experience numerous significant occasions in this venue. This particular event… it simply occurred. Events unfold. And I am thankful to have been present for it, to observe it.”
Despite the immense reverence for a legendary NBA coach, it must be stated: no. Unforeseen occurrences transpire. Things sometimes just go wrong. However, Bam Adebayo amassing 83 points in a professional basketball contest? That outcome is far from a mere coincidence.
(Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports illustration)
Consequently, a frequent sentiment expressed upon learning the astonishing news was the one articulated by Rockets head coach Ime Udoka. The Miami Heat’s center, now in his ninth season — an outstanding performer, a three-time All-Star, and a five-time All-Defensive Team honoree, yet one who had never before achieved even half of Tuesday’s points total in an NBA game — had astonishingly surpassed Kobe Bryant for the second-highest single-game scoring record in league history, with only Wilt Chamberlain ahead of him. Udoka shared his thoughts shortly after hearing about Adebayo’s monumental performance.
“My immediate thought is: How?” Udoka conveyed to reporters following the Rockets’ 113-99 victory over the Raptors. “Not due to any doubt about him, but because of his characteristic playing style.”
This reaction is understandable. All other athletes who have achieved a 70-point game — including Chamberlain, Bryant, Luka Dončić, David Thompson, Damian Lillard, Donovan Mitchell, David Robinson, Elgin Baylor, Joel Embiid, and Devin Booker — are positioned among or very close to the top 50 scorers in NBA history by their average points per game; Adebayo, however, stands at 221st. Before Tuesday’s match, Bam was averaging 18.9 points per game on 15.2 attempts from the field for the season. Indeed, he holds only the third-highest scoring average for the 2025-26 Heat squad, trailing guards Norman Powell (22.5 points per game) and Tyler Herro (22.1 points per game).
Nevertheless, both Powell and Herro were absent from the team roster; as were starting forward Andrew Wiggins and sophomore center Kel’el Ware. This created a significant gap in scoring and offensive initiation within the core of the Heat’s formation … and the central figure of the Heat organization took it upon himself to address this deficit.
Although the 28-year-old has endeavored to broaden his shooting capabilities over the last few years, he primarily operates from the mid-range and closer, with over 52% of his points originating within the arc and almost 46% scored from inside the painted area prior to Tuesday’s game. Yet, Bam demonstrated an eagerness to shoot from a distance frequently and early on Tuesday, sinking his initial 3-pointer within 90 seconds of the game’s start, then converting three additional ones within a 102-second window during the quarter.
Those four long-range shots — already matching his third-highest total for made three-pointers in a single game this season — were all catch-and-shoot plays, consistent with 84% of his successful deep shots this year. When he casually drained a pull-up shot from 27 feet during a fast break — having only successfully attempted 33 such pull-up three-pointers in his entire career before Tuesday — making him just the sixth player in the past 29 years to register 30 points in a single quarter, it was evident he was performing exceptionally, indeed, exceptionally well.
His final stats from beyond the arc were 7-for-22 — personal bests in both successful attempts and total attempts …
… and he would eclipse his prior personal best of 41 points before the half-time break.
“Clearly, my colleagues [were] extremely enthusiastic at the half-time interval,” Adebayo conveyed to journalists after the match. “Therefore, for me, the key was to stay composed, focused, and recognize that I had the potential for an extraordinary achievement.
“However, I didn’t anticipate it would reach 83 points.”
His coach shared the same sentiment.
“He had an incredible opening quarter, and then he amassed 43 points by halftime, and our discussion focused on maintaining our usual style of play,” Spoelstra commented. “The ball naturally found its way to him, irrespective of whether we were specifically designing plays for him during dead-ball situations.”
A factor contributing to the ball consistently reaching him was the Wizards’ inability — a team that ranked last in the NBA for defensive efficiency and 27th in opponent free-throw rate prior to Tuesday — to effectively contain Adebayo in single coverage. Not at all, in fact.
“I observed that he only converted [seven] three-pointers, but he attempted around 40 free throws,” Udoka remarked. “That alone paints a clear picture.”
Udoka paused, then added:
“And it was against the Washington Wizards.”
Repeatedly, Adebayo confronted the young frontcourt players Alex Sarr and Tristan Vukčević, attacked them directly, pushed them forcefully into the restricted area, compelling them to commit fouls to prevent an easy basket. These direct drives, coupled with instances where he rushed towards the basket for an advantageous position in transition or exploited a defensive switch to isolate a smaller Wizards defender in the low post, incrementally built his score.
As the third quarter concluded, Adebayo had provoked 15 fouls, made 22 of 27 free-throw attempts (setting new personal bests in both categories), and, after converting a fast-break dunk subsequent to a steal by Heat guard Dru Smith, had accumulated 62 points — surpassing the Heat’s prior team record, established by LeBron James in 2014, by a single point.
“I’d estimate that once he reached 50 points, our thought was, ‘Okay, perhaps he can reach 60,’” Spoelstra stated. “Subsequently, upon him hitting 60, he simply continued. You know, ‘We might as well aim for 70.’ And by then, I wouldn’t even contemplate removing him from the game. We just pressed on.”
Certain individuals might object to this approach — Spoelstra, maintaining a 16-point advantage after three periods against a team with only 16 victories that had suffered eight consecutive defeats and was clearly not making a serious effort to secure a win at that stage, opting to reintroduce Adebayo for the beginning of the fourth quarter; Miami persistently providing scoring opportunities to Adebayo even as their lead expanded to 25 points halfway through the final quarter; Spoelstra contesting a foul call against Adebayo with 2:56 remaining in a game where they held a 25-point lead; and Heat players intentionally committing several fouls to ensure Miami gained additional possessions, even purposefully missing free throws to attempt to return the ball to Adebayo so he could pursue a historical achievement.
“The intensity truly escalated only when I began actively seeking the ball,” Adebayo mentioned post-game. “You know, for the initial, approximately three and a half quarters, they didn’t employ a double-team on me. So my thinking was, ‘Alright, they’re just going to let me score.’ But then [you] look around and suddenly there are four defenders on you […] when they explicitly want to prevent you from getting possession.”
“They clearly maintained his presence in the contest, and … a substantial number of fouls were whistled,” Wizards head coach Brian Keefe informed journalists. “Sixteen foul shots were awarded in the fourth quarter. We simply aimed to keep the ball away from him. Yet, he still earned free throws from 40 feet away from the hoop. I cannot provide an explanation for some of those officiating decisions. That’s my only comment on the matter.”
Regarding specific calls, where Adebayo initiated contact while the defender played him conventionally, Keefe and the Wizards may have had valid objections. In other instances, the fouls appeared to arise from genuine physical contact during drives and defensive swats near the basket — a direct consequence of Adebayo’s consistent physical dominance and overwhelming presence against Washington’s defenders throughout the entire evening.
Irrespective of one’s perspective on the method by which Bam achieved his ultimate point tally — having attempted (43) and made (36) more free throws than any player in a single NBA game historically — it is pertinent to observe that exceptionally high-scoring performances of this nature occasionally feature comparable pushes to the limits. During Wilt’s 100-point game, when the New York Knicks purposely fouled other Philadelphia Warriors players to prevent Wilt from getting the ball, the Warriors countered by intentionally fouling the Knicks to regain possession and direct it to Chamberlain. The Lakers held a 17-point lead over the Raptors with four minutes remaining in 2006, yet Kobe continued to shoot, adding nine more points before exiting with 81. Deliberate fouling was also a factor in 20-year-old Booker reaching 70 points against the Celtics in 2017.
This is one manner in which, to use Spoelstra’s phrasing, significant events unfold.
“My desire was for him to experience a standout occasion,” Spoelstra articulated. “I was uncertain when that might happen. He simply persevered […] I simply didn’t intervene until he surpassed Kobe’s mark.”
Encouraging Bam to reach his utmost potential was significant for Spoelstra, who has overseen Adebayo’s development into the emblem of the Heat organization — the foundational element, the figurehead, the team leader, the guardian of its ethos. It was equally vital for Adebayo, who was “not initially recognized as a prolific scorer upon entering this league,” yet who has transformed into a dominant presence capable of grasping the chance to permanently inscribe his name in the annals of history alongside — and even above — some of the most formidable offensive talents ever to play the sport.
“Experiencing this moment feels truly unreal,” he conveyed to reporters. “Because, as I mentioned, being able to accomplish it on our home court, with my mother present, with my community, with our dedicated fans, this is a historical milestone that will endure eternally.”