How unlikely superstar Bam Adebayo stormed into NBA lore with his 83-point night

Erik Spoelstra has been on the sidelines for over 1,600 games as the head coach of the Miami Heat. But he had never seen anything like the one he trained on Tuesday.
“This was a weird night,” Spoelstra told reporters after Miami’s historic 150-129 victory over the Washington Wizards. “You know, obviously we’ve been blessed to be a part of a lot of great moments in this arena. This … just happened. Moments happen. And I’m thankful that we were able to be a part of it, and prove it.”
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With all due respect to one of the greatest coaches in NBA history … no. Accidents will happen. S*** it happens. Bam Adebayo scored 83 points in an NBA game, though? That’s not all it happened.
(Photo by Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports)
That’s why there’s one common refrain when hearing the unbelievable news that the Heat’s ninth-year center – a key player, a three-time All-Star and a five-time All-Defensive Team selection, but who has never scored a goal. part as many points in an NBA game as he did on Tuesday – placing Kobe Bryant in the position of the second highest number in a single game in NBA history, behind only Wilt Chamberlain, that’s what Rockets head coach Ime Udoka shared shortly after learning about Bam’s big night.
“The first thing you think is: How?” Udoka told the media following the Rockets’ 113-99 victory over the Raptors. “Not because of him, but because of the way he plays.”
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Make sense. Every other player with a 70-point game to his name – Chamberlain, Bryant, Luka Dončić, David Thompson, Damian Lillard, Donovan Mitchell, David Robinson, Elgin Baylor, Joel Embiid, Devin Booker – ranks with or just outside the top 50 scorers in NBA history in terms of points per game; Adebayo is ranked 221st. Bam entered Tuesday averaging 18.9 points on 15.2 field goal attempts per game on the season. In fact, he’s just the third-leading scorer on the 2025-26 Heat, behind guards Norman Powell (22.5 points per game) and Tyler Herro (22.1 points per game).
But both Powell and Herro were out of the lineup; so were starting pitcher Andrew Wiggins and second-year big man Kel’el Ware. That left a shooting and shooting hole in the heart of the Heat roster … and the heart of the Heat franchise set out to fill it.
While the 28-year-old has worked to expand his range over the past few seasons, he’s still a heavy hitter, with more than 52% of his shots coming from inside the arc and nearly 46% of those coming into Tuesday’s contest. But Bam looked to let it fly early and often on Tuesday, making his first three points less than 90 seconds into the affair before adding three more in a 102-second span midway through the frame.
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Those four 3s — already tied for the most three-pointers he’s made in a game this season — all came, as did 84% of his long balls this season. When he went for a pull-up 27-footer in transition — he had made all three pull-up 3s of his career entering Tuesday — making him just the sixth player in the last 29 years to score 30 points in a quarter, it was clear he was feeling a lot, a lot good.
He would finish 7-for-22 from 3-point range – career highs in both made and attempted…
… and will surpass his previous high water mark of 41 points before the break.
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“Obviously our colleagues [were] I was very happy at halftime,” Adebayo told reporters after the game. “So for me, it was about staying calm and keeping myself inside and understanding that I can go to something special.
“Now, I didn’t think it would be 83.”
Neither did his coach.
“You know, he had a monster first quarter, then he had 43 at halftime, and we just talked about continuing to play our game,” Spoelstra said. “The ball was finding him, even if we were calling the death-ball it was calling him directly.”
Part of the reason the ball got to him was because the Wizards — who entered Tuesday dead last in the NBA in defensive efficiency and 27th in opposing free throw rate — simply couldn’t get a handle on Adebayo one-on-one. Like, not at all.
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“I saw that he was only doing it [seven] three, but 40 free throws or something,” Udoka said. “It tells a story right there.”
Udoka paused, before continuing:
“And the Washington Wizards.”
Again and again, Adebayo tackled big boys Alex Sarr and Tristan Vukčević, drove them straight, smeared their muscles with paint and forced them to abuse him if they didn’t want to stop meeting. Those straight-line drives, combined with the times he rim-runs to get a deep mark on offense or use a switch to take on a smaller Wizard defender in the post, start to add up.
By the end of the third quarter, Adebayo had drawn 15 fouls, gone to the free throw line 27 times (both career highs) and, after a quick dunk following a steal by Heat guard Dru Smith, scored 62 points – one more than the previous Heat franchise record, set by LeBron James in 2014.
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“I’d say if he gets to 50, then we think, ‘Okay, maybe he can get to 60,'” Spoelstra said. “Then when he reached 60 years, it just continued. And then, I didn’t dare to think about taking him out at that time. We just kept going.”
Others may struggle with that — with Spoelstra, who held a 16-point lead after three quarters against a 16-game winning streak that was on an eight-game losing streak. actually trying to win anywhere at this point, deciding to return Adebayo at the start of the fourth; with Miami continuing to feed Adebayo with a goal to even the lead at 25 midway through the fourth; with Spoelstra challenging Adebayo’s charging call at 2:56 to make it a 25-point game; and the Heat players made many mistakes on purpose to ensure that Miami is one more asset, even deliberately missing a free throw to try to return the ball to Adebayo so that he can hunt for history.
“It didn’t start going crazy until I had to hunt for a basketball,” Adebayo said after the game. “You know, first, what, three and a half, they didn’t double me. So I said, ‘Okay, they’re going to let me go.’ [you] Turn around when you have four people watching over you […] when they just don’t want you to get the ball.”
“Obviously they kept him in the game, and … there were a lot of mistakes,” Wizards coach Brian Keefe told reporters. “Sixteen free throws in the fourth quarter. He just tried to get the ball out of his hands. He still got 40 free throws from the rim. I can’t explain some of those calls. That’s all I can say about that.”
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On some calls, with Adebayo making contact while the quarterback plays him straight, Keefe and the Wizards may have had a legal delay. To some, the whistles seemed to range from official body contact on drives and slaps under the rim — Adebayo’s natural build is physical and frustrated Washington’s defenders all night.
Regardless of your opinion on how Bam arrived at his final score — more free throws attempted (43) and made (36) than any player in a single game in NBA history — it’s important to note that historic big games like this one sometimes involve similar accounts to extremes. In Wilt’s 100-point game, when the New York Knicks intentionally fouled some of the Philadelphia Warriors to try to keep the ball away from him, the Warriors responded by intentionally fouling the Knicks to get the ball back to him. The Lakers were up 17 on the Raptors with four minutes to go back in 2006, and Kobe kept firing, scoring nine points before going off with 81. Intentional fouling played a role in the 20-year-old Booker hitting 70 against the Celtics back in 2017.
It is one way of saying, to borrow Spo’s language, that moments happen.
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“I wanted him to have some time,” Spoelstra said. “I didn’t know when that would be, he just kept going […] I didn’t stop until he got Kobe’s.”
Pushing Bam as far as he can go is important to Spoelstra, who has overseen Adebayo’s rise to become the manager of the Heat franchise — the planner, the leader, the captain, the custodian of culture. And it mattered to Adebayo, who “wasn’t labeled as a goalscorer coming into this league,” but has become the kind of force that could use the opportunity to put his name in the history books next to — and in front of — some of the most offensive players ever put together.
“Having this moment is surreal,” he told reporters. “Because as I said man, being able to do it at home, in front of my mother, in front of my people, in front of the home fans, this is a mark in history that will always be remembered.”



