How NBA Players Really Feel About Bam Adebayo’s 83-Point Game
How NBA Players & Coaches Really Feel About Bam Adebayo’s 83-Point Game
While some are celebrating Bam Adebayo’s 83-point game, others aren't as enthused about Kobe Bryant's record being broken.
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- Bam Adebayo scored 83 points, the second-most in NBA history, but the closing stretch was criticized
- Kobe Bryant's 81-point game in 2006 is still seen by some as more impressive despite the lower total
- Players and coaches had mixed reactions, with some praising the feat and others questioning the circumstances

“Records are meant to be broken” is one of those lines people love to throw around in sports, but let’s be real: some records feel like they’re supposed to live in a glass case forever. That’s how folks have long treated Kobe Bryant’s 81-point masterpiece from January 22, 2006. It was the kind of number that felt untouchable, especially in the modern NBA, where defenses are a bit more complex, stars are load-managed, and monster scoring nights usually top out in the 50s or 60s. But on Tuesday, March 10, Bam Adebayo walked into that rare air and blew right past the old standard, dropping 83 points in the Miami Heat’s 150-129 win over the Washington Wizards. Bam finished with 20-for-43 shooting, 7 threes, 36-for-43 from the line, nine rebounds, and three assists, turning what should’ve been just another late-season game into one of the wildest box scores the league has ever seen.
What made the night even crazier is that the scoring avalanche didn’t necessarily come out of nowhere in a cheap, last-minute flurry. Bam was on demon time from the jump. He hung 31 in the first quarter alone, had 43 by halftime, and was already sitting on 62 through three quarters. For most of the game, this wasn’t some circus act — it was a star big man completely frying a helpless defense, making jumpers, getting downhill, cashing threes, and living at the line. Miami, banged up and missing key pieces (Tyler Herro, Norman Powell, and Kel’el Ware), kept riding him, and the home crowd knew they were watching something historic before the fourth even started.
Then came the part that turned celebration into debate. Once Bam got deep into the 70s with Miami up huge, the vibe changed. The Heat kept force-feeding him, Erik Spoelstra admitted the team basically decided to keep going once he got rolling, and critics zeroed in on the late-game gamesmanship: intentional fouls to stop the clock, extra possessions clearly aimed at chasing history, and a fourth quarter that felt less like normal basketball and more like a coordinated record hunt. That’s the piece a lot of people can’t get past. Historic? Absolutely. But pure? Ethical? That’s where the arguments start, because the closing stretch left a bunch of fans and observers feeling like the moment got a little too manufactured.
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And that’s exactly why Kobe’s 81 keeps getting brought up in this conversation. Kobe’s night against Toronto was also a “feed the hot hand” situation, no question, but the context was different. The Lakers were down 63-49 at halftime, and trailed by as many as 18 in the third before Kobe dragged them back into the game and then outscored the Raptors by himself in the second half. He finished 28-for-46 from the field, 7-for-13 from three and 18-for-20 at the line. Bam Adebayo, meanwhile, got to 83 while attempting an NBA-record 43 free throws and while Miami was in much firmer control of the game late. That’s why some fans are saying Kobe’s 81 still “feels” heavier, even if Bam now owns the bigger number in the record book.
The split is all over the internet right now. One side says 83 is 83, period — nobody accidentally scores the second-most points in NBA history, and if the whistles were legit, they count just like any other bucket. The other side has been much louder with the jokes and side eyes, calling for an asterisk, saying the fourth quarter was disrespectful to basketball and to Kobe’s memory, and clowning the Wizards so hard you’d think they need to be relegated instead of just sent back to the locker room. The online reaction has been a full buffet: outrage, memes, admiration, disbelief, and plenty of “y’all complain about everything” pushback from people who think the backlash is doing too much. In other words, the stat is official, but the discourse is messy as hell.


Still, Bam Adebayo himself handled the moment with far more grace than the discourse surrounding it. Postgame, he was emotional, called the whole thing surreal, and spoke like somebody who knew exactly how massive the moment was — especially because he had just moved past one of his idols in Kobe. A’ja Wilson, his longtime girlfriend, was right there for it too (as well as Bam’s mother), and her presence only added to the moment. Wilson’s own résumé is ridiculous: she’s a three-time WNBA champion, four-time WNBA MVP, two-time WNBA Finals MVP, seven-time All-Star and three-time Defensive Player of the Year. Bam made sure to show love to the people around him, and the whole scene had that mix of joy, shock, and “I can’t believe this is real” energy.
Although Bam Adebayo’s postgame press conference was positive and filled with excitement, we can’t say the same about the others around the league when they were asked about Bam’s unbelievable feat. Like the fans, players and coaches had mixed opinions.
Check them out below!
Regardless of how anyone feels about Bam breaking Kobe Bryant’s record, it happened, and will forever live in the history books. Congrats to Bam on this legendary milestone!
How NBA Players & Coaches Really Feel About Bam Adebayo’s 83-Point Game was originally published on cassiuslife.com

