50 Unexpected First Dates
When Andre Miller, a pass-first point guard who holds a modest 14.5 career scoring average, poured in 52 points against the Dallas Mavericks on January 30, it was one of the most unbelievable statistics in recent NBA history. In the previous three games, he’d scored 15 points combined, and in the two games following the scoring binge, he put up just eight and nine points, respectively. While he’s been an All-Star caliber player for much of his 12-year career, Miller is one of the least likely players to reach the half-century mark. Fifty-eight players have joined the 50-point club in the last 20 years — here some of the other most unexpected and in some cases, worst members.
Willie Burton, Philadelphia 76ers (53 points, 12/13/1994): Remember good ol’ Willie “”Bringin’ the Hurtin’” Burton? Stop lying, because you don’t. He barely lasted eight seasons in the NBA, appearing in just 39 total games over his final three years. But on one magical night, Burton poured in 53 points against his former team, the Miami Heat, on only 19 field goal attempts and a whopping 24 of 28 free throws. It’s not possible to come up with a more random player to put up fifty — not even Tim Burton could come up with a more scary tale. And if you’re wondering, that rookie card on the right sells for 40 cents.
Tracy Murray, Washington Bullets (50 points, 2/10/1998): Murray carved out a 12-year career as a three-point shooting role player, amassing a humble 9.0 scoring average. On a night when Chris Webber and Juwan Howard were out with injuries (shocker), Murray put up 29 shot attempts a short-handed Bullet squad that featured the likes of Darvin Ham, Terry Davis, Harvey Grant, Lawrence Moten, and Chris Whitney. That part is left out on on his official website.
Tony Delk, Phoenix Suns (53 points, 1/2/2001): Another journeyman with a lowly 9.1 career scoring average, Delk poured in 53 in a loss against his former Sacramento Kings team. A renowned three-point specialist going back to his days at Kentucky, he somehow did so without hitting a single three-pointer, joining Michael Jordan and Allen Iverson as the only guards to accomplish that feat in the last 20 years. Something is very wrong with this world when Tony Delk is mentioned in the same sentence as Jordan and Iverson.
Clifford Robinson, Phoenix Suns (50 points, 1/16/2000): The “Robinson scores 50″ headlines probably weren’t that surprising, since everyone just assumed it was David, who’d done so three times in his career. But Uncle Cliffy, who played for 18 seasons in league until the age of 40, became the oldest player in NBA history to score 50 points for the first time at 33 years and two months. He later became the oldest player to get busted for marijuana…three times at ages 34, 37, and 39.
Damon Stoudamire, Portland Trail Blazers (54 points, 1/14/2005): Perhaps as unexpected as Miller’s 52, “Mighty Mouse” scored 54 points during a renaissance 2004/05 campaign. The man who once tried to pass through an airport metal detector with marijuana wrapped in aluminum foil, also made Antoine Walker jealous by hitting five of his NBA record 21 three-point attempts in one game that season. Stoudamire was soon traded to Memphis and later signed with the Spurs, averaging 7.4 points over the next three years.
Dana Barros, Philadelphia 76ers (50 points, 3/14/1995): If this were baseball, Barros’ fluky and undeserved 1994/95 All-Star campaign, in which he averaged 20.6 points and 7.5 assists on a 24-58 Sixers team, significantly above his career marks of 10.5 and 3.3, would raise a lot of eyebrows. Even more amazing than his 50-point game, might be Barros’ 25-point, 15-assist, 10-rebound triple-double against the Magic. Yes, that Dana Barros. Then again, his best teammates were an aging Jeff Malone and the legendary Clarence Weatherspoon, so, yeah…
Michael Adams, Denver Nuggets (54 points, 3/23/1991): 54 points on the run-and-gun Denver Nuggets isn’t nearly as impressive as it looks, considering the team put up roughly 357 points per game in those years. After averaging 26.5 points and 10.5 assists in 1990, Adams fell back to earth over his final five seasons, retiring at age 33 after putting up just six points per game in his final two years with the Hornets and finishing his career with a more pedestrian 14.7 scoring average.
Nick Anderson, Orlando Magic (50 points, 4/23/1993): Anderson was an underrated player in the early stages of his career, with two 20-point seasons to his credit on the Magic, and was even a decent free-throw shooter before losing his mind (4:40 mark). What’s remarkable about his performance is that he’s the only player to score 50 after going scoreless in the previous game, and the only player to do so off the bench in the last 25 years.
Honorable Mention:
*Charles Smith, Los Angeles Clippers (52 points, 12/1/1990): Knicks fans will forever hate him for missing four point-blank layups, but Smith was a solid scorer on the Clippers. Then again, his 52-point outing came against those early 90’s Nuggets, whose aversion to defense rivaled today’s Don Nelson-led Warriors.
*Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf, Denver Nuggets (51 points, 12/7/1995): The artist formerly-known-as Chris Jackson, who holds a respectable career scoring average of 14.6 points, dropped 51 on the Utah Jazz during his pre-America hating days, including eight downtown bombs (oops, bad choice of words there).
Vernon Maxwell, Houston Rockets (51 points, 1/26/1991): It’s really not that hard to believe that “Mad Max” could score 51 points, considering that he attempted seven three-pointers per game in the early stages of his career. He’s only this list because he was once ordered to pay a woman $592 thousand for knowingly infecting her with herpes. Ron Mexico would be proud.
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Lowposts is back. I need these kinds of lists in my life. I’m so glad the blazers have Shawn Kemp back!
Lowposts being back = 2000 again? Sweet!
So the blazers pick up an older guy (great guy) but defines a team w/o direction unsure of which player to trust. They pass on Darko M, the guy young enough to show up and run with the young talent we have and make them beter. How… how? HOW does MC make LMA better?
Wait, you’d rather have Darko than Marcus Camby? I don’t care how old Camby is (and let’s be clear — he’s still probably younger than Oden), he gives a team without a healthy bigman a true rebounding, shot blocking center. Darko provides hilarious, profanity-laced interviews…so there that.
Darko is a default center. The reason LMA isn’t an allstar is because the team wont focus on a single style of play and who it’s stars are. Camby clogs the interior, mid range, gets no coverage on offense and sucks down LMA’s ability stretch defenses away from roy.
Darko is hilarious too. I would rather mock him for a few years than watch our solem first round play off exits pile up.
Well, they’re both free agents after this year, so you’d only have have either for 30 games or so. Call me crazy, but I’d rather have a DPOY winner in the middle when I’m playing the Lakers and Spurs than one of the biggest busts in league history. Although mocking Darko is definitely fun…can’t fault you there.
And who is the biggest bust in league history? Mr. Dance Dance Revolution himself. Imagine being Nate and looking down your bench and seeing Darko and Oden? What if they were fighting over a PSP? That would be timeless. I’d put Juan Howard in.