A player known for defence. A career high of 41 points coming in. An opponent ranked among the league's worst. And then 83 points: the second-highest individual scoring game in NBA history, surpassing Kobe Bryant's legendary 81 and trailing only Wilt Chamberlain's untouchable 100 from 1962. Nothing about this night made sense. All of it actually happened.
Bam Adebayo came into this game averaging 18.9 points per game. His previous career high was 41. He was not an All-Star this season. He is, by every established reputation, a defensive anchor first and a scorer second, a big man whose greatest skill is protecting the rim and reading the floor, not filling it up from every angle. None of that history mattered once the ball tipped off at Kaseya Center.
Adebayo had 31 points before the first quarter was over, breaking the Heat's franchise record for most points in any quarter. He had 43 at halftime, already two more than his previous career best for a full game. By the end of the third quarter he had 62, breaking LeBron James's 12-year-old Heat single-game record of 61, and tying Kobe Bryant for the most points through three quarters in the play-by-play era. And then came the fourth quarter, and then came 83, and then came the second line in NBA history below 100.
Dow Futures Fall Amid Inflation and Middle East War FearsThe most statistically extraordinary element of the night was not the total itself but how a significant portion of it was scored. As Al Jazeera reported, Adebayo set NBA single-game records for most free throws made and most free throw attempts. He shot 36-for-43 from the foul line, shattering the previous record of 28 made free throws held by Wilt Chamberlain and Adrian Dantley, and surpassing Dwight Howard's record of 39 attempts, a mark Howard had reached on two separate occasions. In the fourth quarter alone, Adebayo visited the free throw line 16 times, as his teammates orchestrated a deliberate strategy of fouling the Wizards early and often to get the ball back and feed him repeatedly.
Adebayo entered the game averaging only 4.8 free throw attempts per game for the season. He finished with 43. That is not an anomaly of circumstance; it is the result of a conscious team decision, endorsed and directed by head coach Erik Spoelstra, to maximise every remaining opportunity in the fourth quarter to chase history. The Wizards, facing double-digit deficits in the fourth and playing young players through the final stretch of a losing season, were a willing, if overwhelmed, participant in the record-chasing that followed.
| Record | New Mark | Previous Record | Previous Holder |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2nd-highest scoring game, NBA history | 83 points | 81 points | Kobe Bryant, 2006 |
| Most free throws made, single game | 36 | 28 | Wilt Chamberlain (1962) / Adrian Dantley (1984) |
| Most free throw attempts, single game | 43 | 39 | Dwight Howard (twice) |
| First player: 25 FT makes and 5 3-pointers | 36 FT, 7 3-pt | Never done | N/A — first ever |
| Heat franchise single-game scoring record | 83 points | 61 points | LeBron James, 3 March 2014 |
| Heat franchise single-quarter scoring record | 31 points (Q1) | 25 points | Previous Heat player |
| Heat franchise single-half scoring record | 43 points | 37 points | Previous Heat player |
| Season-high NBA scoring, 2025-26 | 83 points | 56 points | Nikola Jokic, Christmas 2025 |
| Rank | Player | Points | Game | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wilt Chamberlain | 100 | Philadelphia Warriors vs New York Knicks | 1962 |
| 2 | Bam Adebayo | 83 | Miami Heat vs Washington Wizards | 2026 |
| 3 | Kobe Bryant | 81 | LA Lakers vs Toronto Raptors | 2006 |
| 4 | Wilt Chamberlain | 78 | Philadelphia Warriors vs LA Lakers | 1962 |
| 5 | Wilt Chamberlain | 73 | Philadelphia Warriors vs Chicago Packers | 1962 |
Miami entered the game already depleted. Norman Powell was out with a groin injury. Tyler Herro missed with a quadriceps issue. Nikola Jovic sat with a back problem. Andrew Wiggins was unavailable with a toe injury. Kel'el Ware was also out with a shoulder problem. With their second, third and fourth options unavailable, Miami's game plan became simple by the second half: give Adebayo the ball and get out of the way. According to Wikipedia's profile of Adebayo, he had never previously been considered a primary scoring option at this level, making the night all the more improbable for a player whose reputation was built on elite defence and playmaking rather than volume scoring.
Spoelstra's decision to keep Adebayo in the game through the entire fourth quarter was not controversial inside the arena. Once it became clear that Adebayo was capable of reaching 70, then 80, then history, the pursuit became the story. Teammates fouled Wizards players within seconds of inbounds passes to win possession back. Every timeout was used to draw up plays with a single recipient. Simone Fontecchio, the team's leading scorer on the night beyond Adebayo with 18 points, described it as one of the most joyful games he had played in his career, watching a teammate rewrite a record book in real time.
Adebayo has spoken openly throughout his career about his admiration for Kobe Bryant. Bryant died in January 2020, and Adebayo has described in multiple interviews his lasting regret that he never had the opportunity to speak with him. Passing Bryant's 81-point record, a mark that had stood for 20 years and that most basketball observers assumed would hold for generations, was therefore weighted with something beyond statistics for Adebayo. It was personal in a way that numbers alone cannot capture.
His post-game comments reflected that. He described the moment of surpassing Bryant as surreal, wondering aloud what Bryant would have said to him. He said his idol would probably have told him to do it again. A'ja Wilson, Adebayo's longtime partner and a four-time WNBA MVP, was courtside and could barely hold back tears as the final buzzer sounded. The game ball was secured. The nets were cut for souvenirs. Heat managing general partner Micky Arison greeted Adebayo on the floor before he finally made his way to the locker room.
The immediate consequence of 83 points is clear: Bam Adebayo is no longer just a great defender. He is now a piece of NBA history, and that changes how he will be discussed, scouted and remembered regardless of everything that follows. His next contract negotiation will reference this night. His Hall of Fame case, previously complicated by the lack of a signature scoring moment, is now fundamentally different. One game does not define a career, but this one altered the terms on which his career will be evaluated.
For the Miami Heat, the night comes at a critical point in the season. They have six consecutive wins, are eighth in the Eastern Conference and are chasing a position that avoids the play-in tournament. With their roster depleted by injury and Adebayo now confirmed as a primary offensive threat capable of carrying games at the highest level, Spoelstra's tactical options have expanded in ways that were not obvious before the Wizards game. Whether the team can convert this momentum into a deep playoff run remains to be seen, but the internal belief within the organisation will have risen sharply after a performance that nobody inside or outside the building saw coming.
As for Wilt Chamberlain's 100: it remains alone. It has been alone since 1962. Adebayo is now the closest anyone has come to it in 20 years. Whether any player comes closer in the next 20 is a question that will be asked, and answered, in arenas that do not yet exist, by players who may not yet have been born. That is the nature of records at this level. They do not fall often. When they do, the game pauses and pays attention. It paid attention on 10 March 2026.
