Deuce Bigalow
11-22-2014, 04:05 PM
There are a number of NBA records that seem to be untouchable. Among them,
1. Wilt Chamberlain's 27.2 rebounds per game for the 1960-61 season (27.0 as a
rookie).
2. Don Otten's 8 fouls in a November 24, 1949 game. :)
3. Wilt Chamberlain's 48.5 minutes per game average in the 1961-62 season
(45.8 for his career).
4. Bill Russell's 11 NBA titles in 13 years.
5. Wilt Chamberlain's 118 50+ point regular season games in his career
(Michael Jordan's in second place with "only" 30).
But the late George Mikan still owns one record that might be as tough to
break as some of the ones listed above. When Mikan scored 61 points in a
1952 game against Rochester, he scored a little better than 67 percent of
his team's 91 points in that game. That's a truly game-dominating
performance. And it exceeds Wilt Chamberlain's percentage performance in
his famous 100 point game: Wilt's 100 points were less than 60 percent of
his team's 169 point total.
But Mikan had an even better "percentage" outing back in 1950. In the
NBA's lowest scoring game, Mikan scored 15 of his team's 18 points.
That's an incredible 83.3 percent of his team's game total. And that is
definitely one NBA record that might never be broken.
George Mikan in 1950: 15 points; team 18; percentage: 83.3
George Mikan in 1952: 61 points; team 91; percentage: 67.0
Kobe Bryant in 2006: 81 points; team 122; percentage: 66.4
George Mikan in 1950: 51 points; team 77; percentage: 66.2
David Robinson in 1994: 71 points; team 112; percentage: 63.4
http://www.sporttaco.com/rec.sport.basketball.pro/George_Mikans_stillstanding_statistical_record_311 0.html
November 22, 1950
http://001-jk-files.s3.amazonaws.com/images/boxscores/195011220MNL.jpg
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/195011220MNL.html
http://i.imgur.com/dC5HJmm.jpg
1. Wilt Chamberlain's 27.2 rebounds per game for the 1960-61 season (27.0 as a
rookie).
2. Don Otten's 8 fouls in a November 24, 1949 game. :)
3. Wilt Chamberlain's 48.5 minutes per game average in the 1961-62 season
(45.8 for his career).
4. Bill Russell's 11 NBA titles in 13 years.
5. Wilt Chamberlain's 118 50+ point regular season games in his career
(Michael Jordan's in second place with "only" 30).
But the late George Mikan still owns one record that might be as tough to
break as some of the ones listed above. When Mikan scored 61 points in a
1952 game against Rochester, he scored a little better than 67 percent of
his team's 91 points in that game. That's a truly game-dominating
performance. And it exceeds Wilt Chamberlain's percentage performance in
his famous 100 point game: Wilt's 100 points were less than 60 percent of
his team's 169 point total.
But Mikan had an even better "percentage" outing back in 1950. In the
NBA's lowest scoring game, Mikan scored 15 of his team's 18 points.
That's an incredible 83.3 percent of his team's game total. And that is
definitely one NBA record that might never be broken.
George Mikan in 1950: 15 points; team 18; percentage: 83.3
George Mikan in 1952: 61 points; team 91; percentage: 67.0
Kobe Bryant in 2006: 81 points; team 122; percentage: 66.4
George Mikan in 1950: 51 points; team 77; percentage: 66.2
David Robinson in 1994: 71 points; team 112; percentage: 63.4
http://www.sporttaco.com/rec.sport.basketball.pro/George_Mikans_stillstanding_statistical_record_311 0.html
November 22, 1950
http://001-jk-files.s3.amazonaws.com/images/boxscores/195011220MNL.jpg
http://www.basketball-reference.com/boxscores/195011220MNL.html
http://i.imgur.com/dC5HJmm.jpg