Scoring in the Modern NBA – Could Anyone Hit 100 Again?

Two eras. One impossible record. Could the unbreakable finally break?

On March 2, 1962, Wilt Chamberlain did the unthinkable — he dropped 100 points in a single NBA game. No three-point line, no social media, no national broadcast. Just raw dominance. For over six decades, that record has loomed like a ghost over the league.

But here’s the question: with the way the game has evolved — pace, spacing, efficiency, and superstar freedom — could someone break it in the modern NBA?

Let’s dive deep into the numbers, the evolution of scoring, and the possibilities.

📊 The Moment: Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-Point Night

What Happened?

On March 2, 1962, the Philadelphia Warriors played the New York Knicks in Hershey, Pennsylvania. Wilt finished with:

  • 100 points
  • 36-of-63 FG
  • 28-of-32 FT (unusually high for him)
  • 25 rebounds

There was no live footage, only a radio call and a few grainy photos. Yet this moment became the most legendary individual feat in sports.

What Made It Possible?

  • The team fed him the ball almost every possession
  • Knicks’ starting center was injured
  • No 3-point line, but more shot attempts due to fast pace
  • Played all 48 minutes (plus overtimes!)

📊 Why It Mattered (Then vs. Now)

In 1962:

  • League average possessions per game: 125 (today: ~99)
  • Defense less organized
  • Isolation post-play was common

Wilt was a freak of nature even for his time. But today’s game favors offensive explosion in different ways:

  • Spacing from 3-point shooting
  • Faster transitions
  • Looser whistle for perimeter players
  • Stars take 35+ shots on hot nights

Modern Outbursts We’ve Seen:

PlayerPointsYear
Kobe Bryant812006
Devin Booker702017
Damian Lillard712023
Donovan Mitchell712023
Luka Dončić732025

Even with increased spacing and usage, no one’s cracked 80 since Kobe.


🔄 How It Could Happen Today

Let’s talk variables:

1. The Right Player

Candidates:

  • Stephen Curry (efficient, limitless range)
  • Luka Dončić (volume scorer, high usage)
  • Jayson Tatum (streaky but elite shooter)
  • Devin Booker (already hit 70)
  • Anthony Edwards (ascending star with no conscience)

A perfect storm of touches, hot shooting, and a weak defense could allow one of these guys to go nuclear.

2. The Right Opponent

  • Bottom-tier defense
  • Injury-plagued roster
  • Blowout-proof (keeps game competitive)

3. Game Environment

  • Double OT? Even better.
  • Weak interior defense
  • Loose whistle from refs

4. Coach Lets Him Cook

  • No load management
  • No “stat shaming”
  • A team that buys into letting history happen

🎨 Legacy & Aftermath: What Would 100 Mean Today?

If someone hit 100 in today’s viral, analytic-heavy NBA?

  • It would crash Twitter, TikTok, and Instagram within minutes
  • The debate over GOAT resumes instantly
  • ESPN would rerun the game for a week straight
  • Signature shoes would be sold out

But here’s the twist:

Would fans respect it like Wilt’s? Or say, “the defense let it happen”?

There’s a purity to Wilt’s night. But a modern 100 would be dissected to death by:

  • Shot charts
  • Defensive rating of the opponent
  • Team schemes

Still, it would be the most iconic sports moment of the decade.


📖 Trivia/Sidebar

  • Wilt Chamberlain scored 50+ 45 times in the 1961–62 season.
  • Klay Thompson scored 60 points in 29 minutes once, on 11 dribbles.
  • Wilt averaged 48.5 minutes per game that season, due to OTs!
  • Luka Dončić’s 2025 outburst included 11 threes and 17 FTs.

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