Tyler Herro joins LeBron James and Magic Johnson in record books

The bucket known as Tyler Herro made history in Game 5 against the Boston Celtics when he went off for those 37 points.

With the Miami Heat needing to bounce back following a tough Game 3 defeat to the Boston Celtics, the team got a special performance out of a not-that-expected source.

That’s not to say it’s totally shocking to see Tyler Herro go off, as he’s had multiple impressive scoring outbursts already this year, but for him to set a career-high by dropping 37 points in one of the most important games of the season is outrageous and speaks to what a special talent Miami has in the confident bucket-getter.

Not only was the performance stunning from an individual perspective, but it was actually historically special, as, at 20 years and 247 days old, Herro became the youngest player in NBA history to score at least 37 points in a playoff game.

Topping two legends in Magic Johnson and LeBron James, Herro placed himself in absolutely elite company with his performance on Wednesday night, one that will be talked about for years to come as his career continues to progress.

Magic’s 42-point game as a 20-year-old will always be the standard-bearer for awesome playoff performances put on by a young player, particularly since it came in Game 6 of the 1980 Finals and was the closeout win for his first NBA championship, but Herro makes a strong argument for having the second-most important playoff performance by a player 21-or-younger, stakes-wise, since he did it in the Eastern Conference Finals.

From the chart above, only LeBron and Amare Stoudemire can claim to have had their scoring explosions in a Conference Finals as Herro did, but they were both 22 by the time they did it, while Herro is a 20-year-old rookie.

In fact, Herro is the first rookie since Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1970, a half-century ago, to drop at least 37 points in a Conference/Division Finals game. (The final four teams left each season used to face off in Division Finals, not Conference Finals.) And Abdul-Jabbar was already 23 by that point and playing in an NBA that was slightly watered down in talent due to the existence of the ABA.

Herro is also the only player besides Magic Johnson with at least 25 points in a Conference or NBA Finals game before turning 21.

We could go on and on about Herro’s big night, like mentioning that his 37 points gave him the second-best playoff scoring performance for a rookie since 1987 or that his 37 trail only Magic’s 42 as the best postseason scoring outing for a player under 21 years old, but what’s most noteworthy for Herro is that it came in an enormous win for his team, one that has the Heat one victory from reaching the NBA Finals in a campaign where no one had them predicted to make it that far.

They can partially thank their big-time rookie for that.

Alberto de Roa contributed research to this article.

Goran Dragic is setting a historic playoff scoring pace for a point guard of his age

The Miami Heat’s Goran Dragic has the best playoff scoring average for a point guard 34 years old since Jerry West in 1972-73.

At 34 years old, Miami Heat point guard Goran Dragic is setting a historic pace with his scoring average this postseason.

The Slovenian ball-handler is pouring in 22.2 points per contest over 11 playoff games this year for Miami, which is the best playoff scoring average for a point guard who’s at least 34 years old since 1972-73.

The only floor general with a higher postseason scoring average at 34 than Dragic?

That would be Jerry West, a Hall-of-Famer and one of the greatest players the NBA has ever seen.

So yeah… solid company for Dragic there.

Highest playoff scoring averages by point guards 34 or older.

If we forget about positions and look at just age, Dragic’s 22.2 points per playoff game is the second-highest postseason scoring average for a player at least 34 years old since 2001-02, trailing just LeBron James this season, who’s putting up 26.6 points himself.

Again, Dragic in rarified air there, trailing just a player who many consider could be the greatest of all time.

No big deal.

What Dragic has been able to do for Miami this postseason has been nothing short of astonishing. For The Dragon to be the leading scorer on a Heat team that has come from out of nowhere to start the playoffs with a 10-1 record and be within two wins of reaching the Finals is absolutely nuts, especially for him to be doing it as a 34-year-old, one who has never even averaged 22.2 points in a playoff run or in a regular season before.

There’s just something about Dragic playing games this late in the summer that helps him take his game to another level. Lest we forget about how the southpaw led Slovenia to a gold medal in the 2017 EuroBasket Tournament, an accomplishment that took place right around this time merely three years ago:

We’ll see how much farther Dragic is able to lead the Heat this postseason, but no matter what, it’s been an incredible run of form for the Slovenian bucket-getter, and a historic one at that.

Alberto de Roa contributed research for this article.

Jamal Murray vs. Donovan Mitchell was the biggest scoring showdown in NBA playoffs history

Jamal Murray and Donovan Mitchell combined for the highest-scoring playoff series in NBA history over the past few weeks.

The incredible display put on between Jamal Murray and Donovan Mitchell in Round 1 of the 2020 NBA playoffs wound up being a historical one.

That’s because the ultra-talented duo combined for 475 points, the most scored by two opponents in a playoff series in NBA history.

Murray and Mitchell took the record away from Jerry West and John Havlicek, who, in fairness, had their own unbelievable shootout with slightly higher stakes at hand, in the 1969 Finals. The two Hall-of-Fame ball-handlers combined for 463 points in that series, 12 fewer than what Murray and Mitchell just put up.

The other highest-scoring playoff series duos all likewise took place in the 1960s and ’70s – Bob McAdoo and Elvin Hayes in the 1975 conference semifinals (461 points), Elgin Baylor and Bob Pettit in the 1961 division finals (461 points) and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Rick Barry in the 1977 conference finals (450 points).

The most recent duo to come close to Murray and Mitchell’s mark was Allen Iverson and Vince Carter, who went off for 449 combined points in the 2001 conference semifinals.

What’s craziest about Mitchell and Murray breaking the record is that they did so even with extremely subpar – by their heightened standards –  Game 7 performances, with the former scoring 22 points on 22 shot attempts and the latter producing merely 17 points on 21 attempts.

Had the tandem gone off yet again in Game 7, they would have left the previous all-time mark even further in the dust.

As is, Mitchell’s 254 points in the series were the best scoring mark for a player in a playoff series since 1977, when Abdul-Jabbar dropped 260 points in the conference semifinals.

In the end, Mitchell and Murray will be linked forever for the otherwordly scoring displays they put on this year, with the Utah Jazz man scoring 57 points, 51 points and 44 points in three of his team’s playoff outings, and the Denver Nuggets guard putting up 50 points, 42 points and 50 points in three consecutive contests prior to Game 7. (That’s good for 47.3 points per game which he did on 64.2/62.9/88.9 shooting splits, for those keeping track at home.)

But it will be Murray who will be remembered more fondly, since it was his outrageous – and clutch – scoring that led Denver to a playoff series victory over Mitchell and Co., despite the Jazz holding a 3-1 series lead at one point.

Regardless, hat’s off to both gentlemen for the insane bucket-getting show they just gave us. It’ll be fun to see what Mitchell and Murray, both of whom are still just 23 years of age, have to show us in the future.

Patrick McCaw has been reigning champ for historically long stretch now

Thanks to his time with the Golden State Warriors and Toronto Raptors, Patrick McCaw has been a reigning champ for a long time now.

Although his role has been that of a deep bench player for the most part, Toronto Raptors wing Patrick McCaw has been a reigning NBA champion for quite a long stretch now – 1,148 days, to be exact.

That’s three years, one month and 25 days straight that McCaw has been a champion, dating back to his stint with the Golden State Warriors and stretching through until now, his time with the Toronto Raptors.

McCaw’s championship reign has been so lengthy, in fact, that it’s reaching historical proportions. It’s actually the second-longest consecutive stretch that one player has been a champion in NBA history since the Boston Celtics dynasty of the 1960s.

The only one who has been a champion longer than McCaw since then was, coincidentally enough, the swingman’s head coach in Golden State, Steve Kerr, who was part of the second Chicago Bulls three-peat and the San Antonio Spurs title run of 1998-99, making him the only non-Celtic in league history to win four championships in a row.

Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr (left) instructs guard Patrick McCaw (0) during the third quarter against the Los Angeles Clippers at Oracle Arena. The Warriors defeated the Clippers 120-75. (Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports)

Of course, the NBA’s coronavirus-related stop in action this season has helped McCaw’s streak extend a little longer than it might have, considering this campaign should have been over by June and we’re now in August with a champion not even close to being decided yet.

Even so, with the Raptors being legitimate title contenders this season, who knows? Maybe McCaw’s championship reign is extended even longer.

For the record, McCaw’s best Finals performance came in Game 5 of the 2017 championship series, his rookie season, when the UNLV product scored six points and secured three rebounds against the Cleveland Cavaliers in a 129-120 win for the Warriors.

Alberto de Roa contributed research to this article

Michael Jordan: His winning percentage vs. fellow NBA legends

Michael Jordan victimized most of the NBA during his years playing pro basketball. There are exceptions, though… and many wore green.

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Michael Jordan victimized most of the NBA during his years playing pro basketball. There are exceptions, though… and many wore green.

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Tony Parker is the only NBA player ever with a positive record against all 30 teams

Tony Parker announced his retirement last summer following a memorable career that saw him win four NBA titles and make the All-Star Game six times. His final year with the Hornets was not the stuff of legend, but one particular event during that …

Tony Parker announced his retirement last summer following a memorable career that saw him win four NBA titles and make the All-Star Game six times. His final year with the Hornets was not the stuff of legend, but one particular event during that season made his NBA career even more remarkable. In beating the Spurs in a January game, the French guard accomplished something no other player had: a positive record against all 30 franchises.

Parker is not the only longtime Spur without a losing record against any of the other teams. David Robinson, Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili are part of that exclusive club, but of course they could never get a winning record vs. San Antonio since they spent their entire time in the NBA rocking the black and grey of the Spurs.

Danny Green, who is currently 9-9 vs. Milwaukee, could become the second player with a positive record against every single NBA franchise this season should the Lakers beat the Bucks on the road in March.

Other players without losing records against any franchise include Magic Johnson, James Worthy, Bill Russell, Sam Jones, KC Jones and Bob Cousy, but it was easier to achieve that back in the day (especially in the case of Celtics legends) since there were fewer NBA teams then.