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The NBA 60 Greatest Playoff Moments were chosen in 2006 to honor the 60th anniversary of the founding of the National Basketball Association (NBA). These 60 moments (in total, there were sixty-two moments; the last three were deemed tied) were selected through a vote by a 25-member panel of experts made up by media members and former players.
[a] NBA win-loss records also do not include wins and losses recorded during a team's playing time in the American Basketball Association (ABA), despite the 1976 ABA–NBA merger. [ 2 ] The San Antonio Spurs have the highest win-loss record percentage, with 2,305–1,562 (.596). [ 3 ]
Only players with 60 points and at most 6 free throws attempted in a game; Rick Barry, Stephen Curry, and Jalen Brunson [246] Most games with at least 30 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists, career; 409 by LeBron James (active) [247] Only player with six-consecutive 30-point games while shooting over 60 percent from the field; LeBron James in ...
NBA players registered 13 60-point games, 105 50-point games and 743 40-point games in the 2010s — all record highs for a decade since Chamberlain's video-game numbers muddied most individual ...
A look at some of the key moments in the 2023-24 NBA regular season: ... It's the fourth 50-point game on Christmas in NBA history, joining Bernard King (60 in 1984), Rick Barry (50 in 1966) and ...
The 1949–50 Minneapolis Lakers, who won the NBA Finals, are not counted in the Eastern versus Western champions record above as they played in the Central Division. The first parentheses in the Western champions and Eastern champions columns indicate the teams' playoff seed.
Most Consecutive NBA titles; 8 by the Boston Celtics (1959–66) Most Consecutive NBA Finals appearances; 10 by the Boston Celtics (1957–66) Best NBA Finals series record; 6–0 by the Chicago Bulls [68] Most NBA Finals appearances without a title; 3 by the Phoenix Suns (1976, 1993, 2021) Most Playoff appearances without a Finals appearance
Abdul-Jabbar held the all-time scoring record in the NBA for over 39 years since his retirement, and it took LeBron James playing only 20 seasons in the league to break it.