An unbelievable night, the kind that shifts perceptions of a player and rewrites conversations around NBA history. Bam Adebayo put up a monstrous 83 points, an achievement that places him straight into a legendary circle. Before him, only absolute icons had reached such heights.

In 1962, Wilt Chamberlain scored 100 in a game that became eternal. Decades later, Kobe Bryant reached 81, the second-highest scoring performance ever – a record that became legend, etched in collective memory. Adebayo probably never imagined sitting at that table.

Yet today, his name is there.

Kevin Durant and LeBron James in disbelief

One of the first reactions came from Kevin Durant, who followed the scoring explosion live:

I couldn’t believe it while watching it in real time… Congrats to Bam

Kevin Durant

Short words, but they capture the amazement of someone who knows the game deeply and understands how rare such feats are.

BAM BAM BAM

LeBron James

Giannis: “In 30 years, only the number will matter”

The most powerful comment came from Giannis Antetokounmpo, shifting the conversation from the game to historical memory:

It doesn’t matter how you get there. What counts is that you got there. In 30 years, no one will remember how many free throws he made. I don’t remember how many shots Kobe took, how many free throws he made, or how many threes he hit. You only remember 81. Wilt, 100. You don’t remember how they scored. In the end, he scored 83

Giannis Antetokounmpo

Wembanyama: Between inspiration and normalcy

For Victor Wembanyama, a generational talent used to thinking big, feats like this are part of the competitive landscape:

We play in a league with so many sources of inspiration

Victor Wembanyama

When asked directly if Adebayo’s performance could motivate him to do the same, his response was simple, accompanied by a shrug:

Yes, I saw it… but we’re in a league full of examples to look up to

Victor Wembanyama

Udoka: A night outside the norm

Houston Rockets coach Ime Udoka emphasized how atypical this performance was relative to Adebayo’s usual style:

The first thing you think is: how? Not for him, but for how he plays. I saw he only made six threes but something like 40 free throws… that already tells you the story of the game

Ime Udoka

Spoelstra: Irony in the press room

Miami coach Erik Spoelstra took an ironic approach in the postgame press conference:

Did something happen tonight?

Erik Spoelstra

Gilbert Arenas warns Bam: “Haters are coming”

Some sharper reactions weren’t missing. Gilbert Arenas laughed while commenting on the feat and sent a direct message to Adebayo:

Get ready for the hate. Kobe’s community isn’t happy that you surpassed 81

Gilbert Arenas

The reference nods to the almost sacred bond between Lakers fans and Bryant’s achievement, considered untouchable by many.

A club for the very few

Scoring 80 points in the NBA isn’t just about talent. It takes rhythm, context, full trust from teammates, and a game that bends completely to your will.

Adebayo now shares elite company with Chamberlain and Bryant – a territory where individual greatness meets legend.

And as Giannis said, in the end, only one number will remain: 83.