The Craziest Thing About Kobe’s 81-Point Game, 10 Years Later

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Ten years ago this Friday, a man in a No. 8 jersey lifted the entirety of the Lakers team onto his shoulders and quite literally single-handedly willed them to victory in front of a raucous Staples Center crowd. 

Of course, that man was Kobe Bryant. The then 27-year-old tallied 81 points in 42 minutes of play that evening, going 28-of-46 from the field, 7-of-13 from deep and 18-of-20 from the line, en route to a comeback victory against the Toronto Raptors.

The scoring display ranked behind only behind Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point onslaught in the list of all-time greatest NBA scoring performances. No one’s come within 10 points of 81 since 1994; the only other time a current NBA player has scored 65 points or more was when Kobe himself poured in that many in 2007.

But perhaps the craziest part of this performance 10 years removed is this: It didn’t seem so crazy at the time. While a massive deviation from the NBA norm, you could see just such a performance brewing within Bryant in the weeks leading up to that Sunday against Toronto.

Even prior to that night, Bryant was averaging 41.6 points that January and roughly 34.7 per game for the season, having scored 40-plus points in four straight contests just a couple weeks earlier. His team was sitting only a step or two above .500, with Bryant working his magic to earn every single one of those wins, effectively dragging his team through each quarter, with a roster replete with what’s-his-names and soon to be ex-NBA players.

And, perhaps most important, Bryant was only a month removed from “62” — the night when he outscored the entirety of the Dallas Mavericks team through three quarters, 62-61. The Lakers’ advantage was so great entering the fourth period that Bryant never came back into the game — never getting the chance that night to climb toward 70 or 80 — a benching that barred NBA fans from watching what could have been a historic night in its own right. But there remained a sense from that night forward that something else could happen — something even great. Then, it did. 

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