Home US SportsNBA Why Bam Adebayo deserved 83-point night of indulgence during demanding Heat season

Why Bam Adebayo deserved 83-point night of indulgence during demanding Heat season

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You generally think “culture” when the Miami Heat come up. It’s a term of respect or eyeroll-inducing depending on your point of view, but people are well aware of the connection by now. Toughness, physicality, conditioning. An unrelenting pursuit of winning, against the odds or the loud (and, frankly, sometimes understandable) call for ping-pong balls.

The word I associate with the Heat is adaptability.

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There are core tenets with this franchise, but the ability to shapeshift is why it’s always in the picture in some capacity. It’s the biggest calling card for head coach Erik Spoelstra, one of the greatest basketball minds in league history, and a multi-time champion because of it.

No player on the current roster, and not many in franchise history, embody that quality like Bam Adebayo.

He’s in the news right now, rightly so, after scoring 83 points on Tuesday night against the Washington Wizards. Anytime you eclipse 40 points, your night’s (likely) going to be celebrated. When you double that and then some — when you surpass Kobe Bryant’s 81 for the second-highest scoring performance in NBA history — the conversation will transcend.

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Seriously, what a night it was: 31 points in the first quarter on an array of skilled drives and 3-point shooting, 43 by halftime. Another 19 in the third to surpass LeBron James’ previous franchise scoring record (61), setting up a 21-point fourth quarter that has since garnered a lot of conversation.

(Actually, a brief aside here. I’m not particularly interested in hearing from or debating the merits of this scoring outburst with people who did not watch it. Your point-at-box-score-and-hate opinion is bad, and you should feel bad. You are entitled to an opinion, of course, but when it is incomplete, you also open yourself up to call-outs. Do your thing, though!)

The game itself deserves its own breakdown — thank goodness for our very own Dan Devine — but it was the aftermath that really stuck with me. Bam’s embrace with Spoelstra; Bam’s embrace with his mom; Bam’s embrace and eventual postgame presser (!) with A’ja Wilson; Bam being doused with water, twice — first by Norm Powell as the clock expired, then again by the rest of the roster literally 11 seconds into his on-court, postgame interview.

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This was an unbelievable individual feat that felt communal. You felt that in the fourth quarter, of course — the emphasis on getting Bam the ball, the late fouling, a hilarious attempt at an intentionally missed free throw — but you really felt it afterward. Not just those exchanges, but the commentary.

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