Here are some notable things from the stat sheet:
- No one had more than five assists on the winning team, which is an indication that a majority of Taylor’s makes were created with his own ability.
- The final score of the game was 179-104. Can you say ring up the score?
- Two players on the opposing team combined for 31 of the team’s 49 turnovers.
- David Larson of the opposing team had a cool 70 points on 34-of-44 shooting, with zero 3-pointers made and only four trips to the line.
- The opposing team had zero 3-point makes. Taylor had 27 of his team’s 30 makes from beyond the arc.
- Taylor did all of his damage in 36 minutes.
Can you imagine witnessing that game? You won’t see statistics like that even in a video game. It appears to have been a wild game, to say the least, and the story reached plenty of NBA players around the league. Most of them appeared to be in awe, as you can see from their reactions:
Chris Tony says
I am also a fan of NBA. I recently got a well-designed phone case about NBA star from http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=sr_pg_19?rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3Aepcase&page=19&keywords=epcase&ie=UTF8&qid=1357180258, which is so amazing. I can hold my favorite things for any time and any where.
Jeff Nichols says
I agree with Kendall Marshall, going 34 for 44 is way more impressive than taking 108 shots.
James Park says
And he only went to the line FOUR times. If he was that dominant, there should have been more fouls to try to stop the dude. Something tells me there wasn’t a whole lot of defending going on in this game at some point.
A.J. says
Dion Waiters: “YO. I SUCK. NOW I GONNA HEAVE 108 SHOTS. PEACE.”