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Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

When it comes to the first person in the NBA, everyone undoubtedly thinks of Michael Jordan, but if you want to talk about the first person in the NBA record, it depends on my ancient god beast "Zhang Dashuai" Chamberlain. As one of the strongest superstars in the NBA in the 50s and 60s, Chamberlain set many records that were almost impossible to break at the time with his outstanding personal ability. So, what horror records did Chamberlain set?

Fifth place: 30+ for 65 consecutive games

Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

In the 18-19 season, The super god Harden once scored 30+ in 32 consecutive games, which is amazing. Harden was undoubtedly the strongest year that season, averaging 36.1 points per game, the highest in 30 years since Jordan in the '86-87 season. However, even Harden, who has played 30+ games in 32 consecutive games, has only touched the tip of Chamberlain's record. Chamberlain has scored 30+ in 65 consecutive games! Scoring stability is average, and even Harden, who is in the season of super gods, is 33 games away from this record, which shows how difficult it is to break this record.

Fourth place: 55 rebounds in a single game

Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

A player with 20 rebounds in a game can already be said to be an inside monster; and a game with 30 rebounds can undoubtedly become the headlines of the day. And Chamberlain once had 55 rebounds in one game! It's a miracle. You know, today's team's rebounds in a game are almost only 50 or so, and Chamberlain alone can get rebounds comparable to a team, a record that is almost impossible to break under today's rules.

Third place: 100 points per game

Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

In the 05-06 season, Bryant's single 81-point game against the Raptors can be described as detonating the basketball world. Cut 80 points in regular basketball games, especially games of this level in the NBA! It can almost be listed as one of the "most impossible things in the world". However, compared to Kobe Bryant's 81 points, Chamberlain's 100 points in a single game still raises this threshold by 19 points! Moreover, in Chamberlain's time, the NBA had not yet introduced three points, and Chamberlain was relying on one two-pointer after another to get an incredible 100 points.

Second place: averaged 50.4 points per game in a single season

Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

In the 61-62 season, Chamberlain, who was still playing for the Philadelphia Warriors, averaged 50.4 points per game that season! You know, a player who has 3-4 50+ games in a season can already be called an explosive performance. But Chamberlain actually averaged 50+ in 80 games in one season! Enough to see what kind of achievement. That is to say, if Chamberlain scored 30 points in a game, it cannot be described as a mediocre performance, but can only be said to have not reached the pass line, and cutting 40 points is considered abnormal.

No. 1: Averaging 48.5 minutes per game in a single season

Records are used to break, but the five major records created by Chamberlain can only be looked up to by the younger generations in these 60 years

Of course, if these records are said to be broken in the NBA after a macho man, there is still a possibility that they can theoretically be broken. Then this record cannot be broken in today's NBA environment. That's 48.5 minutes per game! Also in the 61-62 magical season, Chamberlain not only played a full 48 minutes per game, but also played overtime in several games, so Chamberlain completed a magical record, averaging more playing time per game in one season than in the NBA regular time! That record can't be broken today because in the regular season, coaches don't risk having a player play every game. (ikuet)

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