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Leslie was born in July 1972 and her basketball talent was on display when she was in middle school. In high school, she led the varsity basketball team to two state championships. In one game, she set a record of 101 points in the first half, a record that no one has been able to break so far.
In addition, the reason why she did not score more points was because her opponent had been completely crushed and refused to play the second half of the game, when the score was 102-24. She led the U.S. team to three Olympic gold medals and one World Championship gold medal, and was named the best player at the 2002 World Championships. Since entering the WNBA in 1997, Leslie has gone crazy with her amazing ball skills.
She was named to the WNBA All-NBA Team four times and to the Second Team twice, and was the first player in WNBA history to score more than 3,000 points. The 2001 season was one of the most spectacular for Leslie. That year, she won the regular season MVP, All-Star Game MVP, and playoff MVP titles, and led the Sparks to a championship and made WNBA history.
In the 2004 season, she won the MVP title again. Nine years have passed, and the players who joined at the same time as Leslie have either changed careers, or sat on the bench and cannot play, and have faded out of the court, but Leslie is still the core of the Sparks.
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Kareem Abdul Jabbar.
Abdul-Jabbar played in 1,560 NBA games and scored 38,387 points, the most points in NBA history to date. But he averaged only points per game, a number that isn't remarkable in NBA history. Abdul-Jabbar, who plays as a center, is not very physically strong, but his stunt "hook shot" makes it as easy as finding a bag, and the nickname "Sky Hook" Abdul-Jabbar was born.
P.S. 2Carl Malone.
Malone, who has played 1,434 games in the NBA, currently has a total of 36,374 points (average points per game), ranking second in NBA history. Malone is physically strong and difficult to shake like a big tree, and in this way, he has played the role of a power forward to the extreme. He relied on accurate mid-range shots and seamless coordination with Stockton to keep the points coming back to his name.
3.Michael jordan.
There is no need to describe Jordan in too many words, because he has already dedicated everything to basketball and the fans. However, Jordan played 1,072 games due to the limited number of games, and scored a total of 32,292 points, which can only rank third in history, but he has set an average of points per game and ranks first in the NBA with Chamberlain. Great Jordan, boring data is just as great.
4 Wilt Chamberlain.
In Chamberlain's era, the competition was not as fierce as it is now, so his height was unique in the NBA at that time, unstoppable, and even set a record of 100 points per game. This record has no one before and no one has come after. Chamberlain played a total of 1,045 games in the NBA and scored 31,419 points, ranking fourth in the NBA.
5.Moses Malone.
Ranking fifth on the NBA all-time scoring list is Moses Malone, who played 1,329 NBA games and scored 27,409 points, an average of points per game. Known as one of the NBA's greatest centers, Moses Malone has won NBA championships, WVPs, All-NBA and All-Defensive Team selections throughout his career, as well as the NBA All-Star Game, and is a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame.
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Chamberlain scored the most, averaging points per game in the 1962 season, averaging minutes per game compared to just 48 minutes per game. Career points per game.
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The stars with the highest total points in NBA history are, the first is Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the second is Karl Malone, the third is LeBron James, the fourth is Kobe Bryant, the fifth is Michael Jordan, the sixth is Dirk Nowitzki, the seventh is Chamberlain, and the eighth is O'Neal.
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There are Hayes, Malone, O'Neal, James, Nowitzki, Chamberlain, Jordan, Kobe, Karl Malone, Abdul-Jabbar and others.
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There are Hayes Malone, O'Neal, James, Nowitzki, Chamberlain, Jordan, Kobe, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and others.
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The highest top 10 players in NBA history.
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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, with 38,387 points in 1,560 games, is by far the most scoring player in NBA history.
Chamberlain, 100 points per game.
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Highest individual single-game score:
Retired: Chamberlain.
100 points. On March 2, 1962, in the game between the Philadelphia Warriors and the Knicks, Chamberlain shot 36 of 63 from the field and 28 of 32 free throws, scoring a single-game high of 100 points and 25 rebounds in history, and the Warriors beat their opponents 169-147, in addition to holding a personal record of 4,092 points in a single season.
Active Player: On January 23, 2006, in the regular season Lakers vs. Raptors, Kobe Bryant scored 81 points, including 7 of 13 three-pointers, 18 of 20 free throws, and grabbed 6 rebounds, setting a single-game scoring record for an active player.
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Of course, it's Magic Chamberlain, who averages 50 points per game and once hundreds in a game.
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Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the NBA's all-time leading scorer.
38,387 points he is, and the most points in a single game is Wilt Chamberlain, 100 points!
Abdul-Jabbar's legendary NBA career needs no elaboration, as he is a Hall of Famer, all-time scoring leader, 19-time All-Star, 6 championship rings, 6 regular season MVPs, 2 Finals MVPs, 11-time Defensive Team of the Year, and 15-time All-NBA All-Team selections. In the 1975-76 season, the Lakers had a record of only 40 wins and 42 losses, but Abdul-Jabbar was elected regular season MVP with his average points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks per game, which is also the only MVP in NBA history who missed the playoffs.
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Name plus * for Hall of Fame player, plus for active player.
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The 2010-11 scoring champion was Kevin Durant, the star of the Western Conference Ora, the Homa, and Thunder pairs.
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All-time scores: Abdul-Jabbar 38387. Personal highest score in a single game: Chamberlain 100 points. Highest points per game in the season: Chamberlain.
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The NBA All-Time Scoring List includes all points scored by players on NBA court, including regular season scores, but excludes preseason, playoffs, Summer League, and All-Star Game scores. Updated to the 2014-2015 regular season, after the end of the game on April 16, 2015 (Beijing time), the top scorer is: Karim Abdul-Jabbar scored a total of 38,387 points.
2nd place: Carl Malone Score: 36928 points.
3rd place: Kobe Bryant score: 32482 points.
<> in the top 10 of the NBA players' all-time single-game scoring list counted by the American media, the legendary Chamberlain occupies half of the list, in addition to the incredible 100-point data in a single game, Chamberlain has also scored 78 points and 73 points in a single game (2 points of personal data. Therefore, the 1st, 3rd, 4th, and 7th positions on this list ended up with Chamberlain's name. Compared with Chamberlain, who dominates the list, Jordan, James, Duncan and many other giant stars are nowhere on the list. >>>More
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, James, O'Neal, Hayes and Olajuwon, James is still the number one in the league with great physical gifts, O'Neal was the league's most dominant center at his peak, and few people under the basket can compete with him.
Name plus * for Hall of Fame player, plus for active player.
Highest individual score in NBA history.
In NBA history, the record for the highest individual points scored in a game is 100 points, and the record for the highest total points scored in a single season is 4,029 points, both of which were set in 1963 and 1962 by Wilt Chamberlain. >>>More
Kobe Bryant, he has surpassed Jordan's number of kills in the past two years, December 16, 2009 Lakers vs Bucks 107:106 Bryant hit a 2-point jumper in the face of Charlie Bell's defense, killing the Bucks. This is his 25th time! >>>More