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No Warm-Ups Needed: Four 50-Burgers in NBA Opening Week

Hunter Tierney 's profile
By Hunter Tierney
November 2, 2025
No Warm-Ups Needed: Four 50-Burgers in NBA Opening Week

If it felt like the NBA skipped the warm‑up phase and floored the gas pedal this season, you’re not imagining it. The first week delivered something we’ve literally never seen before: four 50‑point games and sixteen 40‑point performances — both all‑time records for an opening week.

Every night felt like someone else was catching fire. Shai Gilgeous‑Alexander turned a Finals rematch into a personal clinic. Aaron Gordon morphed into a one‑man heat check. Austin Reaves showed he can run an offense like a vet, and Lauri Markkanen looked every bit like a franchise cornerstone. Four completely different players, four totally different ways to break 50 — all in one week.

This wasn’t random hot shooting or stat‑padding in blowouts. It felt like the natural evolution of the league: faster pace, more space, more trust in stars to control games, and more freedom for scorers to push the limits. Mix in fresh legs, looser defenses, and a green light the size of half‑court, and suddenly 40 doesn’t sound nearly as special anymore.

Tracking the Trends

Pace and spacing are real. Transition is a weapon again, and you can tell teams are taking notes from last year’s Finals. Both championship squads played fast, relentless basketball — pushing pace, stretching defenses, and trusting that tempo would break opponents over time. The rest of this copycat league saw it and, true to form, everyone’s trying to replicate that same pace‑and‑pressure formula right now. Coaches are happy to live with a quick semi‑transition three if it comes from the right shooter and the right action.

The problem is, not many teams have the bodies or conditioning to sustain that speed for 82 games, plus the travel grind that comes with it. Still, when that first good look shows up, guys are hunting it like it’s a layup.

Free throws matter — still. It’s not glamorous, but it’s where superstars make their living. Three of these four 50‑point explosions leaned heavily on foul shots, and that’s no coincidence. In today’s game, drawing contact is a skill. Guys who get downhill, shift pace, and bait defenders into reacting are basically printing points. The free-throw line is what turns a great shooting night into a historic one. Every time you see someone live at the stripe, it’s a sign that they’re dictating the entire game on their own terms.

Shooting variance swings games. Aaron Gordon didn’t muscle his way to 50 with dunks and putbacks — he turned into a flamethrower for a night. Ten threes. It won’t happen often, but that’s the beauty of modern basketball: one ridiculous shooting night can flip standings, rewrite narratives, and make you rethink what a player’s ceiling actually is.

The star usage dial is already at playoff levels. Even in October, teams are playing like it’s May. Late‑game offense? The ball’s in the hands of the alpha. You can see coaches trimming down playbooks, running their two or three bread‑and‑butter sets, and trusting the best guy on the floor to figure it out. That’s great for drama — and it’s part of the reason that the season has gotten off to such a hot start. But some of the veteran stars should be careful; it’s a lot of wear and tear this early.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 55: The Paint Is a Problem You Can’t Solve

Jun 13, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) shoots the ball against the Indiana Pacers during the first half during game four of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Credit: Kyle Terada-Imagn Images

Thunder 141, Pacers 135 (2OT)
Line: 55 points, 8 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals, 1 block — 15‑for‑31 FG, 2‑for‑7 3PT, 23‑for‑26 FT in roughly 45 minutes.

This was a statement game in every sense. The defending champs went into a hostile arena, double overtime, and the Pacers just refused to go away. Shai didn’t need any tricks to hang 55 — he just kept putting Indiana in a spin cycle. Slow, deliberate drives. Hesitations that made defenders freeze. Little shoulder dips to get them leaning, then that signature glide into the mid‑range where he’s as automatic as anyone in the league. If you reach, he’s at the line. If you stay back, it’s a soft jumper right over your contest.

It wasn’t just the scoring, though — it was how he did it. Shai got to the stripe 26 times, the most by any player so far this season. Only one other player has even hit the 20‑attempt mark. Nearly half his points came from free throws, which is insane but also perfectly on brand for how he controls a game. He makes defenders feel trapped — too scared to overcommit, too slow to stay in front.

Efficiency-wise, it’s ridiculous: 55 points on 31 shots with a true shooting percentage around 65%. That’s postseason efficiency in Week One. And it came without leaning on a hot shooting night — just steady pressure, smart reads, and the kind of patience that makes every possession look like he’s playing at half speed while everyone else sprints.

The best part? None of this feels like a one‑off. He doesn’t need eight threes or a lucky whistle. The footwork, timing, and craft are all repeatable. The Thunder opening the year with back‑to‑back double‑OT wins only adds to the myth — Shai is playing like the guy who knows the throne is his until proven otherwise.

Aaron Gordon’s 50: Channeling His Inner Steph Curry Against Steph Curry

Warriors 137, Nuggets 131 (OT)
Line: 50 points, 8 rebounds — 17‑for‑21 FG, 10‑for‑11 3PT, 6‑for‑6 FT in 39 minutes.

Of the four 50s, this one was the loudest surprise. Aaron Gordon has spent the past few years in Denver carving out his role as the ultimate glue guy — doing the dirty work, cutting backdoor, defending the toughest wing, setting screens, and cleaning up the leftovers when defenses collapse on Nikola Jokić. Against Steph Curry, he played like a man possessed. Ten made threes. Ten. From the corners, the top, in transition, off rhythm — didn’t matter. Every look felt like it was going in.

You could feel it early, too. Once the first few dropped, the Warriors had to start closing out like he was Klay Thompson. The confidence was higher than the Rocky Mountains, and Denver’s bench just kept laughing in disbelief. Gordon went 17-for-21 overall and 10-for-11 from deep, making it the most threes by any player so far this season and the most efficient 50-point game in recent memory. He finished with an absurd 106% true shooting percentage, which is almost comical at that volume.

The wild part is that even with all that, Denver still lost. Steph Curry reminded everyone why he’s still the boogeyman of closing time — draining a logo three to force overtime and then finishing the job. The Nuggets walked away with an L and a career night from their third option, which kind of sums up both teams perfectly: Denver’s system is so good it can make a role player look like a superstar for a night, and Golden State’s is still built around a guy who can break your heart in the blink of an eye.

Austin Reaves’ 51: Coming Out Hot

Oct 26, 2025; Sacramento, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) reacts after making a three point shot against the Sacramento Kings during the fourth quarter at Golden 1 Center.
Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images

Lakers 127, Kings 120 (in Sacramento)
Line: 51 points, 11 rebounds, 9 assists — 12‑for‑22 FG, 6‑for‑10 3PT, 21‑for‑22 FT in 39 minutes.

Los Angeles walked into this game without LeBron James or Luka Doncic, which usually spells trouble. If you told a Lakers fan last spring that October would feature a road win where Austin Reaves ran the show and put up 51, you’d have probably gotten laughed out of the room.

Instead, Reaves has been scorching hot to start the season and took this opportunity to run the offense like a seasoned vet. Snaking around screens, manipulating defenders, and making the Kings chase ghosts all night. He went 12‑for‑22 from the field, 6‑for‑10 from deep, and got to the free‑throw line 22 times, knocking down 21. That kind of balance — scoring at all three levels while controlling tempo — is what separates “guy on a heater” from “this dude can really be something.”

Reaves currently ranks second in total points scored this season — trailing only Shai Gilgeous‑Alexander, with Steph Curry and Victor Wembanyama rounding out the top-four. That's some wild company for an undrafted guard to be keeping.

The stat line reads like a video game: 51 points, 11 rebounds, and 9 assists — just shy of a triple‑double. But the story’s bigger than numbers. Every possession felt intentional. Reaves picked apart coverages, baited switches, and used timing instead of speed to create space. When he wasn’t cooking defenders himself, he was setting up teammates with skip passes and short‑roll reads. And what makes it even better is that this version of Reaves gives the Lakers a legitimate fallback plan. They don’t have to panic when the stars sit. No one’s asking for 50 every night, but the process — patience, confidence, and playmaking — is sustainable.

In a brutal Western Conference, having someone who can carry the offense on a random Tuesday could be the difference between a top‑four seed and the play‑in.

Lauri Markkanen’s 51: Big-Men Don't Play Like They Used To

Jazz 138, Suns 134 (OT)
Line: 51 points, 14 rebounds, 3 assists — 14‑for‑32 FG, 6‑for‑13 3PT, 17‑for‑17 FT in 45 minutes.

Welcome to the modern power forward. Lauri Markkanen didn’t grind his way to 51 with back‑to‑the‑basket moves or old‑school bruiser stuff — he floated to it. The Jazz forward looked like he was playing a different game entirely, gliding into jumpers and attacking mismatches without ever looking rushed. He wasn’t the most efficient guy on the floor, but it never felt like he was forcing it. He plays like a guard trapped in a seven‑footer’s body, and this is exactly what that looks like at its best.

Phoenix clawed all the way back from a 20‑point hole to push it into overtime, but Markkanen had enough in the tank to finish the job at the line — hitting his 16th and 17th free throws with two seconds left to ice it. That’s what stars do. The raw shooting line (14‑for‑32) doesn’t scream efficiency, but when you add six made threes and a perfect 17‑for‑17 from the stripe, it paints a different picture. That’s nearly 65% true shooting on heavy volume — and he did it while hauling in 14 rebounds and playing 45 minutes.

What makes him so dangerous is how naturally he moves for his size. Put a big on him and he’ll pull them out beyond the arc for a clean rhythm three. Try to switch a wing onto him and he’ll take it inside, using his length and balance to finish through contact. There’s just not an easy answer for someone who can do both. The 17 free throws weren’t a fluke — they were a sign that Phoenix simply couldn’t figure out where to guard him.

The League’s Evolution Never Sleeps 

Apr 26, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Denver Nuggets forward Aaron Gordon (32) celebrates after the game winning dunk to defeat the Los Angeles Clippers 101-99 in game four of round one of the 2024 NBA Playoffs at Intuit Dome.
Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

It’s not like this offensive boom came out of nowhere. The league’s been trending this way for years. Since the early 2010s, the NBA’s average offensive rating has jumped from around 107 to over 114 points per 100 possessions — the highest mark in league history. Teams are scoring smarter. Three‑point shots now make up more than a third of all shots, compared to barely 20% just a decade ago, and players are more efficient than ever with them. Possessions are somehow both faster and cleaner — fewer wasted trips, better spacing, and more purpose behind every touch. 

Every season, players find new ways to sharpen their edges. You can see it in their footwork, their shot mechanics, the way they read defenses — it’s the product of countless hours behind the scenes, working when no one’s watching. Today’s stars aren’t just gifted; they’re obsessed with refinement. The result is a league full of players whose skill sets are expanding year after year, turning what used to be highlight moments into nightly routines.

This season is no different. Across the board, teams and players are finding smarter, more efficient ways to play. Offenses flow with better spacing, defenses rotate faster, and the margin for error keeps shrinking. Everyone’s learning how to maximize every possession, every matchup, every read. It’s the natural evolution of a league that never sits still. 

All stats courtesy of NBA.com.

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