Bam Adebayo has heard enough. After putting up one of the most extraordinary individual scoring performances in NBA history, the Miami Heat center spent part of his postgame media availability Thursday pushing back against the wave of criticism that followed his 83-point night against the Washington Wizards earlier in the week.
The performance moved Adebayo past Kobe Bryant’s legendary 81-point game from 2006, placing him second on the all-time single-game scoring list behind Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point record set in 1962. For a player whose identity has never been built around scoring, the achievement landed with an almost surreal weight. And yet, instead of celebration, a significant portion of the conversation that followed focused on whether Adebayo should have kept playing as aggressively as he did.
He was not interested in entertaining that argument.
Adebayo invokes Kobe to make his case
The most pointed part of his response centered on Bryant himself. Adebayo noted that he is a Kobe fan, that he was aware of how close he was getting to the record, and that no one genuinely familiar with Bryant’s competitive nature would expect him to have stepped back from that same moment. His argument was straightforward. If Bryant had been sitting on 70 points with nine minutes remaining in a game and was on track to break someone else’s record, there is no world in which he pulls himself from the floor voluntarily.
It was a direct rebuttal to the unethical basketball framing that some observers had attached to Adebayo’s performance. He did not engage with that characterization seriously, and made clear he was not going to start.
Adebayo shifts some responsibility to Washington’s coaching staff
Part of Adebayo’s defense included a pointed observation about the Wizards’ defensive approach. He noted that Washington head coach Brian Keefe and his staff did not begin double-teaming him until he was already deep into historic territory, well past the point where such an adjustment could have meaningfully disrupted his rhythm. In his telling, that was a coaching decision that shaped the outcome as much as anything he did on the court.
He also addressed the free-throw volume, which had drawn its own share of commentary. His explanation was straightforward. He was being fouled consistently throughout the game, and free throws are the natural result of that. There was no strategic manipulation involved.
What it means to score 83 and still face scrutiny
Perhaps the sharpest part of Adebayo’s response was aimed at the broader group of critics. He suggested that people questioning his performance are frustrated precisely because they have never been in a position to score anywhere near that many points in a professional basketball game. That context, in his view, shapes how some people are processing what happened.
The Heat beat the Bucks on Thursday, and Adebayo arrived at his postgame session having already secured the win. His 83-point performance against Washington earlier in the week now sits permanently in the record books regardless of how anyone feels about how it got there. He scored the points. The game counted. The number stands.

