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How did Shai break Wilt’s scoring streak?

Shai Gilgeous‑Alexander’s new landmark and why it matters

Shai Gilgeous‑Alexander redefined an all‑time scoring streak during Oklahoma City’s 104‑102 win over the Boston Celtics, producing a performance that combined efficiency and volume. He finished the game with 35 points while also contributing nine assists and six rebounds. That scoring output extended his consecutive regular‑season game run with at least 20 points to 127, moving him past Wilt Chamberlain’s long‑standing mark.

The achievement is about more than a single evening. The streak reflects sustained scoring from a single starter across multiple seasons and systems, showing both shot creation and role durability. It removes any lingering questions about whether the Thunder rely on streaky scoring: his consistency has been a steadying force for a club chasing top playoff positioning.

Immediate takeaways

  • Historic context: Chamberlain’s record stood for more than six decades; eclipsing it places Gilgeous‑Alexander in a rare statistical company that spans eras.
  • Team impact: his scoring consistency turns the Thunder into a game‑by‑game contender; opponents must plan specifically for him each night.
  • MVP and narrative value: such a run strengthens his individual case for awards and postseason seeding discussions.

What comes next

Maintaining the streak requires health, sustained role and continued efficiency; none of that is guaranteed in a long season. Opposing defenses will continue to key on him, potentially creating more opportunities for teammates if coaches successfully double or shade help. For Oklahoma City, the broader implication is that a reliable primary scorer gives the team both tactical flexibility and a psychological edge entering the stretch run and postseason.


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