Apr 04, 2026
Apr 3, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Dallas Mavericks forward Cooper Flagg (32) is helped up by his teammates during the second half against the Orlando Magic at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images April 3, 2026 isn’t likely to be a date well-remembered in NBA history, but it did produce an extraordinary (if unfortunate) statistic: In the 7,891 days in which regular season NBA games have been played since the 1976-1977 season began (i.e., since the NBA-ABA merger), yesterday is the only day in which five games were won by 32+ points. Unsurprisingly, all five games pitted playoff-bound teams who are fighting for seeding against lottery-bound teams who are desperate to lose. Here are a handful of other details: The total margin of victory recorded across all games was +220. This is the 13th highest daily total recorded since the NBA-ABA merger, but the highest for a day in which no more than nine games were played (all days ranked 1st through 12th included at least 11 games played). The average margin of victory across the nine games played was 24.4 points, the highest ever for a day in which at least nine games were played. Of the four other games played, three were double-digit victories. The only truly close contest was the King’s 117-113 victory over New Orleans. Since the NBA-ABA merger, this is just the 18th regular season day in which 9+ games were played with no more than one single-digit margin of victory. However, there have actually been four days in the same period where 9+ games were played with NO single-digit point differentials. Those days are February 3, 1995, November 7, 2025, March 8, 2026, and March 29, 2026. That’s right, three of these four cases happened this season. In any case, to commemorate this event I’ve provided the graded box scores for all five blowouts. If nothing else, examining these tables provides some illuminating insights into the myriad ways in which a 30-plus point blowout can occur. Hope you enjoy. What are Team Graded Box Scores? Very briefly, these box scores grade winner-loser differentials for basic box score statistics, with the grade being based on the winning team’s differential relative to other NBA winners during a defined reference period. Think of it like a report card for understanding how a given winner performed relative to other winners. The reference period used runs from the start of the 2012-2013 season to the latest date of play, including only games in the same season category (i.e., regular season and playoff games are not compared to each other). Data Source: The underlying data used to create these box scores was collected from Basketball Reference. In all cases, the data are collected the morning after the game is played. Although rare, postgame statistical revisions after data collection do occur and may affect the results after the fact. ...read more read less
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