Double-double

(Redirected from Double double)

In basketball, a double-double is a single-game performance in which a player accumulates ten or more in two of the following five statistical categories: points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocked shots. The first "double" in the term refers to the two (double) categories and the second "double" refers to accumulating ten or more (typically double digits) in that category. Similarly, a player records a triple-double, quadruple-double, and quintuple-double when accumulating ten or more in three, four, or all five of the statistical categories, respectively. While double-doubles and triple-doubles occur regularly each NBA season, only four quadruple-doubles have ever officially been recorded in the NBA,[1] and no quintuple-double has ever been recorded in a professional basketball game. A similar term, the five-by-five, is the accumulation of at least five in all five statistical categories. It is rarely done.

Wilt Chamberlain (#13) holds the record for most career double-doubles in the NBA with 968, while Nate Thurmond (#42) was the first to record a quadruple-double.
Tamika Catchings was the first player ever to record an official quintuple-double.

Double-double edit

A double-double is a performance in which a player accumulates a double-digit total in two of five statistical categories—points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocked shots—in a game. The most common double-double combination is points and rebounds, followed by points and assists.[2] During the 2008–09 NBA season, 69 players who were eligible for leadership in the main statistical categories recorded at least ten double-doubles during the season.[3]

Since the 1983–84 season, Tim Duncan leads the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the points–rebounds combination with 841 double-doubles, John Stockton leads the points–assists combination with 714, and Russell Westbrook leads the rebounds–assists combinations with 142. Since the 1983–84 season, Tim Duncan also holds the record for most total career double-doubles in the NBA, having recorded 841. In league history, the record for most career double-doubles is 968, held by Wilt Chamberlain.

Special double-doubles are rare. One such achievement is sometimes called a 20–20, double double-double, or double-20, when a player accumulates 20 or more in two statistics in a game.[4][5][6] Another similar feat is a 30–30.[7] The only player in NBA history to record a 40–40 is Wilt Chamberlain, who achieved the feat eight times in his career, four of which were in his rookie season.[8]

Triple-double edit

A triple-double is a single-game performance by a player who accumulates a double-digit number total in three of five statistical categories—points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocked shots—in a game. The most common way for a player to achieve a triple-double is with points, rebounds, and assists, though on occasion players may record 10 or more steals or blocked shots in a game.[13] The origin of the term "triple-double" is unclear. Some sources claim that it was coined in the NBA by former Los Angeles Lakers public relations director Bruce Jolesch in the 1980s in order to showcase Magic Johnson's versatility,[14][15] while others claim that it was coined by then Philadelphia 76ers media relations director Harvey Pollack in 1980.[16][17]

Triple-doubles in the NBA edit

Russell Westbrook holds the record for the most NBA career regular season triple doubles with 198, and is the only player to average a triple-double over four different seasons.
Oscar Robertson is second in NBA career regular season triple-doubles with 181, and was the first of two players to average a triple-double over an entire season.

The triple-double became an officially recorded statistic in the NBA during the 1979–80 season. That season, there were 32 triple-doubles, 12 more than the previous season.[18][19] From the 1979–80 to the 1990–91 season, the NBA recorded a total of 543 triple-doubles, or 45.25 triple-doubles per season. This can be largely attributed to Magic Johnson, who was responsible for 137 of this time-span's triple-doubles, or about 25.23% of them.[20] After Johnson retired in 1991, the number of triple-doubles in the league declined. From the 1991–92 to the 2014–15 seasons, there were only 841 triple-doubles, or about 35.04 triple-doubles per season. Jason Kidd recorded the most triple-doubles in this timespan with 107, which was 68 more than second placed LeBron James.[21][22] However, in the 2015–16 season, the number of triple-doubles recorded in the NBA grew from 46 to 75.[23][24] From the 2016–17 to the 2018–19 season, the NBA recorded 352 triple doubles, which was approximately 117.33 triple-doubles per season. Over those three years, Russell Westbrook recorded 101 triple-doubles—28.69% of all triple-doubles in that timespan.[25][26][27]

There has been occasional controversy surrounding triple-doubles made when a player achieves the feat with a late rebound. Players with nine rebounds in a game have sometimes been accused of deliberately missing a shot late in the game in order to recover the rebound. One such case involved a player shooting at his own team's basket. On March 16, 2003, the Cleveland Cavaliers were up 120–95 against the Utah Jazz with four seconds left in the fourth quarter. Following an inbounded ball, Cavaliers guard Ricky Davis shot the ball off his own team's basket to secure the final rebound for a triple double.[28][29] The move was criticized by players, coaches, and the media.[30][31] To deter this, NBA rules allow rebounds to be nullified if the shot is determined not to be a legitimate scoring attempt.[32]

Russell Westbrook holds the NBA record for career triple-doubles with 198. He and Oscar Robertson are the only two players to average a triple-double over a season, with Robertson achieving the feat once and Westbrook achieving the feat four times. Magic Johnson holds the playoff record for career triple-doubles with 30.

WNBA edit

 
Alyssa Thomas of the Connecticut Sun is the only WNBA player to have recorded her eleventh career triple-double.[33]

Triple-doubles have been far more rare in the WNBA than in the NBA; the games are shorter in the WNBA (40 minutes vs 48), there are fewer games (fewer teams) in a season (36 vs 82), and the playing style in the WNBA is more of a team game than relying on star players. As of the 2022 season, 20 triple-doubles have been recorded in the WNBA — 16 in the regular season and four in the playoffs.[34][35] Sheryl Swoopes, Courtney Williams, and Courtney Vandersloot are tied for third place with two WNBA triple-doubles, while Candace Parker and Sabrina Ionescu are tied for second place with three, and Alyssa Thomas has the all-time record at eleven.[36]

Alyssa Thomas scored the third overall playoff triple-double and first WNBA Finals triple-double on September 15, 2022 against the Las Vegas Aces,[37] and the fourth the following game on September 18. Thomas recorded four of her career triple-doubles in the 2022 season, and her fifth through eleventh in the 2023 season.[38]

On June 12, 2022 in a New York Liberty game, Ionescu became the fourth and youngest WNBA player to achieve multiple triple doubles in a career, while also being the first to both achieve a triple double in three quarters and register at least 12 of each statistic for the triple double.[39]

In June 2022, Parker became both the first person to reach three triple doubles overall, as well as achieve two or more triple doubles in the same season.[40]

The following is a list of all WNBA triple-doubles, with the playoff triple-doubles highlighted in italics. Bold numbers indicate the statistic relevant to the triple double.

Name Team Opponent Date Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks
Sheryl Swoopes Houston Comets Detroit Shock July 27, 1999 14 15 10 3 2
Margo Dydek Utah Starzz Orlando Miracle June 7, 2001 12 11 3 3 10
Lisa Leslie Los Angeles Sparks Detroit Shock September 9, 2004 29 15 3 2 10
Deanna Nolan Detroit Shock Connecticut Sun May 21, 2005 11 10 11 1 0
Sheryl Swoopes Houston Comets Seattle Storm September 3, 2005 14 10 10 2 0
Temeka Johnson Seattle Storm New York Liberty July 24, 2014 13 10 11 1 0
Candace Parker Los Angeles Sparks San Antonio Stars July 28, 2017 11 17 11 0 4
Courtney Vandersloot Chicago Sky Dallas Wings July 20, 2018 13 10 15 1 1
Chelsea Gray Los Angeles Sparks Washington Mystics July 7, 2019 13 10 13 0 0
Sabrina Ionescu New York Liberty Minnesota Lynx May 18, 2021 26 10 12 0 1
Courtney Vandersloot Chicago Sky Connecticut Sun September 28, 2021 12 10 18 4 2
Candace Parker Chicago Sky Washington Mystics May 22, 2022 16 13 10 0 0
Sabrina Ionescu New York Liberty Chicago Sky June 12, 2022 27 13 12 0 0
Candace Parker Chicago Sky Los Angeles June 23, 2022 10 14 10 1 2
Moriah Jefferson Minnesota Lynx Dallas Wings June 28, 2022 13 10 10 2 0
Sabrina Ionescu New York Liberty Las Vegas Aces July 6, 2022 31 13 10 0 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Minnesota Lynx July 22, 2022 15 10 12 3 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Phoenix Mercury August 2, 2022 10 12 10 1 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Las Vegas Aces September 15, 2022 16 15 11 2 1
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Las Vegas Aces September 18, 2022 11 10 11 2 2
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Seattle Storm June 20, 2023 13 15 12 3 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Chicago Sky June 25, 2023 14 12 11 2 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun New York Liberty June 27, 2023 11 10 10 4 1
Courtney Williams Chicago Sky Los Angeles Sparks June 30, 2023 12 11 13 1 0
Satou Sabally Dallas Wings New York Liberty July 28, 2023 14 11 10 0 1
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Minnesota Lynx July 30, 2023 17 14 11 0 2
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Minnesota Lynx August 1, 2023 21 20 12 3 1
Natasha Howard Dallas Wings Chicago Sky August 4, 2023 28 12 11 2 0
Chelsea Gray Las Vegas Aces New York Liberty August 18, 2023 22 11 11 3 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun Los Angeles Sparks September 5, 2023 27 12 14 6 1
Sug Sutton Phoenix Mercury Las Vegas Aces September 8, 2023 18 11 11 2 0
Courtney Williams Chicago Sky Connecticut Sun September 10, 2023 23 16 13 2 0
Alyssa Thomas Connecticut Sun New York Liberty October 1, 2023 17 15 11 2 0

NCAA Division I edit

In women's play, Danielle Carson (Youngstown State), Kim Rhock (Mount St. Mary's), Nicole Powell (Stanford), Ashley Schrock (Cleveland State), Claire Faucher (Portland State), Brittney Griner (Baylor), and Ny Hammonds (Charlotte) have accomplished this feat once. Powell did so in successive rounds of the NCAA tournament.[54] Sabrina Ionescu has done so twice, and Chastadie Barrs of Lamar has done so three times, making them the only D-I players of either sex to do so more than once. Barrs is the only player to have recorded consecutive triple-doubles twice in a single season, doing so in 2018–19.[48][54][55][56][57][58]
  • Two women are the only NCAA players of either sex in any division to have recorded three consecutive triple-doubles. The first was Carson in the 1985–86 season. She began by recording 12 points, ten, rebounds, and 12 assists against Akron on November 29, 1985. The following day, she recorded 20 points, 12 rebounds, and at least 20 assists against Kent State (her exact assists total in that game is unknown). Finally, on December 2 against Cleveland State, Carson recorded 26 points, 15 rebounds, and 14 assists.[54] Barrs matched the feat in the 2018–19 season. She began with 17 points, ten rebounds, and 12 steals on January 9, 2019 against New Orleans.[57] Next, on January 12, Barrs had ten points, 11 rebounds, and ten assists against Central Arkansas.[58] Finally, on January 16, Barrs recorded 15 points, ten rebounds, and 11 assists against Southeastern Louisiana.[59]
  • Most triple-doubles in a single season:
    • Men's: Kyle Collinsworth (BYU), with six – performed twice: in the 2014–15 season, and again in 2015–16.[41]
    • Women's: Sabrina Ionescu (Oregon), with eight in the 2018–19 season.
  • Triple-doubles in NCAA tournament history:
Men's
The NCAA first recorded individual assists in men's basketball in 1950–51, but stopped doing so after the 1951–52 season, and did not resume keeping track of assists until 1983–84. Blocks and steals were first recorded in 1985–86. Thus, the NCAA officially records ten tournament triple-doubles. However, many tournaments had included assists, steals and blocks in their official boxscores prior to that time, so unofficially this has occurred 18 times.[60] Only three pre-1986 triple-doubles are included below.
Name Team Score Opponent Round Date Minutes
played
Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks Reference
Oscar Robertson Cincinnati 98–85 Louisville Third place March 21, 1959 39 39 17 10 [61]
Magic Johnson Michigan State 95–64 Lamar Second round March 10, 1979 35 13 17 10
Magic Johnson Michigan State 101–67 Penn Final Four March 24, 1979 35 29 10 10 3 0 [61]
Gary Grant Michigan 97–109 North Carolina Second round March 14, 1987 39 24 10 10 1 0 [62]
Shaquille O'Neal LSU 94–83 BYU First round March 19, 1992 31 26 13 4 1 11 [61]
David Cain St. John's 85–67 Texas Tech First round March 18, 1993 37 12 11 11 1 0 [63]
Andre Miller Utah 76–51 Arizona Elite Eight March 21, 1998 36 18 14 13 2 1 [61]
Dwyane Wade Marquette 83–69 Kentucky Elite Eight March 29, 2003 35 29 11 11 1 4 [61]
Cole Aldrich Kansas 60–43 Dayton Second round March 22, 2009 31 13 20 1 0 10 [64]
Draymond Green Michigan State 76–78 UCLA First round March 17, 2011 37 23 11 10 4 0 [65]
Draymond Green Michigan State 89–67 Long Island Second round March 16, 2012 35 24 12 10 1 0 [66]
Ja Morant Murray State 83–64 Marquette First round March 21, 2019 39 17 11 16 0 0 [67]
Marcus Domask Illinois 85-69 Morehead State First round March 21, 2024 36 12 11 10 0 0 [68]
Women's
In women's basketball, the NCAA began keeping track of assists in 1985–86, then blocks and steals in 1987–88, so officially this has occurred 14 times. However, many tournaments had included assists, steals and blocks in their official boxscores prior to that time, so unofficially this has occurred 17 times.[54] All three triple-doubles that preceded the NCAA's official inclusion of the relevant statistics are included below.
Name Team Score Opponent Round Date Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks Reference
Cassandra Lander Arizona State 97–77 Georgia First round March 12, 1982 17 11 10 [54]
Anne Donovan Old Dominion 74–60 Penn State Elite Eight March 26, 1983 20 13 12 [54]
Joni Davis Missouri 82–92 LSU First round March 18, 1984 14 11 10 [54]
Katie Meier Duke 70–55 Manhattan First round March 11, 1987 16 11 10 [54]
Pauline Jordan UNLV 84–74 Colorado Second round March 18, 1989 22 17 11 [54]
Sonja Henning Stanford 91–67 Cal State Fullerton Second round March 16, 1991 19 10 10 [54]
Niesa Johnson Alabama 121–120 (4OT) Duke Second round March 18, 1995 28 12 14 [54]
Tracy Henderson Georgia 81–68 Louisville Second round March 19, 1995 14 13 10 [54]
Ticha Penicheiro Old Dominion 92–39 Saint Francis (PA) First round March 13, 1998 22 15 14 [54]
Nicole Powell Stanford 76–51 Weber State First round March 16, 2002 20 11 10 [54]
Nicole Powell Stanford 77–55 Tulane Second round March 18, 2002 16 10 10 [54]
Kristin Haynie Michigan State 76–64 Vanderbilt Sweet Sixteen March 27, 2005 16 10 10 [54]
Skylar Diggins Notre Dame 80–49 Maryland Elite Eight March 27, 2012 13 10 10 [54]
Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis Connecticut 91–52 Saint Joseph's Second round March 25, 2014 20 10 10 [54]
Samantha Logic Iowa 66–81 Baylor Sweet Sixteen March 27, 2015 13 10 14 [54]
Sabrina Ionescu Oregon 88–45 Seattle First round March 16, 2018 19 10 11 [44]
Sabrina Ionescu Oregon 91–68 Indiana Second round March 24, 2019 29 10 12 3 0 [52]
Caitlin Clark Iowa 97–83 Louisville Fourth round March 26, 2023 41 10 12 3 0 [69]
  • Others
    • Kalara McFadyen of Memphis achieved perhaps the most unusual triple-double in history, and she did it without scoring a point or even attempting a shot from either the field or the free-throw line. On February 3, 2002, in a women's Division I game against Charlotte, she had 12 assists, 10 steals, and 10 rebounds.[70][71]

FIBA European Champions Cup and EuroLeague edit

 
Nick Calathes is the most recent EuroLeague player to record a triple-double, doing so in 2019, and the first to record one since 2006.[72]

Much like the WNBA, there are a few reasons why triple-doubles are far more rare in the EuroLeague than in the NBA. The games are 40 minutes long—8 minutes shorter than in the NBA—there are 30 games in a season compared to the NBA's 82, and various rules—such as those on assists—are stricter than that of the NBA.[73] As of 2019, only seven triple-doubles have been recorded in Euroleague history,[74] and only three in the modern era of Euroleague basketball (since 2000).[72] The following is a list of all seven of these triple-doubles:

Name Team Opponent Season Points Rebounds Assists Reference
  Keith Williams   WKS Śląsk Wrocław   Dinamo Tbilisi 1992–93 30 10 16 [74]
  Vasily Karasev   CSKA Moscow   Olympiacos 1994–95 21 10 10 [74]
  Bill Edwards   PAOK   Cholet Basket 1999–00 24 15 10 [74]
  Derrick Phelps   ALBA Berlin   Iraklis 2000–01 SuproLeague 11 10 12 [74]
  Nikola Vujčić   Maccabi Tel Aviv   Prokom Trefl 2005–06 11 12 11 [74]
  Nikola Vujčić   Maccabi Tel Aviv   Olimpija Ljubljana 2006–07 27 10 10 [74]
  Nick Calathes   Panathinaikos   Budućnost 2018–19 11 12 18 [74]

Quadruple-double edit

 
Center David Robinson is the most recent NBA player to accomplish the feat of a quadruple-double by recording at least 10 points, rebounds, assists, and blocks in a game.

A quadruple-double is a single-game performance by a player who accumulates ten or more in four of five statistical categories—points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocked shots—in a game. This feat is extremely rare:[75][76] only four players have officially recorded a quadruple-double in National Basketball Association (NBA) history. The first American male player above the high school level to officially record a quadruple-double was Nate Thurmond, who achieved this feat in 1974 while playing for the NBA's Chicago Bulls. The first American female player above the high school level to officially record a quadruple-double was Ann Meyers, who achieved this feat in 1978 while playing for the UCLA Bruins, when women's college sports were under the auspices of the AIAW.[77]

The first male player in NCAA Division I history to record a quadruple-double was Lester Hudson in 2007.[78] The first Division I women's player to have officially recorded a quadruple-double since the NCAA began sponsoring women's sports in 1981–82 was Veronica Pettry of Loyola–Chicago in 1989. Only three other women have done so since, and the only player to have recorded a quadruple-double since 1993 is Shakyla Hill of Grambling State, who accomplished the feat in 2018 and 2019. An earlier player, Jackie Spencer of Louisville, accomplished the feat against Cincinnati during the 1984–85 season, but the NCAA did not record assists and steals throughout Division I women's basketball at that time. The Metro Conference, then home to both schools, did officially record these statistics, but the NCAA did not start doing so until 1985–86 for assists and 1987–88 for steals.[54]

NBA edit

Quadruple-doubles have only been possible since the 1973–74 season, when the NBA started recording both blocked shots and steals. It is often speculated by observers that other all-time greats, namely Oscar Robertson (former all time triple-doubles leader with 181, now Russell Westbrook),[79][80] Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell, and Jerry West could conceivably have had quadruple-doubles.[75] West's biography at NBA.com claims that he once recorded an unofficial quadruple-double with 44 points, 12 rebounds, ten assists, and ten blocks.[81] A biography of Wilt Chamberlain claims that he also recorded an unofficial quadruple-double in Game 1 of the 1967 Eastern Division Finals against the Boston Celtics, when he had 24 points, 32 rebounds, 13 assists, and 12 blocks.[82]

The reason why [the quadruple-double] is such a hard thing to accomplish is because it requires a player to be completely dominant on both ends of the court without being too selfish—so he can get the assists—and without fouling out trying to block every shot or grab every rebound. A lot of guys can get the points, rebounds and assists, but it's the defensive stuff that messes everybody up. You have to love defense to get a quadruple-double. There's no way around it. [1]

— Nate Thurmond

The four players listed below are the only players who have officially recorded a quadruple-double in an NBA game. Except for Thurmond, who retired before the award was established in 1983, all of them have won NBA Defensive Player of the Year at least once. Robertson is the only player who was not a center to accomplish the feat, doing so with steals rather than blocks.[1]

Legend
 * : Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
NBA quadruple doubles
Name Date Team Score Opponent Min Points Reb Assists Steals Blocks Overtime
Nate Thurmond*[83] October 18, 1974 Chicago Bulls 120–115 Atlanta Hawks 45 22 14 13 1 12 Yes
Alvin Robertson[84] February 18, 1986 San Antonio Spurs 120–114 Phoenix Suns 36 20 11 10 10 0 No
Hakeem Olajuwon*[85] March 29, 1990 Houston Rockets 120–94 Milwaukee Bucks 40 18 16 10 1 11 No
David Robinson*[86] February 17, 1994 San Antonio Spurs 115–96 Detroit Pistons 43 34 10 10 2 10 No

Only seven other players (Drexler did it twice) have managed to finish with triple-doubles and a total of 9 in a fourth statistical category (statistical categories in which they fell short are in bold):

NBA triple doubles with nine of a fourth statistic
Name Date Team Opponent Minutes
played
Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks Overtime
Rick Barry*[87][88] October 29, 1974 Golden State Warriors Buffalo Braves 43 30 10 11 9 No
Larry Steele[89][90] November 16, 1974 Portland Trail Blazers Los Angeles Lakers 44 12 11 9 10 No
Johnny Moore[91] January 8, 1985 San Antonio Spurs Golden State Warriors 36 26 11 13 9 No
Larry Bird*[92][93][a] February 18, 1985 Boston Celtics Utah Jazz 33 30 12 10 9 No
Micheal Ray Richardson[94] October 30, 1985 New Jersey Nets Indiana Pacers 54 38 11 11 9 Yes (3 OT)
Clyde Drexler*[90] January 10, 1986 Portland Trail Blazers Milwaukee Bucks 42 26 9 11 10 No
Hakeem Olajuwon*[95][b] March 3, 1990 Houston Rockets Golden State Warriors 40 29 18 9[b] 5 11 No
Clyde Drexler*[96] November 1, 1996 Houston Rockets Sacramento Kings 42 25 10 9 10 No

Notes

  • a Bird sat out the entire fourth quarter. After three quarters, head coach K. C. Jones informed Bird that he was one steal away from a quadruple-double and asked if he wanted to stay in the game. Bird declined, saying that he "already did enough damage."[97][98]
  • b Olajuwon was credited with 9 assists in the original box score. However, after Rockets officials reviewed the game tape and discovered what they believe was an uncredited assist in the first quarter, they revised the box score, crediting Olajuwon with 10 assists and the third quadruple-double in NBA history. NBA's director of operations, Rod Thorn, requested to review the tape. After reviewing the tape, the league disallowed Olajuwon's quadruple-double and announced that his original line—with 9 assists—is official.[99][100]

Other men's basketball edit

League Name Date Team Opponent Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks Overtime Reference
NJCAA Clifford Wilson February 14, 1979 Fulton-Montgomery Hudson Valley 31 18 10 15 No [101]
French National League Derrick Lewis[c] February 24, 1990 Reims Lorient 20 11 12 10 No [102]
National Basketball League (Australia) Daren Rowe[d] July 28, 1990 Geelong Supercats North Melbourne Giants 25 17 11 11 No [103][104]
NJCAA Monroe Pippins February 9, 1995 Fulton-Montgomery Herkimer 34 17 10 11 No [citation needed]
NJCAA Steve Francis November 16, 1997 Allegany College of Maryland Vincennes 24 10 11 10 [105]
Metropolitan Basketball Association Donbel Belano August 14, 1999 Davao Eagles Nueva Ecija Patriots 19 11 11 10 No [106]
Úrvalsdeild karla Brenton Birmingham March 16, 2000 Grindavík Keflavík 17 14 10 10 No [107]
Úrvalsdeild karla Brenton Birmingham April 17, 2001 Njarðvík Tindastóll 28 10 11 10 No [108][109]
Chinese Basketball Association Hu Xuefeng December 8, 2004 Jiangsu Dragons Yunnan Bulls 16 10 12 10 No [110]
FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship Ricky Rubio August 19, 2006 Spain Croatia 19 10 13 11 No [106]
American Basketball Association (2000–) Jamel Staten February 2, 2007 Minnesota Ripknees St. Louis Stunners 17 11 11 10 No [111]
NCAA (Division I) Lester Hudson[e] November 13, 2007 UT Martin Central Baptist 25 12 10 10 1 No [78][112]
Continental Basketball Association Jermaine Blackburn December 20, 2008 East Kentucky Miners West Virginia Wild 22 10 14 10 No [113]
High school boys Jerrelle Benimon February 17, 2009 Fauquier HS Osbourn HS 13 17 11 10 No [114]
NCAA Juniors Division (Philippines) Joshua Saret July 23, 2009 JRU Light Bombers AUF Baby Danes 89 11 12 13 No [115]
Chinese Basketball Association Chris Williams December 25, 2009 Qingdao Doublestar Dongguan Leopards 15 11 11 11 No [116]
High school boys Isaiah Grant December 6, 2014 Sequoia Pathway Academy Berean Academy 11 10 10 10 No [117]
Ukrainian First league Vitaliy Bykov December 17, 2016 BC Zaporizhya-2 BC Kramatorsk 14 13 11 12 No [118]
High school boys Cameron Krutwig March 10, 2017 Jacobs High School Larkin High School 20 23 10 11 No [119]
Liga Super Basketball U-18 Natan Oliveira April 8, 2017 Colégio Sul Americano Rappers 32 11 10 16 No [120]
High school boys Andres Frye December 1, 2017 McLean School Model Secondary School for the Deaf 13 10 10 10 No [121]
High school boys Billy Whelan February 2, 2018 Hamilton-Wenham Regional High School Manchester Essex Regional High School 15 11 11 10 No [122]
High school boys Romeo Weems February 20, 2019 New Haven High School (Michigan) Detroit Edison Public School Academy 34 12 10 10 No [123]
1. Regionalliga Jonathan Braeger March 12, 2022 Baskets Vilsbiburg s.Oliver Würzburg Akademie 100 12 16 12 No [124][125]
Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League Krystoff "Kyt" Jimenez October 10, 2022 Sarangani Marlins Mindoro Tams 33 13 11 11 1 No [126][127]
1. muška liga Republike Srpske Filip Cvijetinović December 16, 2023 Drina Princip Zvornik Derventa 18 10 11 10 No [128]

Notes

  • c This is the only quadruple-double in French National League history.[102]
  • d This is the only quadruple-double in National Basketball League history.[103]
  • e This is the only quadruple-double in NCAA Division I men's basketball history.[78] The opponent, Central Baptist, plays in the NAIA.

Women's basketball edit

  • United States college records mostly are accurate as of February 2019. NCAA records are complete for Divisions I and II, but not for Division III; specifically, entering the 2018–19 season, there have been a total of eight quadruple-doubles in Division III play, and one player, Suzy Venet of Mount Union (1994–1998), had two in her career, both in the 1996–97 season.[129] NAIA records are also incomplete.[according to whom?]
League Name Date Team Opponent Points Rebounds Assists Steals Blocks Reference
AIAW Division I Ann Meyers February 18, 1978 UCLA Stephen F. Austin 20 14 10 10 [77]
NCAA Division I Jackie Spencer[a] February 2, 1985 Louisville Cincinnati 14 12 14 10 [130]
NAIA Suzanne Gonzales[b] February 11, 1989 Southern Colorado Western State[133] 13 12 10 11 [132]
NCAA Division I Veronica Pettry March 4, 1989 Loyola (Chicago) Detroit 12 10 22 11 [130]
NCAA Division I Ramona Jones January 14, 1991 Lamar UCF 10 10 10 12 [130]
NCAA Division I Sonja Tate January 27, 1993 Arkansas State Mississippi Valley State 29 14 10 10 [130]
Úrvalsdeild kvenna Penny Peppas October 15, 1996 Grindavík ÍR 52 16 11 10 [134][135]
American Basketball League Debbie Black December 8, 1996 Colorado Xplosion Atlanta Glory 10 14 12 10 [136][137]
NCAA Division II Tereska Watkins February 8, 1997 Fort Valley State unknown 12 12 10 10 [132]
NCAA Division III Katherine Santiago December 7, 1999 Lehman SUNY-Purchase 23 10 13 12 [138]
Russian Premier League Maria Kalmykova January 21, 2001 Chevakata Vologda Dynamo Kursk 20 15 11 11 [139]
European U16 Championship Anastasiya Verameyenka April 20, 2003 Belarus U16 Czech U16 21 10 10 12 [140]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] October 17, 2003 Haukar Breiðablik 37 15 10 10 [142]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] October 30, 2003 Haukar Hamar 41 11 15 11 [143]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] November 18, 2003 Haukar Laugdælir 24 12 10 11 [144]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] December 14, 2003 Haukar Hrunamenn 38 11 15 13 [145]
NCAA Division III Evita Esteves February 5, 2004 Emmanuel (MA) Johnson & Wales 10 10 11 13 [146][147]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] February 8, 2004 Haukar Breiðablik 41 12 13 14 [148]
1. deild kvenna Helena Sverrisdóttir[c] March 27, 2004 Haukar Hrunamenn 45 20 20 10 [149]
Úrvalsdeild kvenna Reshea Bristol November 10, 2005 Keflavík Grindavík 30 16 10 10 [150][135]
NCAA Division III Danna Purnell February 10, 2007 SUNY-Old Westbury New Rochelle 14 10 11 13 [146][151]
NCAA Division III Latiqua Williams November 16, 2008 Bard New Rochelle 21 13 10 11 [152]
Israeli Premier League Edwina Brown December 2008 Ramat Hen Hapoel Holon 22 10 10 10 [153]
Greek A1 Ethniki Zoi Dimitrakou March 22, 2009 G.S. Megas Alexandros Aris Holargou 49 18 10 12 [154]
Icelandic Company Cup Heather Ezell September 25, 2009 Haukar Njarðvík 24 13 10 10 [155][156]
Úrvalsdeild kvenna Heather Ezell January 9, 2010 Haukar Valur 25 15 11 10 [157][158]
Ukrainian SuperLeague Alina Iagupova May 15, 2011 BC Dnipro Luhanski Lastivky 28 15 13 10 Stats
FIBA U16 European Championship Ana Ferariu August 7, 2013 Romania U16 Ireland U16 23 12 10 10 Stats[159]
High School girls Aminata Ly December 12, 2017 Greenforest Academy W.D. Mohammed 23 16 11 14 [160][161]
Úrvalsdeild kvenna Kristen McCarthy December 3, 2017 Snæfell Njarðvík 31 15 10 12 [162][163]
NCAA Division I Shakyla Hill January 3, 2018 Grambling State Alabama State 15 10 10 10 [164]
1. deild kvenna Sylvía Rún Hálfdánardóttir January 5, 2019 Þór Akureyri Njarðvík 11 13 10 10 [165][166]
NCAA Division I Shakyla Hill February 2, 2019 Grambling State Arkansas–Pine Bluff 21 16 13 10 [167]
First Women's Basketball League of Serbia Shakyla Hill January 25, 2020 ŽKK Kraljevo Partizan 1953 15 10 11 11 [168]
1. deild kvenna Jordan Danberry November 8, 2023 Aþena ÍR 40 13 12 17 [169]
Notes
  1. ^ The NCAA does not consider Spencer's quadruple-double to be official. Although the Metro Conference, then home to both teams involved in this game, kept records in all of the relevant statistical categories in the 1984–85 season, the NCAA did not. Assists were not recorded throughout Division I women's basketball until 1985–86, and steals were not so recorded until 1987–88.[130]
  2. ^ Although Gonzales played for a school that is now a member of NCAA Division II, the NCAA does not consider her quadruple-double to be official for two reasons. First, the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference, then as now home to both teams involved in this game, then competed in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), and was not an NCAA conference until 1992–93.[131] In addition, the NCAA did not record steals throughout Division II women's basketball until 1992–93.[132]
  3. ^ a b c d e f During the 2003-2004 1. deild kvenna season, Helena averaged a quadruple-double with 37.6 points, 13.3 rebounds, 11.6 assists and 10.2 steals. Out of the 16 games she played, she posted a quadruple-double in six of them.[141]

Quintuple-double edit

A quintuple-double is a single-game performance by a player who accumulates double-digits in all five statistical categories—points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocked shots—in a single game.[170] There are only four known officially recorded quintuple-doubles, all done at the girls' high-school level. The first was recorded by Tamika Catchings of Duncanville High School (Duncanville, Texas) with 25 points, 18 rebounds, 11 assists, 10 steals, and 10 blocks in 1997.[171] The second was by Alex Montgomery of Lincoln High School (Tacoma, Washington), who had 27 points, 22 rebounds, 10 assists, 10 steals, and 10 blocks in January 2007.[172] The third was by Aimee Oertner of Northern Lehigh High School (Slatington, Pennsylvania), who had 26 points, 20 rebounds, 10 assists, 10 steals, and 11 blocks on January 7, 2012.[173] The most recent was Kieonna Christmas of Fonda Fultonville, who had 11 points, 20 rebounds, 11 assists, 10 steals, and 10 blocks on February 22nd, 2024.[174]

Wilt Chamberlain allegedly recorded a quintuple-double on March 18, 1968 with 53 points, 32 rebounds, 14 assists, 24 blocks, and 11 steals. However, before 1974, prior to Chamberlain's retirement, steals and blocks were not officially recorded by the NBA. Statistician Harvey Pollack, who spectated the game, reported that Chamberlain might have had more than one quintuple-double.[175]

As of January 2023, there is no overlap between the 14 players who have recorded 10+ steals in an NBA game and the 36 players who have recorded 10+ blocks in a game; in other words, no NBA player's career-high stat line is a quintuple-double.[176][177] The best single-game career high in blocks for a player with a game of 10+ steals is 5 by Draymond Green,[178][179] and the best single-game career high in steals for a player with a game of 10+ blocks is 8 (Andrei Kirilenko[180] and Hakeem Olajuwon[181]).

Five-by-five edit

A five-by-five is a performance in which a player accumulates a total of five in five statistical categories—points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks—in a single game.[182] Statistics for steals and blocks were not kept in the NBA until the 1973–74 season, so all NBA five-by-fives are known only from that season onward. Hakeem Olajuwon (six times) and Andrei Kirilenko (three times) are the only players to have recorded multiple five-by-fives (based on records since the 1984–85 season).[182] Both are also the only players to record six-by-fives (at least six in all five statistical categories).[182] Only twice has a five-by-five coincided with a triple-double (both by Olajuwon, one of which was 1 assist shy of a quadruple-double) and only three times has a player recorded a five-by-five without registering at least a double-double (two by Kirilenko and one by Marcus Camby).

Facts edit

All facts based on data since the 1985–86 season:

  • Greatest five-by-fives (most of each stat): Hakeem Olajuwon, on March 10, 1987, became the first in NBA history to record a six-by-five (at least 6 each of all five statistics: points, rebounds, assists, blocks, steals).[183] It took nearly twenty years for the second official occurrence in NBA history. Andrei Kirilenko, on January 3, 2006, recorded a six-by-five against the Lakers.[184]
  • Most five-by-fives in a career: Hakeem Olajuwon leads all players with 6 career five-by-fives.[182] Andrei Kirilenko, with 3, is the only other player with more than one career five-by-five.[185]
  • Most five-by-fives in the same season: Only twice has a player recorded at least two five-by-fives in a season. Olajuwon with three in the 1993–94 season, and Kirilenko with two in the 2003–04 season.[186]
  • Quickest pair of five-by-fives: Kirilenko performed a five-by-five on December 3, 2003, and completed another just a week later, on December 10, 2003. The second-quickest five-by-fives were completed by Olajuwon on November 5, 1993, and another, 55 days later, on December 30, 1993.
  • Quickest to reach a five-by-five in a game: Victor Wembanyama in 30 minutes and 55 seconds vs the Los Angeles Lakers on February 23, 2024[187]
  • Youngest player: Victor Wembanyama is the youngest player to record a five-by-five, which he did on February 23, 2024 when he was 20 years, 50 days of age.[188]
  • Oldest player: Olajuwon is the oldest player to record a five-by-five. His last career five-by-five came on December 30, 1993, at which time he was 30 years, 343 days old.[189]

See also edit

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