Baltimore Bullets Vs St. Louis Hawks

Mar 1, 1967 122 - 112 Final
Baltimore Bullets logo

Baltimore Bullets

PLAYER Pts Reb Ast MIN 2M-2A 3M-3A FG% 1M-1A 1% Or Dr Reb Ast To Stl Blk Fo Pts Eff
John Barnhill 27 5 8 44 10-15 - 66.7% 7-9 77.8% 0 5 5 8 0 0 0 2 27
Ray Scott 25 18 3 40 7-14 - 50.0% 11-15 73.3% 0 18 18 3 0 0 0 4 25
Jack Marin 24 6 2 29 11-17 - 64.7% 2-4 50.0% 0 6 6 2 0 0 0 3 24
Kevin Loughery 20 5 3 37 8-17 - 47.1% 4-7 57.1% 0 5 5 3 0 0 0 4 20
Johnny Egan 12 4 5 16 4-8 - 50.0% 4-4 100.0% 0 4 4 5 0 0 0 3 12
Leroy Ellis 7 11 5 43 3-7 - 42.9% 1-4 25.0% 0 11 11 5 0 0 0 1 7
Gus Johnson 4 4 0 16 2-6 - 33.3% 0-0 - 0 4 4 0 0 0 0 6 4
Ben Warley 3 4 1 15 1-3 - 33.3% 1-2 50.0% 0 4 4 1 0 0 0 4 3
Baltimore Bullets logo
Baltimore Bullets
122 57 27 240 46-87 0-0 52.9% 30-45 66.7% 0 57 57 27 0 0 0 27 122 0
St. Louis Hawks logo

St. Louis Hawks

PLAYER Pts Reb Ast MIN 2M-2A 3M-3A FG% 1M-1A 1% Or Dr Reb Ast To Stl Blk Fo Pts Eff
Zelmo Beaty 24 12 0 37 8-17 - 47.1% 8-10 80.0% 0 12 12 0 0 0 0 5 24
Rod Thorn 20 5 5 28 9-17 - 52.9% 2-5 40.0% 0 5 5 5 0 0 0 2 20
Paul Silas 17 13 2 28 7-10 - 70.0% 3-4 75.0% 0 13 13 2 0 0 0 4 17
Richard Guerin 14 5 3 29 6-16 - 37.5% 2-4 50.0% 0 5 5 3 0 0 0 4 14
Joe Caldwell 11 14 3 42 5-17 - 29.4% 1-6 16.7% 0 14 14 3 0 0 0 2 11
Lenny Wilkens 9 5 7 34 4-12 - 33.3% 1-1 100.0% 0 5 5 7 0 0 0 4 9
Lou Hudson 9 4 2 21 4-13 - 30.8% 1-1 100.0% 0 4 4 2 0 0 0 3 9
Bill Bridges 8 6 2 21 4-9 - 44.4% 0-2 0.0% 0 6 6 2 0 0 0 4 8
St. Louis Hawks logo
St. Louis Hawks
112 64 24 240 47-111 0-0 42.3% 18-33 54.5% 0 64 64 24 0 0 0 28 112 0

Boxscore glossary

Basketball stats abbreviations

  • MIN: Minutes played
  • 2M-2A: Two-points field goal made, attempted
  • 3M-3A: Three-points field goal made, attempted
  • FG%: Field goal percentage
  • 1M-1A: Free throws made, attempted
  • 1%: Free throw percentage
  • Or: Offensive rebounds
  • Dr: Defensive rebounds
  • Reb: Total rebounds
  • Ast: Assists
  • Stl: Steals
  • Blk: Blocks
  • Fo: Personal fouls
  • Pts: Points scored
  • Eff: Efficiency

If a player records double digits in a game in two of the PTS, REB, AST, STL or BLK statistics, he has a double-double. If he does it in three of this categories, he has a triple-double. If he does it in four categories he has a quadruple-double. Having a triple-double is considered as having a great game. Quadruple-doubles are extremely rare. Having one constitutes an historical performance. The last NBA player to record a quadruple double is David Robinson: it happened on February 17, 1994