63 Crazy Details from Michael Jordan’s 63-Point Playoff Game
Larry Bird called him “God disguised as Michael Jordan” in a show for the ages. Here’s everything you forgot about that game…
MICHAEL JORDAN ONCE SCORED 63 POINTS IN A PLAYOFF GAME AGAINST THE BOSTON CELTICS. That’s the part you definitely remember. I remember it. I remember staying up late and watching it live on the old box TV encased in wood in my basement with my parents and older brothers. I remember Jordan scoring bucket after bucket against the vaunted Celtics, heroically keeping the Bulls in the game. I genuinely definitely remember this. It’s my first memory as a human. I can picture every detail.
Except I can’t. I don’t actually remember it. Because I was not quite 3 years old, and humans don’t have memories of sports games at age 2. I think.
Anyway, NBA TV re-aired the 63-point game and I thought I’d watch it. Or maybe re-watch. I definitely remember the 63 points. Here are 63 other crazy little details I definitely forgot…
- MJ’s 63 points are the most all-time in any playoff game, just ahead of Elgin Baylor’s 61 in 1962. Wilt Chamberlain scored 56 the same year, tied for third all-time with Jordan in 1992 and Charles Barkley in 1994.
- The Bulls lost the game despite Jordan’s heroics.
- The game went to double overtime. Final score: 135 to 131.
- The Celtics led by two in regulation with seconds to play. The Bulls led by two in overtime with seconds to play. Neither hung on to win.
- Both Michael Jordan and Larry Bird missed potential game-winning shots at the buzzer.
- Jordan’s 63 points didn’t happen just anywhere. They came on the road at the historic Boston Garden.
- The Celtics went 40–1 at home that season. Their one loss was to the Portland Trail Blazers.
- The Celtics finished 10–0 at home in the playoffs, an NBA record 50–1 record at home for the season.
- Boston went on to win the NBA championship.
- The 63-point game happened on April 20, 1986.
- These weren’t just any Celtics. These were the ‘86 Celtics, widely considered one of the greatest teams in NBA history.
- The ‘86 Celtics featured Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Bill Walton, Robert Parish, and Dennis Johnson, five Hall of Famers. They were coached by 8-time NBA champion K.C. Jones, another Hall of Famer.
- The ‘86 Bulls were not one of the greatest teams of all time. They were hardly memorable at all, outside of this game. Chicago went just 30–52.
- Michael Jordan played only 18 games that year after breaking a small bone in his foot in the third game of his sophomore season.
- It was supposed to be a season-ending injury. Instead Jordan came back in March to lead the Bulls to the final Eastern playoff spot, then set the NBA record for points in a playoff game.
- The 63-point game was only Jordan’s 9th start of the season. He came off the bench for 11 regular season games in his return from injury.
- The Bulls went 9–9 (.500) with Jordan and 21–43 (.328) without him. They only even made the playoffs because 8 of the 10 East teams made it in 1986. Chicago had the fourth worst record in the entire NBA.
- Michael Jordan dragged the third-worst team in the NBA to the playoffs on a broken foot, then scored a playoff-record 63 points against one of the greatest teams in NBA history on their almost-invincible home court.
- Three days earlier, Jordan scored 49 points in Boston in a Game 1 loss. The Celtics finished the sweep in Game 3.
- Jordan shot 22 of 41 from the field. He didn’t take a single three-pointer.
- MJ spent the game guarded by elite defenders Dennis Johnson and Danny Ainge, with Kevin McHale and Robert Parish at the rim. The Celtics were the league’s #1 defense. All but three of Jordan’s shots were contested.
- Jordan lived at the line that night, hitting 19 of 21 free throws.
- Two of those free throws came at the end of regulation with the game on the line and no time on the clock.
- Down two with six seconds left, Jordan took the inbound pass, dribbled past Dennis Johnson, and shot a long jumper over Kevin McHale as the buzzer sounded. The shot clanged out but the ref blew for a foul.
- Jordan went to the line for two must-have free throws, sitting on 52 points and a chance for one of the biggest upsets in playoff history.
- Because there was no time on the clock, it was just Jordan, the parquet court, an empty lane, and a raucous arena of screaming fans.
- The first free throw rattled around and used every part of the rim before dropping through the net.
- Jordan stepped away, then calmly stepped back to the line, and swished the tying free throw to send it to overtime, with a signature Jordan fist pump to celebrate.
- Jordan finished regulation with 54 points.
- It’s possible he should have had 55.
- Watch the video of the game. Jordan stops behind the arc, pulls up, and gets called for the foul. It certainly looks like a three. Watch his feet. They sure look like they’re behind the arc.
- Jordan should have had three free throws. He should have had a chance to win the game in regulation.
- Except not. The rules back then awarded only two free throws on a three-point attempt. Those rules lasted until 1995. James Harden was six.
- Or maybe Jordan should have had no free throws at all.
- Watch the replay again. This time, watch McHale leaping out at him. Where exactly is the foul? How is that a foul??
- Imagine being that referee in that arena in that moment calling a touch foul on a jump shot against that team.
- Maybe Michael Jordan really did get all the calls.
- Maybe two free throws was a good compromise. The game deserved overtime, and Jordan wouldn’t have scored his 63 without it.
- Those 54 points in regulation were already the second most all-time against the Celtics in any playoff game.
- The only player to score more against the Celtics? Elgin Baylor, whose record 61 also came against Boston in the NBA Finals 24 years earlier.
- Baylor also held the all-time record for points against the Celtics in any game (64) until Devin Booker’s 70. Baylor played in eight NBA Finals in a 12-year stretch. Seven were against the Boston Celtics. He lost all seven.
- Only Jerry West, LeBron James, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar have scored more Finals points than Baylor and Jordan.
- Jordan ranks 4th all-time in Finals points. He played only 35 Finals games, nine fewer than anyone else in the top 10. His 33.6ppg in the Finals ranks second all-time to Rick Barry’s 36.3.
- The Celtics entered the first overtime period without Bill Walton, who fouled out in regulation. They left it without Dennis Johnson, another DQ.
- Jordan fouled both of them out, of course.
- Jordan scored five points in the first overtime and the Bulls led by 2 with 15 seconds remaining.
- In the final minute of overtime, Jordan had a turnover and a missed shot and allowed an open layup to Ainge to tie the game. He also missed a go-ahead bucket with two seconds on the clock in a tie game.
- Larry Bird had a three at the buzzer to win it but hit the back of the rim. Bird played all but two minutes for Boston, finishing with 36 points, 12 rebounds, and 8 assists.
- Jordan and Bird weren’t the only NBA legends playing that day. Hall of Famer George Gervin also played five minutes for the Bulls.
- Gervin scored 16ppg that season, starting 75 games in Jordan’s place. He didn’t score in this one, one of only four scoreless games in his career.
- Gervin did not even get a shot up. It was the only such game of his career. Gervin didn’t play in Game 3. He then retired.
- Michael Jordan’s 63-point game was the final game of George Gervin’s career.
- Jordan played the other 53 minutes Gervin sat. He led Chicago with 6 of the team’s 15 assists.
- Fifteen assists on 131 points. Cuz MJ had to score most of his points all on his own. And he had to score them against a pissed-off Dennis Johnson, who had just given up 49 points to Jordan three days before.
- The same Dennis Johnson who had just been named to his eighth consecutive All-Defense team.
- In the second half, Johnson began face guarding Jordan off the ball, the same box-and-one zone defense the Raptors used against Steph Curry.
- MJ scored 31 second-half points anyway.
- In the second overtime, the Celtics began trapping Jordan in the back court to get the ball out of his hands.
- Jordan still hit two jumpers in the final minute to tie the game at 131.
- Michael Jordan played 53 minutes on a broken foot with a 30–52 squad against five Hall of Famers at the arena where they went 50–1 and dropped 63 points on that team, nearly beating them single-handedly.
- Imagine if you took this year’s Atlanta Hawks, gave them Michael Jordan, and asked them to beat the 73–9 Warriors at home in the playoffs… and then they almost did.
- Michael Jordan was only 23 years old.
- Said Larry Bird after the game: “I think he’s God disguised as Michael Jordan. He is the most awesome player in the NBA.” ■



