We are officially under a month away from the end of the NBA regular season, and the hierarchy in the Western Conference has become a game of extremes. Six teams have already secured their postseason spots, but there is a huge disparity between the contenders and the bottom-feeders. The 11th seed is currently sitting eight games behind the play-in threshold and a massive 17 games back from the 6th spot, making the race for the middle of the pack almost non-existent.
Over in the East, it’s a similar story: three teams have already been mathematically eliminated, while the Detroit Pistons, yes, you read that right, stand as the only team with a playoff spot fully secured. As the schedule winds down, the hardware debates are reaching a fever pitch.
The MVP race is once again a photo finish between the reigning winner, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and Nikola Jokic, both of whom have spent the last two years trading blows at the top of the ladder. Meanwhile, the Rookie of the Year race has evolved into a two-man showdown between former Duke teammates.
While the first overall pick Cooper Flagg has the highlight reel, Kon Knueppel has the availability. Knueppel has missed just one game all year, playing 11 more than Flagg, while leading the entire NBA in three-pointers made, having already shattered the league’s rookie record from deep.
Cooper Flagg’s Historic Run: Surpassing Kobe Bryant in the Teenage Scoring Ranks
While Knueppel has the volume, Cooper Flagg is proving to be the more complete generational prospect. Earlier this season, Flagg dropped 49 points in a single outing, the most ever by an NBA teenager and the highest rookie mark since Allen Iverson went for 50 back in 1997.
Despite a tough 138-105 home loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers on Friday, Flagg was the lone bright spot for Dallas, finishing with a team-high 25 points. That performance wasn’t just another night at the office; it was his 25th game of the season scoring 20 or more points.
With that bucket, Flagg officially moved past the late Kobe Bryant (24 games) to claim the sixth spot on the all-time list of 20-point games by a teenager. Passing a name like Kobe is a massive statement for the Mavs rookie, especially considering he’s doing it in an era where defensive schemes are specifically designed to neutralize primary options like him.
The Elite Tier: Can Flagg Chase Down LeBron, Carmelo, and Durant?
The road ahead for Flagg to break into the top three is steep, but certainly not impossible. The “Teenage Scoring Pantheon” is currently led by LeBron James with a staggering 62 games of 20+ points before his 20th birthday. Behind him sit Carmelo Anthony (49) and Kevin Durant (44). Flagg currently finds himself behind two other modern stars: Anthony Edwards (36) and Luka Doncic (33).
However, the math is on Flagg’s side. With 15 games left in this regular season and the fact that he doesn’t turn 20 until late December, he has over 35 games of “teenage eligibility” remaining. If he maintains his current scoring pace, he is almost guaranteed to leapfrog Luka and “Ant-Man,” with a very real shot at catching Durant for third place.
LeBron’s record of 62 remains the “untouchable” gold standard of the group, but by simply entering the conversation with Carmelo and KD, Flagg is cementing his status as the most polished scoring prospect we’ve seen in a decade.
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