MONDAY was a day for the history books for Dirk Nowitzki. In front of a sell-out crowd at American Airlines Center, Nowitzki passed Hall of Famer Wilt Chamberlain for the sixth-most points of all-time. And he did it in the most Dirk way possible: by hitting a fade-away 20-foot jumper. The Dallas Mavericks forward came into the night just three points shy of Chamberlain’s 31,419 career mark and needed less than four minutes to pass him in Monday’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans. In just his ninth start of the season, Nowitzki began his scoring with another 20-foot jumper two minutes into the game. He found Tim Hardaway Jr. for a corner three to pick up an assist the next time down the court, and two possessions later, he hit the milestone shot. Now in his 21st season, Nowitzki has moved to a bench role for the first time since his rookie season, but he remains a vital part of the Mavericks’ organization. In many ways, this season has been a passing of the baton to fellow European stars Luka Doncic and newly acquired Kristaps Porzingis. Nowitzki is averaging a career-low 6.0 points in 13.8 minutes per game, and many people believe this will be his final season. NBA commissioner Adam Silver named Nowitzki and Miami Heat star Dwyane Wade to this year’s All-Star game as special roster additions as a send-off gift of sorts. The Mavericks sent out a mysterious message from their Twitter account Monday afternoon with the message 41.21.1, which many people assumed meant that Nowitzki might also announce his retirement. Of course, 41 is his number, and he’s spent 21 years in the league with one team. With just 12 games left in the season — and quite likely his career — there are only so many more records Nowitzki can break. Even if he played another season, he would be unlikely to pass Michael Jordan for fifth place — as LeBron James just did — since that would take nearly another 1,000 points. However, Nowitzki can extend his record for most points scored by a player born outside the U.S. — a record two of his teammates may later threaten. Nowitzki passed Houston Rockets legend Hakeem Olajuwon in 2014 and has outscored him by nearly 4,500 points. Nowitzki could also move up slightly on the all-time rebounds leaderboard. Although it wouldn’t be a nice, round number, Nowitzki can still pass Elgin Baylor (11,463) for the 27th-most career rebounds.(SD-Agencies) |