Shai Gilgeous-Alexander Broke an Allen Iverson NBA Record in First Two Finals Games

SGA's scoring outbursts through two games set an NBA Finals record.
Gilgeous-Alexander shoots the ball over Siakam during the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center.
Gilgeous-Alexander shoots the ball over Siakam during the 2025 NBA Finals at Paycom Center. / Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images
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Oklahoma City Thunder superstar and NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was bound to put up numbers in his first NBA Finals appearance. But through his first two games, he scored at a record pace.

He had 34 points, eight assists, five rebounds and four steals in the Thunder's 123–107 win over the Indiana Pacers Sunday to even the series at one game apiece before it heads to Indianapolis. Gilgeous-Alexander's 34-point night followed a 38-point game in the difficult Game 1 loss.

With 72 points through the first two games of the series, Gilgeous-Alexander set the record for the most points ever by a player through their first two career NBA Finals games, according to NBA PR. The honor was held previously by Allen Iverson, who scored 71 points in his first two NBA Finals games, which came in 2001 with the Philadelphia 76ers. He dropped 48 points in his NBA Finals debut, which remains the most points scored in a NBA Finals debut for any player. The 48-point performance gave Iverson's 76ers a win over the Los Angeles Lakers, which turned into L.A.'s only playoff loss that season as they eventually eliminated the Sixers and won the NBA title in five games.

Gilgeous-Alexander's heroics are nothing new for the Thunder as he averaged 32.7 points per game over the regular season on his way to the league's MVP award. Over the postseason, he's averaging 30.2 points, 6.7 assists and 5.6 rebounds per game. The Thunder now head to Indianapolis to try and claim the series lead in Game 3, which tips off Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. ET.


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Blake Silverman
BLAKE SILVERMAN

Blake Silverman is a contributor to the Breaking and Trending News team at Sports Illustrated. Before joining SI in November 2024, he covered the WNBA, NBA, G League and college basketball for numerous sites, including Winsidr, SB Nation's Detroit Bad Boys and A10Talk. He graduated from Michigan State University before receiving a master's in sports journalism from St. Bonaventure University. Outside of work, he's probably binging the latest Netflix documentary, at a yoga studio or enjoying everything Detroit sports. A lifelong Michigander, he lives in suburban Detroit with his wife, young son and their personal petting zoo of two cats and a dog.