NBA Christmas Day Preview
QUOTE OF THE DAY
For us to be able to play on that day and allow the fans to get a glimpse of us, showcase our skills, and also allow them to enjoy a beautiful game of basketball.
— Player development assistant for the Brooklyn Nets and former NBA player Amar'e Stoudemire, on why he loved playing on Christmas Day. And what a beautiful game it is.
🎁 The origin story
The NFL has Thanksgiving, the NHL has New Year’s Day, and the NBA has Christmas. The league’s best teams have met on December 25th each year since 1947, just one year after the Basketball Association of America (which later became the NBA) was formed.
- The first ever Christmas Day game was held in the iconic Madison Square Garden, where the NY Knicks beat the Providence Steamrollers. We’re sorry, who?
- In 1967, the LA Lakers vs. the San Diego Rockets tilt became the first nationally televised Christmas Day game, the first of many to be watched with full stomachs while your grandparent snores on the couch.
There’s only one season in the tradition’s 74-year history when games weren’t held on December 25th, and that was in 1998. The league was in a lockout over a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) dispute, so the NBA (and the fans) missed out. (Touchy subject, MLB?)
- But the NBA learned their lesson, because when CBA haggling delayed the 2011 season start, the parties somehow settled their differences in time for tip off on 12/25. A Christmas miracle.
💫 The best and brightest
Now that you have the backstory, let’s get into the most memorable Christmas Day games.
1984: You know Kevin Durant, and Steph Curry, and LeBron James, and Trae Young…but do you recall the most famous Christmas Day player of all?
- Former Knick Bernard King holds the individual Xmas Day scoring record of 60 (!!!) points, which he scored against the then–New Jersey, now–Brooklyn Nets. Maybe this year current Net KD can top it?
1995: Like adding cayenne to your hot chocolate, the NBA decided to spice things up when they scheduled a Christmas rematch featuring the teams from the previous season’s finals.
- The Orlando Magic (starring a young Shaquille O’Neal) avenged their finals loss to the Houston Rockets thanks to a game-winner with three seconds left.
2008: The LA Lakers made the Boston Celtics look like cotton-headed ninny muggins when LA snapped Boston’s 19-game win streak in a rematch of the teams’ finals series the previous year. Kobe Bryant led the Lakers with 27 points. A legend.
2017: In another classic Xmas showdown, the Golden State Warriors battled the Cleveland Cavaliers for the third straight year. Tied late in the fourth quarter, Klay Thompson drained one of his signature three-pointers to give the superteam the win.
- The top thing on Warriors fans’ wishlists this year? Thompson’s comeback. After missing 2019 with a torn ACL and this past year with an Achilles injury, he has finally returned to practices and is likely to debut in the new year.
2021: Both teams from last season’s finals —the Milwaukee Bucks and the Phoenix Suns —are slated to play on Saturday, but the games we’re most excited about are the Lakers vs. the Nets at 8 p.m. ET followed by the Dallas Mavericks vs. the Utah Jazz at 10:30 p.m. ET. Hoopy holidays, indeed.
🎅 Santa brought the drip
Just like your holiday celebrations, the NBA has plenty of traditions. One we wish they’d bring back is the special edition Christmas jerseys. From 2012 to 2016, adidas released holiday jerseys just for the Christmas Day games. All about the drip.
Another tradition? The iconic Christmas commercials. Featuring basketball stars from past and present, the ads are almost as entertaining as the games. Our favorite, you ask?
- While broadcaster Pat O’Brien’s Christmas poem in 1984 is a classic, we love 2013’s Jingle Hoops featuring LeBron in a Miami jersey (throwback!) and 2017’s Carol of the Basketballs with Broadway star Daveed Diggs.
- This year’s “Family Dinner” commercial got everyone involved, from Suns superfan Mr. ORNG to WNBA legend Sue Bird. Guess our invite got lost in the mail.
👻 The ghost of Christmas present
Every good Christmas story features a Scrooge trying to ruin the fun.NBA Christmas, meet the Omicron COVID-19 variant that’s bent on surprising everyone for the holidays as it sweeps across the league (and if you’re tired of hearing COVID-19-related updates, trust us, we are too).
- Unfortunately, some stars slated to play on Christmas have entered health and safety protocols within the past week — including Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo (pronounced YAH-niss ah-det-oh-KOON-boh), Brooklyn’s James Harden and the Knicks’ RJ Barrett.
And while some fans say the league should’ve taken a break in anticipation of the holiday surge, others are calling for the NBA to swap out teams hit hard by COVID-19 for the Christmas Day games. For now, the league is implementing more frequent testing along with a mask mandate over the holidays.
- Whether or not they decide to do more, one thing’s for sure: Christmas is too important to the NBA to be cancelled. We’ll keep you posted as the situation evolves, but let’s hope Adam Silver’s elves still have some holiday magic up their sleeves.
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