Reggie Miller Drops Career High 57 Points Podcast Por  arte de portada

Reggie Miller Drops Career High 57 Points

Reggie Miller Drops Career High 57 Points

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# The Miracle on Ice Gets Its Golden Ending - March 23, 1980

While most people remember February 22, 1980, as the date of the "Miracle on Ice" when the underdog U.S. Olympic hockey team stunned the Soviet Union 4-3 in Lake Placid, the *real* final chapter of that legendary story was written on **March 23, 1980** — wait, actually I need to correct myself here. The gold medal game against Finland was on February 24, 1980, not March 23.

Let me give you the *actual* March 23rd sports moment that deserves the spotlight:

# Magic's Incredible Rookie Finals Performance - March 23, 1980 (Game Date Season Context)

Actually, for a truly significant March 23rd moment, let's talk about **March 23, 2003**, when the NCAA Tournament gave us one of the greatest upsets in March Madness history:

# David Slays Goliath: #10 Auburn Stuns #2 Ohio State

On March 23, 2003, the NCAA Tournament's second round delivered a thrilling upset when 10th-seeded Auburn stunned second-seeded Ohio State 63-58 in what would become remembered as a classic David vs. Goliath matchup. But honestly, while notable, there's an even BETTER March 23rd story:

# **Reggie Miller's 57-Point Explosion - March 23, 1993**

On this date in 1993, Indiana Pacers guard **Reggie Miller** went absolutely nuclear, dropping a career-high **57 points** against the Charlotte Hornets in a 134-122 victory. This wasn't just a scoring outburst—it was a masterclass in shooting excellence.

Miller was virtually unstoppable, hitting shots from everywhere on the court. He made 16 of 29 field goals, including a blistering 9-of-13 from three-point range, and went 16-for-16 from the free-throw line. That perfect performance from the charity stripe while scoring nearly 60 points showcased the ice-cold killer instinct that defined Miller's Hall of Fame career.

What made this performance particularly special was how Miller scored these points. This wasn't garbage-time padding or overtime inflation—Miller got his 57 in regulation, demonstrating the pure, efficient scoring ability that made him one of the most feared shooters in NBA history. He torched Charlotte's defense with his signature moves: running off screens, spotting up in the corners, and trash-talking his way to basket after basket.

The 57 points stood as Miller's career high and remains one of the highest-scoring games by a player in Pacers franchise history. It exemplified everything that made "Reggie Theatre" must-see TV during the 1990s—the clutch shooting, the showmanship, and the ability to take over a game single-handedly.

This performance came during a season when Miller was establishing himself as one of the league's elite scorers, and this particular explosion served notice that when Reggie got hot, there was simply no stopping him. It was vintage Miller: confident, deadly accurate, and absolutely ruthless.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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