My top 10 I’ve had the good fortune of seeing in person:
#10: Rockets 133, Kings 93 - Dec 12th, 1995
Hakeem Olajuwon dominated with 31 points and 15 rebounds as Houston curb-stomped the Kings by 40. But Olajuwon was joined by pretty standout performances from Drexler, Horry, and Cassell in the onslaught, so it’s hard to spotlight just one guy from that miserable night at Arco.
#9: A’s 7, Blue Jays 3 - May 8th, 2012
Brandon Inge gave me an early birthday present with a walk-off grand slam over the Jays. Prior to this though he was 0-4 with 2 strikeouts and hit into a double play, so really just the best single at-bat I’ve ever seen.
#8: Steelers 27, 49ers 6 - Nov 7th, 1999
Not one that shows up on the stat sheet, as Levon Kirkland finished this forgettable, mid-season mud bowl with a seemingly pedestrian 11 tackles and a pass deflection. But Kirkland flat-out punished the Niners’ offense, squashing any hope of a running game with extreme prejudice. Every one of his 11 vicious cracks audibly sliced through the silent and stunned crowd of 3Com.
#7: Kings 108, Heat 103 (OT) - Dec 27th, 2013
The Boogie Monster was at his peak this game as Demarcus Cousins posted 27 points, 17 rebounds, and 5 assists to take down Lebron James and the Heat in OT. Also the last Kings game I’ve gotten to see in person.
#6: Cardinals 4, Padres 0 - Sept 3rd, 2001
Due to how long I lived in San Diego, I’ve been to far more Padres games than A’s games, even if just as a casual observer. Wasn’t even paying attention to this one until about the eighth inning when whispers started building in the crowd that rookie Bud Smith was pitching a no hitter. Weirdly, Smith would never again pitch a complete game in his short 2 season career.
#5: 49ers 35, Buccaneers 7 - Dec 11th, 2022
I bought these tickets thinking only that it would be the last time I could ever catch Tom Brady in person. I was not ready for first time starter Mr. Irrelevant Brock Purdy to dominate from the onset. 16 for 21, 185 yards passing, 2 TDs, 0 ints, and a rushing TD seems decent, but not otherworldly. But this game was over by halftime, and Purdy absolutely rocked it for the first half turning the rest of the game into a sleepwalk.
#4: Kings 123, Mavericks 94 - Jan 15th, 2003
Mavs came into town with a 31-5 record and a lot of chatter about being the best in the NBA, only to have their clocks cleaned by a complete team effort on the Kings’ part with Chris Webber’s triple double of 29 points, 15 rebounds, and 11 assists as the fulcrum. Only time I’ve ever heard the rumblings of the college chant “Oh-Ver-Ra-Ted” reverberating through a pro arena.
#3: Bulls 111, Kings 93 - Jan 30th, 1997
Something of a double entry. Kings were clearly overmatched from the onset, even though they scrapped and clawed their way to a slim lead at the half. Became pretty clear by the start of the 4th the Bulls as a team were merely toying with the ragtag Sacramento squad as Chicago sleepwalked their way to an easy road win and eventually another 3-peat that year. But the microcosm game-within-a-game was fiercely competitive and entertaining from tip-off to final buzzer as our own Mitch “The Rock” Richmond squared up against Michael Jordan in a one-on-one duel that transcended an otherwise meaningless regular season game in late January. Richmond ended with 28 points, 9 rebounds, 6 assists, 3 steals, and a block while hounding the GOAT all night, who responded with a game high 32 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists, and 3 steals. Jordan is on record citing Richmond as one of his toughest opponents, and it was clear the Rock brought his A game for this one. Truly a thrill to watch in person Sacramento’s “Welcome to Hell” era unsung Hall of Famer match stride with arguebaly the greatest to have played the game.
#2: Lakers 116, Kings 108 (OT) - Apr 14th, 2011
This was supposed to have been the final game of the Sacramento Kings franchise, and it had the feel of a game the Kings were destined to win in triumphant fashion as a heroic swan song. Of course, Kobe Bryant was a cold-hearted psychopath who cared nothing for sentimentality and thrived off the lamentations of opposing home crowds. In addition to posting 36 points, 9 rebounds, and 6 assists, he also drilled the game tying 3 with 4 seconds left, and blocked Thornton’s game-winner attempt to force overtime.
#1: UNR 55, Weber St. 49 - Nov 2nd, 1991
The oldest game on the list and not likely to ever be supplanted from the number one spot. I was just a 9-year-old kid dragged to a D-II College football game because what else is there to do for a kid in Reno on a Saturday? UNR ranked #1 was down against Weber St. 49-14 into the 3rd quarter when backup QB Chris Vargas came in. Now the Wolfpack D deserves a ton of credit for shutting down the Wildcats the rest of the way, but Vargas became the super star. In less than one half, Vargas threw for 346 yards and 2 tds, ran for a third TD, and orchestrated the offense to set-up 3 more goal line plunges, leading what remains the largest comeback in college football history (Michigan State tied this record in 2006 with a comeback against Northwestern)