13 points in 35 seconds

13 points in 35 seconds
San Antonio Spurs Houston Rockets
80 81
Head coach:
Gregg Popovich
Head coach:
Jeff Van Gundy
1234Total
San Antonio Spurs 1222242280
Houston Rockets 1820162781
VenueToyota Center, Houston, Texas
RefereesDerrick Stafford
Jason Phillips
Tom Washington

In the National Basketball Association (NBA), 13 points in 35 seconds refers to the Houston Rockets comeback against the San Antonio Spurs driven by Tracy McGrady, in the last 35 seconds of the two teams' December 9th, 2004 match.[1] The game was televised nationally in primetime on TNT.

His sequence included four consecutive three-pointers, one of which was part of a four-point play and the last of which was the game-winner in the final two seconds.[2] This comeback became one of McGrady's most memorable performances, on the Young Man and Three podcast, McGrady stated, “I was struggling shooting the ball [that] game for three quarters. 4th quarter come, 35 seconds left, bro. I don’t know what came over. I literally don’t know what came over.”[3]

Background

On December 9, 2004, at the last 35 seconds of the Houston Rockets against the San Antonio Spurs, the Rockets were down 76–68, with the Spurs having the upper hand. Having led at the half, the Rockets trailed after a dominant third quarter by the Spurs. After Devin Brown made two free throws to put the Spurs up by 8, McGrady made his first three-point shot at exactly 35 seconds remaining in the game. Brown then made two more free throws, and McGrady responded with another three-pointer, drawing the foul and making the free throw to complete the four-point play. Tim Duncan of the Spurs responded with two made free throws to put his team up 80–75 with 16 seconds remaining. McGrady then made a three-point shot at 11 seconds and his final three-point shot with only 1.7 seconds remaining in the game to seal the win for the Rockets, totaling 13 points in 35 seconds.

After the win, McGrady stated, "[He was] just thinking, 'Don't quit. Just get the ball up and just try to get a shot off. When they take the ball out, try to get a steal. And if we don't get a steal, foul and put them on the free-throw line.'" He stated, "The basketball gods were talking to me that night. [He was] dribbling the ball up the court and [he was] looking for [his] spot, head down and pop! Game over," after which, McGrady described the experience as an "out-of-body experience" and that he could not repeat it even if he wanted to.[4][5]

Statistics

W L PCT GB Home Road Div
y-San Antonio Spurs 59 23 .720 38–3 21–20 10–6
x-Dallas Mavericks 58 24 .707 1 29–12 29–12 11–5
x-Houston Rockets 51 31 .622 8 26–15 25–16 10–6
x-Memphis Grizzlies 45 37 .549 14 26–15 19–22 7–9
e-New Orleans Hornets 18 64 .220 41 11–30 7–34 2–14

Awards

Reception

Tracy McGrady's performance scoring 13 points in 35 seconds against the San Antonio Spurs was met with widespread amazement and continues to be revered as one of the most incredible performances in NBA history.

See Also

References

  1. ^ "McGrady's Big Finish Sends Rockets Past Spurs". NBA.com. Ticker. December 9, 2004. Retrieved January 28, 2008.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  2. ^ "Rockets 81-80 Spurs (Dec 9, 2004) Final Score". ESPN. Retrieved 2025-09-10.
  3. ^ Galizia, Joseph (2025-06-14). ""Should Have Been More Points": Tracy McGrady Re-Lives His Legendary 13 Points in 33 Seconds Against the Spurs". The SportsRush. Retrieved 2025-09-10.
  4. ^ Jul 5; Et, 2024 11:46 Am (2024-07-05). "45-Year-Old Tracy McGrady Recreated His Legendary 13 Points In 35 Seconds Sequence". Yardbarker. Retrieved 2025-09-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Panerio, Jonas (2025-06-16). ""Once I hit that second shot, which was a four-point play on Tim Duncan, I knew I wasn't missing" - T-Mac on his legendary '13 points in 33 seconds' moment". Basketball Network. Retrieved 2025-09-10.