In Year 20, Chris Paul started all 82. And he made some NBA history in the process.
Paul was in the San Antonio Spurs' starting lineup for their season finale on Sunday, making him the first player to ever make 82 starts this deep into a career. The previous mark on that front was held by Utah's John Stockton, who started all 82 games in his 19th and final season.
Paul — who turns 40 in less than a month — is one of three players to have a season with 82 appearances at his age. Stockton did it in the seasons where he turned 39 and 40, and Michael Jordan turned 39 in his final season while playing in all 82 games and starting 67 of them.
“It’s crazy," Paul said. "I was talking to my wife about this. When you’re sort of in it, you’re not really thinking about it. It’s like, ‘OK, it’s Game 30. OK, it’s Game 40something. It’s game such and such.’”
It became Game 82. And Paul never missed a beat.
He's one of six players who made 82 starts in this NBA regular season, which was ending Sunday. The others: New York's Mikal Bridges, Minnesota's Jaden McDaniels, Houston's Jalen Green, Cleveland's Jarrett Allen and Paul's San Antonio teammate Harrison Barnes.
With Paul, Barnes and Julian Champagnie, the Spurs became the first team since the 2017-18 Minnesota Timberwolves with at least three players to appear in 82 games.
For Barnes, who is in his first year with the Spurs, Sunday's game was his 304th in a row. He and Paul are the first Spurs to play all 82 games since Bryn Forbes and Patty Mills in 2018-19 — and the first Spurs to start all 82 games since Bruce Bowen in 2006-07.
“Year 20, this is only the second time in my career playing 82 games," Paul said. “And also playing as long as I have, I think I know how hard it is. That's why I have so much respect for Harrison, who is doing this for the third year in a row. And Mikal, who was my teammate, he never misses a game.”
Bridges was playing in his 556th consecutive regular-season game Sunday — out of a possible 556. He hasn't missed any game since his junior year of high school, including 116 at Villanova and 39 NBA playoff games. Add that up, and he's played in 711 consecutive games since entering college.
The Knicks held out four starters for a meaningless game standings-wise Sunday. Bridges was the exception.
“I think he's earned that right,” Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau said. “It's a tribute to him. I think he's worked hard to put himself in that position. I've said this before: He should be commended for it.”
Bridges played the first six seconds to extend the streak Sunday, took a foul, got subbed out by Landry Shamet and went to the bench. (He did something similar in the final game of the 2023-24 season, playing four seconds for Brooklyn against Philadelphia on the last day.) It happened elsewhere, too: Allen played 41 seconds for Cleveland on Sunday to get to 82 starts, then was subbed out.
Sacramento’s Jonas Valanciunas appeared in 81 games this season, not 82, with a big caveat — he was inactive for two teams on the same day, which is the only reason why he didn’t get to 82 this season. Valanciunas was traded by Washington to the Kings on Feb. 5; he appeared that night as inactive for both of those teams on the official NBA boxscores because the trade was pending.
He played on Feb. 6 for the Kings and hasn’t missed a game since.
Paul was the 11th player in NBA history to make it to 20 seasons in the league. LeBron James, if he plays next year as would be expected, will then become ...