On an and-1 3-pointer, the Portland Trail Blazers' Carmelo Anthony moved into the top 10 all time in NBA scoring Monday night, passing Elvin Hayes.
With 11:09 left in the second quarter against the Hawks in Atlanta, Anthony isolated on the right wing and pulled up from 3, plus the foul. After his trademark move of hitting the side of his head with three fingers, Anthony raised both arms in the air as a quick acknowledgement of the accomplishment.
It was his third 3 of the first half, giving him 12 points. Anthony entered Monday's game against the Hawks nine points behind Hayes' career total of 27,313.
"I think after it's done, whenever it happens, I think I'll be more in awe of it," Anthony told ESPN by phone last week. "This is something I never, ever thought about. When you're young you look up at that list and you're like, 'Damn, so-and-so has that many points? I'll never be able to do that.'" I'm more just in awe of it."
Moses Malone is next up on the all-time list at 27,409, a reachable number this season if Anthony maintains his current scoring pace.
Anthony's journey to the top 10 comes with context, with him away from the NBA for a season after being cut by the Houston Rockets after just 10 games early in the 2018-19 season. Anthony continued working out and signed with the Trail Blazers in November 2019, starting all 58 games last season. He agreed to a bench role this season with Portland and entered Monday averaging 13.6 points as a sixth man.
A 10-time All-Star, Anthony is in his 18th NBA season. He won the scoring title with the New York Knicks in 2012-13, averaging 28.7 points. Anthony spent 10 consecutive seasons in the top 10 in scoring and finished as a runner-up for the scoring title twice in that stretch.
Anthony's point distribution is 13,970 in eight seasons with the Denver Nuggets, 10,186 in seven seasons with the Knicks, 1,261 in one season with the Oklahoma City Thunder, 134 with the Rockets and 1,740 (entering Monday) in two seasons with the Blazers.
This season, Anthony has moved past Tim Duncan, Dominique Wilkins, Oscar Robertson and Hakeem Olajuwon in scoring.