Utah’s final home game turned into a record-breaking performance that redefined what a team stat line can look like.
The Utah Jazz didn’t just close out their home schedule. They gave their fans something that felt almost impossible to process in real time. On a night that could have easily slipped by as another late-season game, Utah turned it into a full-blown showcase of chaos, chemistry, and creativity.
Every time you glanced at the box score, something new jumped out. Another double-double. Another player hitting double figures. Another stat that made you stop and double-check it. By the end of the night, what the Jazz had done against the Memphis Grizzlies wasn’t just impressive. It was something the league had literally never seen before.
The @utahjazz tonight:
7 players with 10+ points
5 players with a double-double
4 players with 10+ rebounds
3 players with 10+ assists
2 players with a triple-doubleNo other team in NBA history has done all of that in one game. pic.twitter.com/OEwIg4jEVg
— OptaSTATS (@OptaSTATS) April 11, 2026
According to OptaSTATS, Utah became the first team in NBA history to record all of this in a single game:
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7 players with 10+ points
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5 players with a double-double
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4 players with 10+ rebounds
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3 players with 10+ assists
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2 players with a triple-double
It reads more like a video game stat line than something that actually happened on an NBA floor.
A night where everyone had a moment
This wasn’t about one player taking over. It was about everyone finding a way to matter. Bez Mbeng and John Konchar led the charge with triple-doubles, something rare enough on its own. Seeing two teammates do it in the same game made it feel surreal. Mbeng poured in 27 points to go with 11 rebounds and 11 assists, playing with a confidence that stood out from the opening tip. Konchar followed with 11 points, 11 rebounds, and 10 assists, adding steals, blocks, and constant activity that never really showed up fully in the box score.
Then there was Oscar Tshiebwe, who completely owned the glass with 22 rebounds, turning missed shots into second chances all night. Ace Bailey and Kennedy Chandler each added double-doubles of their own, continuing the theme of balance that defined the entire game.
Seven players scored in double figures. Five finished with double-doubles. It felt like every rotation player had a stretch where the game ran through them.
You almost never see something like this
Yes, the circumstances were unusual. Both teams were short-handed. Rotations were tight. The game opened up in ways it normally doesn’t.
But even with all of that, this still doesn’t happen. The NBA has seen decades of high-scoring games, stat-padding nights, and triple-double performances. Even so, no team had ever put together this exact combination of production across the board. Not once.
That is what makes this night stick. It wasn’t just big numbers. It was the way those numbers were spread out, layered on top of each other until the entire stat sheet looked unreal.
Maybe this is what Utah is building
For a team still figuring out its long-term identity, this felt like a glimpse into a different kind of future. Not one built around a single dominant star, but one where the impact comes from everywhere. Players stepping into bigger roles. Bench pieces are making real contributions. Everyone is staying involved.
On this night, it worked to perfection. And even if it never looks exactly like this again, the Utah Jazz gave their fans something rare. A game that didn’t just end with a win, but with history.
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This story was originally published by Athlon Sports on Apr 11, 2026, where it first appeared in the NBA section. Add Athlon Sports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: Utah News









