 We've all been watching James Harden go absolutely berserk on the rest of the NBA. But is this the most dominant statistical run we've ever seen? I'm going to answer that question for you. Here are the five most dominant streaks in NBA history. And for all you stat heads out there, this is post-NBA-ABA merger in 1976. So no-wilt Chamberlain. At number five, Steph Curry, February 2016. Over an 11-game stretch, Steph averaged 36.7 points, 7.3 assists, and shot 53.6% from 3-point land. It was absolutely ridiculous. Of course, Golden State won 10 of the 11 games. They went on to win 73 that season, and Curry had his second MVP award. At number four, Kobe Bryant, March 2007. This is a year after he dropped 81 points on the Toronto Raptors. Kobe joined Wilt Chamberlain as the only players in history to have a four-game streak of 50 or more points in each game, and the Lakers won every game. Kobe dropped 65 on Portland. He dropped 50 on Minnesota. He dropped 60 on Memphis, and another 50 on New Orleans, and shot 54% from the field. At number three, Michael Jordan, the last 24 games of the 88-89 season. His coach, Doug Collins, put him at point guard. And we got a taste of the type of numbers Jordan would put up if he was as ball dominant as a lot of the guys today, bringing the ball up court, making all the passes, all the shots, all the decisions. He averaged 30 points, 11 assists, and nine rebounds a game. In one 11-game stretch, he had 10 triple doubles, including seven straight. MJ all day, baby. At number two, James Harden, December 13, 2018, to the present. He's had 21 straight games of at least 30 points. That's the longest streak since the merger you've heard it before. He's averaged 43 points, eight assists, and eight rebounds during the streak. And one of the most impressive things is without Chris Paul for any of the games, the Rockets have gone 15 and six. All right, so if James Harden's not number one, who could it be? Russell Westbrook, the last three seasons. Here's how good he's been. The triple double, which was this haloed statistical achievement, has become ho-hum for Westbrook. He does it all the time. This guy's averaged a triple double for three years. We never thought we'd see another player since Oscar Robertson do it. We didn't think Magic would do it. He didn't. We didn't think LeBron could do it. He didn't. We didn't think Jason Kidd could do it. He didn't. Nobody's done it except Russell Westbrook. Everybody's starting to hate on Russ, but this is still a tremendous statistical accomplishment. It's incredible what this guy's doing. And oh, by the way, the Thunder are 62 and 19 in the last three years when Westbrook has a triple double. So his triple doubles are great for Oklahoma City. Russell Westbrook's run these last three years is the greatest statistical run in NBA history.