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This might have been a quadruple double. There really might have been ten steals made by Mully in this game. An update of a highlight reel in rather poor quality I had done six years ago, this is quite the night for Chris Mullin. Having made a request for a trade, he went out on the court possibly for the last time as a Warrior and tied Nate Thurmond's franchise record for games played. Ultimately, the trade deadline went past and Mully remained a Warrior for the rest of the season, though he could have gone out in style with a vintage Chris Mullin performance. The twelve assists are actually a bit of a sham. He would have gotten to ten either way by NBA standards as there were a few more passes he made before an eventual basket (they could have gone wild actually and gave him like 15 assists). Mullin did benefit from the home arena's scorer's table on those typical "passes made to a player in motion who then takes three more dribbles before making the shot". However, he was probably robbed of a few steals on occasions where teammates gathered the loose ball after Mullin had made the deflection that made the steal possible. Mullin was credited with four steals out of the 0:45, 1:06, 1:39, 3:16 and 3:40 bunch, then with one out of 3:50 and 4:45, and one more from 5:12 and 5:36. The steal at 6:54 was the seventh for him, one which Greg Papa and Jim Barnett should have gone crazy over instead of a hunt for the 10th rebound. I'm not claiming that these are definite ten steals. But you can make an argument for it and he probably deserved at least one or two more in the boxscore. February 19, 1997.