California high school basketball player brothers, Nick and Dylan Khatchikian, each had the historic stat-lines in Mesrobian's 119-25 win over Waverly high school. That is, 6-foot-2 senior guard Nick had 102 points on 48-of-60 FG shooting (0 assists), while Dylan did everything but score, as he had a triple-double with 35 assists (tied national record), 15 rebounds, and 13 steals.
Videos by FanBuzz
THIS IS INSANE 🔥🔥
NICK KHATCHIKIAN
102 Points (79 1st half)
48/60 Shooting
3/6 Three Pointers
0 Assists
22 MinutesDYLAN KHATCHIKIAN
0 Points
35 Assists
15 Rebounds
13 StealsTheir team won 119-25 pic.twitter.com/jFWBJgp7R4
— Ballislife.com (@Ballislife) January 24, 2025
One fan commented on X, "Idk what's more impressive 35 assists with 0 buckets or 102 points without an assist."
In view of the blowout, the score was 79-0 at halftime, as Nick (102 points) came out of the game with 2:17 left in the 3rd quarter, scoring triple-digits in only 22 minutes of playing time.
Considering the statline was almost too crazy to be true, LeBron James said he needed to see some game footage.
"I wanna see the game film!" LeBron said on Instagram.
.@KingJames Yo Bron, here is a short clip of the 102 point High School performance from last night. All I could get while doing PA for their games. I must have said his name (Nick Khatchikian) 50+ time. #nickkhatchikian #mesrobian pic.twitter.com/KMsf5wIyAU
— Missak (@followMissak) January 24, 2025
Apparently the previous California high school state record (100 points) was also held by a player from Mesrobian high school.
In 2003-2004, former Pico Rivera Mesrobian player, Tigran Grigoryan, recorded 100 points, and is now an assistant coach for the program.
Mesrobian High School's (CA) Nick Khatchikian scored 102 points on 48-of-60 shooting from the field last night against Waverly high (CA)🤯
Breaking California’s single-game scoring record.
Read: https://t.co/BszAw3VMzu pic.twitter.com/6YkDAA34tK
— On3 High School (@On3hs) January 24, 2025
As for Dylan and his 35 assists, this broke the previous state record (31) and ties the national record (35), which also was accomplished by Andre Colbert in a 1987 New York high school game (per ESPN).
Related: Sports Records So Outrageous That They'll Never Be Touched