Draymond Green has got to be one of the weirdest players in NBA history. His scoring prowess has never been up to snuff with his fellow greats on the Golden State Warriors, and it has devolved to be downright bad in recent years. Yet, somehow, he has managed to establish and keep his status as one of the most dangerous playmakers in the game.

Check out this bananas stat line from Friday night's tilt against the Denver Nuggets:

Allow us to submit “Draymond Special” as a naming candidate for these weird stat lines.

But the fact that these are getting common enough to be named means that it's relatively common for Draymond to turn in statistical anomalies like this on any given night. So, to celebrate Golden State's win and to shout out one of the most unique players in NBA history, let's take a trip down memory lane to find the three most notable Draymond Specials ever, at least outside of this one.

3. GSW v POR, December 17, 2016

Stat line: 3 PTS, 13 AST, 12 REB, 1 BLK (25%FG, 0%3FG, 50%FG)

While you spend the next few seconds picking your jaw off the floor, keep in mind that this is only the first entry on this list, and the ridiculousness takes a considerable leap from here. This is just a taster of what's to come. Green only took four shots on the night, making one and splitting two free throws at the line.

But his 13 assists and 12 rebounds are nothing to scoff at. Both point to his trademark versatility very clearly, as he helped to absolutely pick apart Damian Lillard and the Portland Trail Blazers.

2. GSW v MEM, February 10, 2017

Stat line: 4 PTS, 10 AST, 11 REB, 10 STL, 5 BLK (33%FG, 0%3FG)

This game proved that scoring isn't the only, or even the most impactful thing a player can do to affect the game of basketball. For added context, Draymond Green only took six shots the entire evening, making two (zero free throws). Yet, he walked away with a triple double.

Think about that real quick: Draymond Green earned a triple double on steals, rather than points. Did you know that the most common steals leaders in every season average only around two per game? Draymond beat that by a factor of five, as a center. Not to be outdone either, he grabbed five blocks as a 6'6 big man that can't jump. In fact, if Green was into stat padding, he would have become just the third player in NBA history with multiple 5×5 games (at least 5 in every major counting stat).

This stat line would easily be the most notable Draymond Special of the bunch, only to be beaten by one out of sheer context.

1. GSW v OKC, February 27, 2016

Stat line: 2 PTS, 14 AST, 14 REB, 6 STL, 4 BLK (0%FG, 0%3FG, 40%FT)

What. The. Hell.

If you don't remember this game, you should: this was the game that cemented Steph Curry as the greatest shooter in NBA history, the game where he casually drilled a 40-foot pull-up three to ice the game in overtime. Steph would of course be the most memorable player from this momentous night in history (46 points), but Draymond Green would not be denied on either end of the court. This is despite missing every single shot he took, and only making two out of his five free throws.

In fact, despite his insanely poor shooting night, he had arguably the most positive impact out of any Warrior (+10 plus/minus) on the night, continuing his trend of being the most impactful overall Warrior at his peak, and the power behind the everlasting sheen that is Steph Curry.