Another day, another triple-double for Washington Wizards superstar Russell Westbrook. The 32-year-old guard raked in another personal milestone on Saturday, becoming just the third player in NBA history to record 10 or more triple-dubs in his first season with a team.

Hall of Famer Oscar Robertson tops the list with 26 during the 1960-61 season with the Cincinnati Royals, while Philadelphia 76ers All-Star Ben Simmons also achieved this in his rookie year in 2017-18, according to ESPN Stats & Info.

Russell Westbrook is already on track to become the Wizards' all-time franchise leader in triple-doubles, needing just six more to hold the distinction. That's certainly quite the feat for someone in his first season with the team. At the rate that he's playing today, he might even break the Big O's record if the Wizards can somehow make it to the playoffs this season.

Brodie and the Wizards have definitely flipped the switch as of late, winning seven of their last 10 games and currently holding a two-game winning streak. Westbrook helped Washington repel the Minnesota Timberwolves at Capital One Arena on Saturday, coming out with 19 points on 7-of-19 shooting from the floor, to go with 14 rebounds, 12 assists, and two steals in 32 minutes.

He's certainly playing at an All-Star level (though he missed the cut this season) and the Wizards are finally winning consistently. In 24 games for Washington so far, Westbrook has been tallying near-triple double averages of 19.7 points, 9.9 rebounds, and 9.8 assists.

Westbrook has taken the most flak for the Wizards' struggles in the early part of the season. While his counting numbers have always been good, they have been deemed as empty stats since his team usually failed to win most of the time. The Wizards star is definitely hushing his critics right now.