His 40th birthday will arrive in December, and perhaps then the appreciation of LeBron James will begin to approximate his colossal accomplishments. For many, the other numbers that define him as a basketball player have not elevated his stature, but maybe his delivery of legitimate performances at an age that diminished so many past greats will be convincing.
At 39, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar saw his scoring average decline by 25 percent.
At 39, Michael Jordan played for a sub-.500 team.
At 39, Tim Duncan averaged 25 minutes a game.
At 39, LeBron scored 25.7 points, grabbed 7.3 rebounds and passed for 8.3 assists per game. He produced five triple-doubles in the 2023-24 regular season. He surpassed the 40,000-point mark, remarkable given no player in league history even had approached 39,000.He appeared in his 54th playoff series, although this one did not last long, with James and the Lakers falling 4-1 to the reigning champion Nuggets.
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There has yet to be a number, though, that fully resonates with the portion of the public passionate about NBA basketball in general but indifferent to James’ broad spectrum of achievements. On social media, he is derided for criticism of game officials, shot selection and even, according to one Twitter fantasist, for having “ruined a generation” of youth because how he plays basketball has led to “the soft, whiny, entitled display we see on college campuses.”
No, really. Dude said this in public.
This is the world James has owned and occupied since entering the league in the fall of 2003, a world in which he no doubt has legions of fans but inspires far more antagonists than any athletic superstar of the past half-century. Certainly there existed a universe of football fans who grew weary of Tom Brady’s habit of crashing the Super Bowl, but as he approached his seventh ring, you would find few unwilling to acknowledge his greatness.
James is into his third decade in the public eye, and the most scandalous episode involving him either remains the continued insistence his oldest son, Bronny, is an NBA-ready prospect despite a college scoring average of 4.8 points or the acceptance of the vainglorious nickname, “King James”. The only headlines for LeBron are those that encompass his basketball career or his gift for making lucrative business decisions. He is a tabloid’s worst nightmare: a celebrity who, privately, is boring.
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Ordinarily, this would make him almost universally popular. James, though, found the wrong side of a large number of sports fans because of two factors:
1) He arrived not long after MJ ceased to be. Michael Jordan still is with us, of course, and blessedly so, but the MJ who ruled over the NBA in the 1990s played his final game just before James entered the league. Michael became the unchallenged hero to a generation of basketball fans who do not wish for their childhood memories to be superseded.
2) Unlike Jordan — who famously declared “Republicans buy sneakers, too” around the time he was asked to support the Senate campaign of Harvey Gantt, who was opposing longtime segregationist Jesse Helms – James eagerly has supported liberal political causes. He publicly supported Barack Obama’s presidency, campaigned for Hillary Clinton and was critical of Donald Trump’s campaign and work in the White House. James advocated for stricter gun laws and, in 2014, wore an “I Can’t Breathe” t-shirt during a pregame warm-up following the death in New York of Eric Garner during an encounter with police.