LeBron James
Cleveland Return (2016) · 2016
James's elite Versatility (95) and elite Playmaking (92) define this era.
Trophy Case
2012, 2013, 2016, 2020
Won with Miami (2×), Cleveland (3-1 comeback), and LA in the Bubble
2012, 2013, 2016, 2020
2012, 2013, 2016 (3-1 comeback), 2020 — four different runs
2009, 2010, 2012, 2013
4× MVP — won two in Miami, two in Cleveland
2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024
20 selections — most in NBA history, spanning 20 seasons
2023
Passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at 38,387 points — the king of all scorers
2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020
13 selections — most in NBA history, spanning 15 seasons
The Story
The Block
Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals. Cleveland down 3-1 to the 73-win Warriors. With under two minutes left in a tie game, Andre Iguodala sprinted for a go-ahead layup. LeBron materialized from nowhere, chasing down the play from behind for one of the greatest blocks in NBA history. Cleveland won its first major championship in 52 years.
2007: One Man Army
In Game 5 of the 2007 Eastern Conference Finals, a 22-year-old LeBron scored the Cavaliers' last 25 points — and 29 of their final 30 — in a double-overtime thriller against Detroit. It was the moment the basketball world realized this wasn't just potential. This was destiny arriving ahead of schedule.
The Longevity King
All-time leading scorer. Four championships with three different franchises. Twenty-one All-Star selections. LeBron didn't just sustain excellence — he redefined what a basketball career could look like. At age 39, he was still posting 25/7/8 averages. The combination of physical gifts, basketball IQ, and dedication to his body may never be replicated.
LeBron vs. The Warriors Dynasty
Four consecutive Finals meetings. LeBron vs. Curry, Durant, Thompson, and Green. He went 1-3 but averaged a staggering 33.6 points across those series. The one he won — 2016, down 3-1 — might be the greatest individual achievement in Finals history.
More Than an Athlete
The I PROMISE School in Akron. SpringHill Entertainment producing films and shows. Billions in career earnings reinvested into his community. LeBron used his platform to prove that athletes could be moguls, activists, and community leaders simultaneously — and do all of it at the highest level.
The Decision and Beyond
Love it or hate it, The Decision changed athlete empowerment forever. LeBron showed that superstars could choose their own destiny. The backlash was enormous, but the paradigm shift was permanent. Every superstar trade demand since has LeBron's fingerprints on it.
Basketball IQ Off the Charts
LeBron's photographic memory for plays is well-documented — he can recall specific possessions from games years ago. Coaches and teammates consistently say his understanding of the game is the deepest they've ever seen. He sees three passes ahead like a chess grandmaster.
The Hairline Chronicles
LeBron's evolving hairline has been one of the most closely tracked sagas in sports history. Fans have created entire timelines documenting the journey. Whatever his hair care routine involves, it's become an endearing part of his public persona — and arguably the most discussed follicles in athletic history.
Rumored · Never confirmed
In Their Own Words
“I'm coming home.”
— LeBron James, Sports Illustrated essay announcing his return to Cleveland, July 2014
After four years in Miami and two championships, LeBron returned to Cleveland with a promise to deliver the city its first championship in 52 years. He fulfilled it two years later.
The Journey
The Chosen One at 16
St. Vincent-St. Mary High School · Akron, OH
Appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated as a junior with the headline "The Chosen One." Led SVSM to three Ohio state championships in four years. As a senior, averaged 31.6 PPG, 9.6 RPG, 4.6 APG. Named Mr. Basketball of Ohio three times and Gatorade National Player of the Year twice. His games were broadcast on ESPN — a first for a high school player.
31.6
ppg
9.6
rpg
3
state titles
From Cleveland to Global Icon
Cleveland Cavaliers / Miami Heat / Los Angeles Lakers · Cleveland / Miami / Los Angeles
Selected 1st overall in 2003 by his hometown Cavaliers. Won Rookie of the Year. "The Decision" to join Miami in 2010 made him the most polarizing athlete on Earth — then he backed it up with two championships. Returned to Cleveland in 2014 and delivered the city's first major sports title in 52 years, coming back from 3-1 down against the 73-win Warriors. Joined the Lakers in 2018 and won a fourth title in 2020. Became the NBA's all-time leading scorer in 2023, passing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
4
mvps
20
all star
4
finals mvps
4
championships
✓
scoring record
The Complete Player
Active · Los Angeles, CA
Career averages of 27.1 PPG, 7.5 RPG, 7.3 APG across 21 seasons. Only player in NBA history in the top 5 in both points and assists. Built a billion-dollar business empire, opened the I PROMISE School in Akron for at-risk youth, and produced films and TV shows. The GOAT debate between Jordan and LeBron defines modern basketball discourse.
7.3
career apg
27.1
career ppg
7.5
career rpg
Signature Moments
The Block
Game 7 of the 2016 Finals. With the game tied 89-89 and under two minutes left, Andre Iguodala broke away for what looked like a go-ahead layup. LeBron chased him down from behind and pinned the ball against the backboard. It is the most iconic block in NBA history.
Two minutes later, Kyrie hit The Shot. Cleveland won its first title in 52 years. LeBron delivered on "I'm coming home."
45 Points in Game 6 — Eastern Conference Finals
LeBron scored the Cavaliers' last 25 points in a double-overtime victory, finishing with 48 points, 9 rebounds, and 7 assists against the defensive juggernaut Pistons. He was 22 years old. He scored or assisted on 29 consecutive Cavaliers points in the fourth quarter and overtime periods.
The game where a 22-year-old announced: "I am the best player on the planet."
Passing Kareem — The Scoring Record
LeBron scored 38 points to pass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the NBA's all-time leading scorer with 38,390 career points. The game was stopped for a ceremony. Kareem was in attendance and embraced LeBron at midcourt.
A record many thought would never be broken, achieved in his 20th NBA season at age 38.
The Decision
LeBron James announced on live television that he was leaving Cleveland for Miami. "I'm going to take my talents to South Beach." The entire sports world watched. Cleveland burned his jerseys. The narrative around LeBron changed forever — from hometown hero to villain. He embraced it.
The most polarizing moment in NBA free agency history. It changed how superstars move between teams and created the modern player empowerment era.
Game 6 — 2012 Eastern Conference Finals
Facing elimination in Boston, with his legacy on the line, LeBron scored 45 points, 15 rebounds, and 5 assists. He was possessed — hitting fadeaways, driving through triple teams, refusing to let the season end. The Celtics had no answer. ESPN called it the game LeBron became a champion.
This was the game that separated "talented" LeBron from "killer" LeBron. He went on to win his first championship two weeks later.
The 2016 Finals — Down 3-1
The Warriors had gone 73-9. No team had ever come back from 3-1 in the Finals. LeBron averaged 36.3 points, 11.6 rebounds, and 9.7 assists over the final three games. The Block on Iguodala. Kyrie's three. LeBron crying on the floor. He delivered Cleveland its first championship in 52 years.
The greatest Finals comeback in NBA history, against the greatest regular-season team ever. This is the series that defines LeBron's legacy.
Chasing Kareem — 40,000 Points
LeBron James passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to become the NBA's all-time leading scorer with a fadeaway jumper. The arena erupted. Kareem was courtside. Every living NBA legend acknowledged the moment. 40,474 points — and counting — in a career that spanned four teams and three decades.
A record many thought would never fall. LeBron broke it at age 38, still playing at an All-Star level, proving longevity is its own form of greatness.
Record-Breaking Performances
The games and seasons that rewrote history
The Block and The Comeback: 2016 NBA Finals Game 7
LeBron led both teams in points, rebounds, assists, steals, and blocks for the entire series — a statistical feat never accomplished before or since in any Finals. The chase-down block on Andre Iguodala with 1:50 left in Game 7 is the defining play of his career.
First team in NBA Finals history to come back from a 3-1 deficit. First championship for Cleveland in 52 years.
Cleveland hadn't won a major sports championship since 1964. LeBron had left for Miami in 2010 ("The Decision"), won two titles, then came home promising to deliver. Down 3-1 to a 73-win team, nobody believed. He delivered anyway.
Greatest Rivalries
Jordan vs LeBron: The GOAT Debate
See Michael Jordan's profileThe defining argument in sports — who is the greatest basketball player ever?
Head-to-Head
Jordan: 6 championships, 6 Finals MVPs, 5 MVPs, 10 scoring titles, 0 Finals losses. LeBron: 4 championships, 4 Finals MVPs, 4 MVPs, all-time scoring leader, 21+ seasons of elite play.
They never played against each other. The debate is purely about legacy: 6-0 in Finals vs 4-6 in Finals, individual dominance vs longevity, killer instinct vs all-around impact. Jordan retired in 2003; LeBron was drafted that same year. The torch was passed without ever being contested on the court.
Defining Moments
Turning Point
LeBron's 2016 Finals comeback (down 3-1 against the 73-win Warriors) is the closest anyone has come to matching Jordan's 1998 Finals Game 6 "Last Shot." Both moments define their respective legacies.
The Verdict
No verdict. Both have legitimate GOAT claims. Jordan has the perfect Finals record and cultural mythologizing. LeBron has the longevity, the counting records, and the adaptability. The debate will never be settled — and that's what makes it the greatest argument in sports.
The Jordan-LeBron debate has spawned a billion-dollar media industry. It drives television ratings, podcast downloads, and social media engagement. It's the rare sports argument where both sides have legitimate, defensible positions.
Curry vs LeBron: Four Finals in Four Years
See Stephen Curry's profileThe dominant rivalry of the 2010s — four straight Finals between Cleveland and Golden State.
Head-to-Head
Curry's Warriors won 3-1 overall (2015, 2017, 2018). LeBron won in 2016 (3-1 comeback). LeBron averaged 33.6/12.0/8.9 across all four series.
From 2015 to 2018, the NBA Finals was a private conversation between LeBron James and Stephen Curry. They met four consecutive years — the first time that happened since Russell vs Chamberlain in the 1960s.
Defining Moments
Turning Point
2016 Finals: LeBron's chase-down block on Iguodala, Kyrie's dagger three over Curry. The Warriors blew a 3-1 lead with the best regular season record in NBA history.
The Verdict
Curry owns the series record (3-1) but LeBron owns the narrative (2016 comeback). Curry changed the sport more fundamentally; LeBron was the better individual player in every series. Both won.
Curry vs LeBron was appointment television that drove the NBA to its highest ratings in decades. Their rivalry forced the NBA to reckon with superteam culture after KD joined Golden State.
Career Numbers
Career PPG
21 seasons
27.1
Career RPG
Also Kareem (11.2) — elite for a forward
7.5
Career APG
Best among forwards all-time
7.3
Career SPG
Also Kobe (1.4) — LeBron was a transition terror
1.5
Career Points
NBA all-time leader
40474
Career Assists
5th all-time
10908
Playoff PPG
All-time playoff scoring leader
28.4
Games Played
21 seasons
1492
2023
Became Billionaire While Playing
First active NBA player to reach $1B net worth — did it while still averaging 25+ PPG at age 38
66,000+
Total Career Minutes
More total minutes played (regular + postseason) than any player in NBA history — the equivalent of 46 straight days of basketball
10
NBA Finals Appearances
10 NBA Finals appearances — more than 22 of 30 current NBA franchises have made in their entire history
4
Decades With 10,000+ Points
Scored 10,000+ points across 4 different decades (2000s, 2010s, 2020s) — nobody else has done 3
Season Stats · Cleveland Return (2016)
Engine Attributes
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