LeBron James and the possibility of the Los Angeles Lakers superstar becoming the NBA’s all-time scoring leader excites current recordholder Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Abdul-Jabbar sits atop the throne for most points in the NBA with 38,387 following a Hall of Fame career that featured six championships, six MVP awards and 19 All-Star selections among other honours during his time with the Milwaukee Bucks and Lakers.
James (35,367) is third on the all-time list entering his 19th season, behind Karl Malone (36,928) and Abdul-Jabbar – the four-time champion and four-time MVP still needs 3,020 points to break the record.
Abdul-Jabbar, who spent 14 years with the Lakers from 1975 to 1989 before returning as an assistant coach between 2005 and 2011, was asked about James’ pursuit of history.
“I’m excited to see it happen,” Abdul-Jabbar, 74, told Marc Stein in his substack newsletter. “I don’t see records as personal accomplishments, but more as human achievements.
“If one person can do something that’s never been done, that means we all have a shot at doing it. It’s a source of hope and inspiration.
“Roger Bannister broke the four-minute mile back in 1954. Since then, not only have 1,400 runners beaten that time, but the new record is 17 seconds less.
“We all win when a record is broken and if LeBron breaks mine, I will be right there to cheer him on.”
James and the Lakers were unable to defend their NBA title in 2020-21 as they crashed out in the first round of the playoffs.
The 36-year-old James averaged 25.0 points, 7.7 rebounds and 7.8 assists per game last season.
James’ field-goal (51.3) and three-point (36.5) percentages were his best since 2017-18.