Well, as of today Kareem also played in 150 games more than LeBron has played.
hph6203 said:
Wouldn't underestimate the shift to three point shots across the league and the advancements in medical technology that will allow people to de-age/play well into their 40's. That already exists in mouse models.
I'm not saying it will definitively be broken, but I'm not confident it won't be.
Agreed, Just don't like him. It is what it is.coastalAg said:
This dude is 38 and still averaging 30/8/7. He dropped a pretty casual 36 points in three quarters to break the record. It's ****ing amazing how good he still is after all these years.
The Porkchop Express said:What's the NBA going to do when Russell Westbrook passes the 50,000 turnover mark and his 20,000th missed three-pointer?Iowaggie said:
BTW, this also happened last night:.@russwest44 is just the 10th player in NBA history to record 9,000 career assists 😤 pic.twitter.com/fOUCSbHIX2
— NBA on ESPN (@ESPNNBA) February 8, 2023
As did this on LBJ's record breaking shot:ANTHONY DAVIS💀!!#LakeShow pic.twitter.com/NlNYSi9CkF
— iGor (@1zrte) February 8, 2023
Quote:
I feel like LBJ gets the short end of the stick in a lot of comparisons because he's lived fully in the Internet/social media age, something that Kobe only partially did and Jordan never had to worry about.
Quote:
Every time LeBron says something stupid or reads the first page of the book, it's everywhere. If Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley and Jordan had played in the era of social media, their personal foibles would have been lambasted on the daily.
I think I would start my team with Jordan over Bron, but no way I take Magic over Bron. I'd rather watch Showtime than LeBron cry, but LeBron is a much better scorer and a much better defender than Magic. Physically, LeBron is better and talent-wise, Bron has more tools.Quote:
That said, as a basketball fan who cut his teeth in the 1980s, I don't see LeBron even close to Michael Jordan. At their primes, Jordan would have eviscerated him mentally in a series matchup. Kobe as well had the killer instinct that LeBron has never shown. I'd also put Magic Johnson above him. He hasn't played in almost 30 years and there's still never been another player like him.
Another difficulty of breaking the record is that Bron came out of HS and that is not allowed anymore. Anyone that comes in the league ready to be a #1 scorer now loses a prime year. Bron scored 1650 points as a rookie. Just under what he scored last year at age 37.Head Ninja In Charge said:
Not sure how much stock to put into a 23-year old's words, but Luka already said he doesn't want to play that long. I kind of believe him. I can see him retired by 33 with two rings and 26,000 points living in Europe fat as hell smoking two packs a day on a yacht.
I'm not talking about what they would post on social media, I'm talking about what they were up to in their playing days. Jordan was gambling away millions of dollars, but there was no way to easily post and share photos of him at the casino at 2 a.m the night of a game. The weird thing about how his father got murdered would have been an Internet conspiracy field day for decades. The rumor that Stern told him to leave the league for a year because of his gambling would have been everywhere.Guitarsoup said:Quote:
I feel like LBJ gets the short end of the stick in a lot of comparisons because he's lived fully in the Internet/social media age, something that Kobe only partially did and Jordan never had to worry about.
Jordan is still alive and he still doesn't post online, while many of his contemporaries do such as Magic and Barkley. Jordan mostly keeps his opinions to himself. My guess is Phil Knight explained to him that he needs to control his image and he became an icon. The lasting non-game memories of Jordan were him playing basketball with kids in McDonalds and Gatorade commercials and stuff like that. Flashing that huge smile. He built an incredible image that we know isn't exactly what he is. But Jordan was invested in creating that image, so whoever guided Jordan in that was brilliant.
My guess is Jordan took the marketing advice of Phil Knight and Nike and didn't just hire his buddies from Wilmington, NC to guide him.
LeBron hired his buddies from Akron. He could have followed Michael's lead, but chose not to. I don't think that is all about the Social Media age. We never saw other superstars like Duncan, Dirk, Giannis, etc publicly ****ing up or putting their foot in their mouth.
I can't recall anything this great from Bron's camp:Quote:
Every time LeBron says something stupid or reads the first page of the book, it's everywhere. If Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley and Jordan had played in the era of social media, their personal foibles would have been lambasted on the daily.
Barkley's were lambasted all the time. And that's why stupid ass sip Red McCombs vetoed a trade of Sean Elliott for Charles Barkley before Barkley was eventually traded to the Suns for Andrew Lang and Hornacek. Red was wanting to sell the team and thought that if he had a bad guy on the team like Barkley, it would be more difficult to get as high a price. So he only wanted nice guys like Robinson and Elliott. Then the Spurs were sold and the new owners immediately traded for Dennis Rodman.I think I would start my team with Jordan over Bron, but no way I take Magic over Bron. I'd rather watch Showtime than LeBron cry, but LeBron is a much better scorer and a much better defender than Magic. Physically, LeBron is better and talent-wise, Bron has more tools.Quote:
That said, as a basketball fan who cut his teeth in the 1980s, I don't see LeBron even close to Michael Jordan. At their primes, Jordan would have eviscerated him mentally in a series matchup. Kobe as well had the killer instinct that LeBron has never shown. I'd also put Magic Johnson above him. He hasn't played in almost 30 years and there's still never been another player like him.
The Porkchop Express said:I'm not talking about what they would post on social media, I'm talking about what they were up to in their playing days. Jordan was gambling away millions of dollars, but there was no way to easily post and share photos of him at the casino at 2 a.m the night of a game. The weird thing about how his father got murdered would have been an Internet conspiracy field day for decades. The rumor that Stern told him to leave the league for a year because of his gambling would have been everywhere.Guitarsoup said:Quote:
I feel like LBJ gets the short end of the stick in a lot of comparisons because he's lived fully in the Internet/social media age, something that Kobe only partially did and Jordan never had to worry about.
Jordan is still alive and he still doesn't post online, while many of his contemporaries do such as Magic and Barkley. Jordan mostly keeps his opinions to himself. My guess is Phil Knight explained to him that he needs to control his image and he became an icon. The lasting non-game memories of Jordan were him playing basketball with kids in McDonalds and Gatorade commercials and stuff like that. Flashing that huge smile. He built an incredible image that we know isn't exactly what he is. But Jordan was invested in creating that image, so whoever guided Jordan in that was brilliant.
My guess is Jordan took the marketing advice of Phil Knight and Nike and didn't just hire his buddies from Wilmington, NC to guide him.
LeBron hired his buddies from Akron. He could have followed Michael's lead, but chose not to. I don't think that is all about the Social Media age. We never saw other superstars like Duncan, Dirk, Giannis, etc publicly ****ing up or putting their foot in their mouth.
I can't recall anything this great from Bron's camp:Quote:
Every time LeBron says something stupid or reads the first page of the book, it's everywhere. If Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley and Jordan had played in the era of social media, their personal foibles would have been lambasted on the daily.
Barkley's were lambasted all the time. And that's why stupid ass sip Red McCombs vetoed a trade of Sean Elliott for Charles Barkley before Barkley was eventually traded to the Suns for Andrew Lang and Hornacek. Red was wanting to sell the team and thought that if he had a bad guy on the team like Barkley, it would be more difficult to get as high a price. So he only wanted nice guys like Robinson and Elliott. Then the Spurs were sold and the new owners immediately traded for Dennis Rodman.I think I would start my team with Jordan over Bron, but no way I take Magic over Bron. I'd rather watch Showtime than LeBron cry, but LeBron is a much better scorer and a much better defender than Magic. Physically, LeBron is better and talent-wise, Bron has more tools.Quote:
That said, as a basketball fan who cut his teeth in the 1980s, I don't see LeBron even close to Michael Jordan. At their primes, Jordan would have eviscerated him mentally in a series matchup. Kobe as well had the killer instinct that LeBron has never shown. I'd also put Magic Johnson above him. He hasn't played in almost 30 years and there's still never been another player like him.
Barkley and Magic f*cked anything that moved while they were in the league. Barkley threw a guy through a plate glass window while he was in Houston. Think how that would have effected his career if it had been caught on camera and put on Twitter and You Tube. My point being those guys bad behavior off the court would have been hurting their reputations.
AustinCountyAg said:
meh. record would mean more if teams still played defense.
AustinCountyAg said:
meh. record would mean more if teams still played defense.
Kind of cool how that tracks the PACE chart:fat girlfriend said:AustinCountyAg said:
meh. record would mean more if teams still played defense.
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Queen James has always hand picked most of the players he's played with. Michael made average players around him better through the manner in which he played.
Im not the biggest Lebron guy...but this is where he really amazes me.rsf0626 said:
I still remember when i was a young kid how hyped up this guy was before the nba. He has surpassed every single expectation imaginable
You can find both. Lots of guys liked him (Ray Allen, Wade, Haslem, Kuz) and lots that didn't like him (Love, Chandler, Chalmers, assume Anthony Davis)CC09LawAg said:
Other than LeBron's bestie DWade, what stars have seemed to genuinely enjoy playing with him? I think the only people who like playing with him are the ones that use the same agent because they tend to get way overpaid.
I am sure his micromanagement gets old. I just don't get the vibe that he is a stellar locker room guy.