BLOCKBUSTER: The Boston Celtics have agreed to trade Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers for Paul George, two first-round picks and two second-round picks, sources tell ESPN.
I’ve watched all three eras. For me, the GOAT debate isn’t close.
Michael Jordan
Kobe Bryant
LeBron James/Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
This isn’t a knock on LeBron. It’s about what I value when defining greatness.
This morning on SportsCenter, Brian Windhorst talked about teams lining up to sign a 41-year-old LeBron. He said that is his legacy. Averaging 20.9 points, 7.2 assists and 6.1 rebounds in Year 23 is something we’ve never seen before.
But longevity doesn’t automatically equal greatness.
If longevity is the measuring stick, then don’t forget Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Kareem played 20 seasons, won six championships, six MVPs, retired as the NBA’s all-time leading scorer, and scored the overwhelming majority of his points in the paint and at the free-throw line, without relying on the three-point shot that defines today’s game. His longevity was every bit as remarkable.
Jordan’s résumé speaks for itself:
• 6 championships
• 6 Finals MVPs
• 5 MVPs
• Defensive Player of the Year
• 10 scoring titles
• 9 First Team All-Defense
• 6-0 in the Finals
Kobe’s résumé gets overlooked:
• 5 championships
• 2 Finals MVPs
• 1 MVP
• 12 All-Defensive Teams (9 First Team)
• Two decades with one franchise
• The closest thing we’ve ever seen to Jordan mentally and stylistically.
Then there’s LeBron:
• 4 championships
• 4 Finals MVPs
• 4 MVPs
• 6 All-Defensive selections
• No Defensive Player of the Year
• 4-6 in the Finals
• The greatest career of sustained excellence the league has ever seen.
Here’s where I separate Jordan from LeBron.
Jordan never left to build a superteam.
Jordan never lost on the biggest stage.
Jordan was the best offensive player in basketball while also winning Defensive Player of the Year.
Jordan didn’t just beat opponents. He broke them. He struck fear in them.
And Kobe? Kobe is still ahead of LeBron for me because I value two-way basketball, competitive obsession, staying with one franchise, and the willingness to fail on your own terms rather than constantly reshaping the roster around you.
LeBron’s numbers are unmatched. His longevity may never be duplicated.
But when I think of the player who had the greatest impact on winning, who struck the most fear into opponents, who dominated both ends of the floor, and who defined an era, that’s easy for me, I’m still taking MJ.
And if we’re talking about the mentality it takes to wear a championship on your back every single night, I still think LeBron spent his career chasing Bean as much as he spent it chasing Jordan.
Free agent sharpshooter Luke Kennard has agreed to a two-year, $13 million deal with the Phoenix Suns, with a player option for the second season, sources tell ESPN.