The Columbus Dispatch

Lebron, Kareem took different paths

- Jeff Zillgitt

In 1965, Lew Alcindor – before he was Kareem Abdul-jabbar – finished a brilliant high school basketball career in New York that made him the most famous prep star.

He chose to play college ball at UCLA, a school at the time with yearly expectatio­ns to win a national championsh­ip.

He won three titles with the Bruins, was named the NCAA tournament's MVP three times and was a two-time Associated Press Player of the Year.

He met expectatio­ns and entered the NBA with expectatio­ns. They seemed impossible to meet, yet Abdul-jabbar won six titles, six MVPS, two Finals MVPS and finished his career as the NBA'S all-time leading scorer with 38,387 points.

And when Los Angeles Lakers star Lebron James passed Abdul-jabbar and became the league's scoring leader, I thought about expectatio­ns.

The expectatio­ns placed on James were unrealisti­c and unfair. And yet 21 years after Sports Illustrate­d put him on the cover with the headline “The Chosen One” and 20 years after USA TODAY named James its boys high school player of the year for the second consecutiv­e season, James surpassed expectatio­ns.

The odds were not in James' favor. By his own admission, he fell into the category called at-risk children.

He missed 83 days of school in fourth grade, and if you understand that part of James' life, you understand his Lebron James Family Foundation and his I Promise School – designed to help kids similar to him.

Basketball Hall of Famer Charles Barkley has called James the greatest story in sports.

It doesn't happen often that a 16year-old projected to be one of the alltime greats ends up as one of the alltime greats, if not the GOAT.

But that's what James did. He has four MVPS, four Finals MVPS, 19 All-star selections and 18 ALL-NBA selections,

two Olympics gold medals, is No. 4 on the all-time assists list, the all-time playoff points leader, No.4 on the alltime assist list, the all-time playoff points leader, No. 2 all-time in playoff assists, No. 2 all-time in Finals points and No. 2 all-time in Finals assists.

And now, he is atop the all-time scoring list.

James and Abdul-jabbar are not particular­ly close. Abdul-jabbar has been critical of James' stances on social issues. Asked before the season about his relationsh­ip with the former Lakers

great, James said, “No relationsh­ip.”

But on Tuesday night, there was respect and appreciati­on and maybe the beginning of a better relationsh­ip.

Abdul-jabbar sat courtside and presented James with the game ball after James broke the record. The two embraced, and whatever difference­s they have had melted. Abdul-jabbar was gracious after the game.

"What Lebron has done off the court is more important than what he's done on the court," Abdul-jabbar said. "He's keeping kids in school. He's provided

leadership and an example on how to live."

James called Abdul-jabbar by his nickname, "Cap" (for captain) during the in-game ceremony.

“To be able to be in the presence of such a legend as great as Kareem, it's very humbling,” James said.

From different places and eras and with different perspectiv­es, they stood at center court as the top two scorers in NBA history – players who exceeded expectatio­ns to become two of the greatest players in basketball history.

 ?? GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Lakers forward Lebron James celebrates former Lakers star Kareem Abdul-jabbar after breaking the record for all-time scoring in the NBA on Tuesday night in Los Angeles.
GARY A. VASQUEZ/USA TODAY SPORTS Lakers forward Lebron James celebrates former Lakers star Kareem Abdul-jabbar after breaking the record for all-time scoring in the NBA on Tuesday night in Los Angeles.
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