Los Angeles Times

LeBron passes Kobe in points

It’s James’ moment as he tops Bryant on scoring list, but not his night

- BY TANIA GANGULI

Current Laker star supplants ex-Laker star to claim third spot on NBA’s alltime list.

PHILADELPH­IA — The big, historic moments are the ones that LeBron James cherishes. These chances to do what only the greatest players in the history of basketball have accomplish­ed before him, these legendary feats that keep marking his career.

He sat at his locker Saturday night in Philadelph­ia and delivered a soliloquy about everything Kobe Bryant meant to him, his voice heavy with the gravity of passing Bryant for third on the NBA’s alltime scoring list. He shared a story. On Feb. 10, 2002, James’ high school was playing Virginia’s Oak Hill Academy in New Jersey. Before the game, he and his friend Maverick Carter drove to Philadelph­ia in hopes of meeting Bryant, who was playing in the NBA All-Star game there. Bryant gave him his shoes.

“The red, white and blue Kobes,” James said. “I was a 15, and he was a 14. And I wore ’em anyways.

And I sat and just talked to him for a little bit. He gave me the shoes.”

Almost 18 years later, James showed his appreciati­on for Bryant through shoes. On his game sneakers he wrote “Mamba 4 Life,” referencin­g Bryant’s nickname, along with both of Bryant’s numbers, 8 and 24, and the letters “KB.”

Then, in the third quarter of the Lakers’ 108-91 loss to the Philadelph­ia 76ers, James did it. He drove across the lane. In a town where Bryant spent most of his childhood, in a building where fans once booed the Lakers great, the crowd rose in anticipati­on of a moment of history.

James made a layup, giving him 18 points in the game. At that moment, he had scored one more point in his career than Bryant had.

“It’s cool to know that you have the support of one of the all-time greats that ever played this game and someone that you admired to be like on the floor,” said James, who finished with 29 points, eight assists and seven rebounds. “And to do the things, winning championsh­ips, be young and be remembered.

“You don’t have that much time to play this

game. If you’re able to be remembered for the great things that you did, the positive things that you did, making people feel great about what you did, that’s a pretty cool thing.”

James has scored 33,655 points in his career and sits third behind Karl Malone, who scored 36,928 points, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who scored 38,387. Bryant scored 33,643.

“Continuing to move the game forward @KingJames,” Bryant said in a tweet. “Much respect my brother.”

James’ effort, along with Anthony Davis’ 31 points, seven rebounds, two steals and a blocked shot, weren’t enough Saturday.

Philadelph­ia, led by Ben Simmons (28 points) and Tobias Harris (29), opened a 20-point lead in the third quarter. After the Lakers cut the deficit to 93-88 with 5:21 left in the fourth, the 76ers pulled away when Al Horford scored seven straight points.

James crept toward the feat during the Lakers’ five-game trip. He scored 31 points at Houston, 15 at Boston, 21 at New York and 27 at Brooklyn. That left him 18 points shy of passing Bryant heading into Saturday night.

James scored his first point at the line, then the next three on a layup and free throw after a steal. He scored six points in the first quarter but committed four turnovers. In the second quarter, he scored six more before resting, then re-entered the game with about three minutes until halftime.

With just under two minutes left in the half, James had 14 points and stepped back for a three. It missed. With 1:01 left, James charged into Furkan Korkmaz for his third foul. He sat for the rest of the half.

As the third quarter began, James scored on a left-handed layup that cut the deficit to 10. A step-back three a minute later would have done it. But it missed and James had to wait.

He scored his 18th point with 7:22 left in the quarter.

“I should’ve fouled him,” said Shake Milton, who was guarding James. “I wish he didn’t get it on me or close to me.”

Milton didn’t realize how close James was, and neither did some Lakers teammates. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, who set the screen for James, didn’t realize it until the timeout when the Wells Fargo Center showed James on its video screen to acknowledg­e his feat. Until then, Caldwell-Pope wasn’t sure why teammates were congratula­ting James.

“When I set the screen, I just ran to the bench, after he scored, ran to the bench, sat down and that’s when I realized,” Caldwell-Pope said.

The fans in the arena gave James a standing ovation.

Bryant has said he plans to reach out to James, but at the time James addressed reporters, he had no idea what his messages looked like. His phone was filled with congratula­tions, and one well-wisher — close friend Chris Paul — had called just as James was about to speak.

James collected as much memorabili­a from the night as he could but didn’t know what he’ll do with it. For now, he’s still processing what he did.

“It doesn’t make no sense,” James said, “but the universe just puts things in your life.”

 ?? Chris Szagola Associated Press ?? LeBRON JAMES acknowledg­es the fans’ cheers after passing Kobe Bryant for No. 3 on the NBA’s career scoring list. James finished with 29 points, eight assists and seven rebounds but also had eight turnovers and couldn’t rally the Lakers to a trip-ending win.
Chris Szagola Associated Press LeBRON JAMES acknowledg­es the fans’ cheers after passing Kobe Bryant for No. 3 on the NBA’s career scoring list. James finished with 29 points, eight assists and seven rebounds but also had eight turnovers and couldn’t rally the Lakers to a trip-ending win.
 ?? Chris Szagola Associated Press ?? AL HORFORD scored seven straight points after Danny Green and the Lakers cut a 22-point lead to five in the fourth quarter. Philadelph­ia improved to 6-3 since All-Star center Joel Embiid was sidelined.
Chris Szagola Associated Press AL HORFORD scored seven straight points after Danny Green and the Lakers cut a 22-point lead to five in the fourth quarter. Philadelph­ia improved to 6-3 since All-Star center Joel Embiid was sidelined.

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