LeBron gets ready to add another golden moment
As LeBron James closes in on Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to become the NBA’s career scoring leader, the King’s memorable moments flash back.
And there have been many. Many. Through 20 seasons and four NBA championships, the list of James’ unforgettable nights is immeasurably long. But here are five that stand out.
THE MASK
The highest-scoring game of his career came on March 3, 2014, when James — playing with a mask to protect a facial fracture — toyed with the Bobcats, scoring 61 points to set a Heat record that still stands.
He hit 22 of 33 shots in a 124-107 Heat victory. He made his first eight 3-pointers, the last of them officially listed as being from 29 feet.
Even the Bobcats were awed.
“You take away his 61 points,” Charlotte’s Al Jefferson said, “and we still had a fighting chance there at the end.”
THE LOOK
Game 6 of the 2012 Eastern Conference finals did not start with Miami in great shape. The Heat was in Boston, trailing the series 3-2, one loss away from elimination and — after losing in the finals the year before, the first season of James’ tenure in Miami — quite probably needing to win to keep Miami from overhauling the roster.
James missed his first shot.
He made his next 12.
He finished with 45 points, 15 rebounds, five assists — and an intense look cameras caught him making during the game is still a meme today. Miami won, 98-79, came home to beat the Celtics in Game 7 and went on to beat Oklahoma City for James’ first title.
“He was absolutely fearless tonight, and it was contagious,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said.
THE STREAK
On May 31, 2007, James and the Cavaliers went to Detroit for Game 5 of the Eastern Conference finals, series tied, 2-2.
Drew Gooden hit a free throw with 2:49 left in regulation to draw Cleveland within 88-84. And that was the last point he, or any Cavs player not wearing No. 23, would score that night.
James scored Cleveland’s final 25 points — and 29 of the Cavs’ last 30 — to lift his team to a 109-107 overtime win and a 3-2 series lead. He even had hit game-winner, a layup with 2.2 seconds remaining.
He finished with 48 points. Cleveland closed out the series with a Game 6 win and sent James to the finals for the first time.
“We threw everything we had at him,” said Detroit guard Chauncey Billups, now the Trail Blazers coach. “We just couldn’t stop him.”
THE PROMISE
James had promised Cleveland a championship. And then he left in 2010 for Miami, a move that left Cavs fans jilted for years — especially when he won two titles there.
But when he returned in 2014, all was forgiven. Two years later — June 19, 2016 — he finally delivered what Cleveland had waited generations for.
He notched 27 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists, and delivered a chase-down block of Golden State’s Andre Iguodala to keep the game tied with just under two minutes to go. The Cavs dethroned the champions, winning 93-89 and capping a comeback from a 3-1 series deficit.
It was the first major championship for the city of Cleveland since the Browns in 1964.
THE FOURTH
James’ fourth title came before almost no fans. A handful of team employees and a very select group of invitees were the only ones inside the bubble at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Florida when the Lakers beat the Heat in the 2020 finals.
It capped a season delayed by the pandemic, and one in which the Lakers grieved the death of Kobe Bryant earlier that year.
James recorded a triple-double in the title-clincher, this time 28 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists. The Lakers won, 106-93, taking the series, 4-2.
“Our organization wants their respect. Laker Nation wants their respect,” James said that night. “And I want my damn respect, too.”