Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

LeBron isn’t limited in how he scores

- SEAN CATANGUI AND LEO DOMINGUEZ

LeBron James has broken Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s NBA career scoring record, 38,387 points. To get here, he adapted to a rapid and radical shift of playing style that transforme­d the game he had already learned to dominate.

NBA teams shoot nearly twice as many three-pointers as they did when James began his career in 2003. They focus less on big men who score near the rim, like Abdul-Jabbar, than on fast players who can shoot from afar. James can do both.

Abdul-Jabbar’s scoring record was a testament to the sustained effectiven­ess of the sky hook, a highly technical shot that only he mastered. James, in a testament to adaptabili­ty, dethroned Abdul-Jabbar by scoring in all kinds of ways and learning new skills as the game changed around him.

THE DRIVE

The Cleveland Cavaliers drafted James at No. 1 overall when he was 18 and just a few months too late to face off against Michael Jordan, who retired for good after the 2002-03 season. They were often compared to each other, and James quickly showed why with forceful drives to the rim and fluid midair contortion­s in the Jordan template.

At first glance, it may seem as if James can drive so effectivel­y because he is simply faster and stronger than everyone. And at 6-9 and 250 pounds, he generally is. He has drawn comparison­s to football players with the way he flies down the lane. But in addition to his speed and strength, he has the footwork and tight ball-handling skills to change directions in an instant. This devastatin­g combinatio­n has made him one of the league’s top scorers at the rim throughout his career.

James’ game had its limitation­s early on, however. In James’ first appearance in the NBA Finals, with the Cavaliers in 2007, the San Antonio Spurs clogged the driving lanes, exploiting his subpar outside shooting. The Spurs swept the series, 4-0. James averaged just 22 points a game and missed about two-thirds of his shots.

In time, he got better.

THE POST

Four years later, after losing in the NBA Finals again, this time with the Miami Heat, James took it upon himself to expand his offensive repertoire. During the 2011 offseason, he started working with another scoring legend, Hakeem Olajuwon, who was known for his balletic footwork in the post.

James, a forward, has the size to back down almost anyone.

By starting more of his attacks from the post, with his back to the basket, James could exert less energy than he did powering in for drives to the rim and be more selective about the shots he took. This playing style earned Olajuwon the 12th spot on the NBA’s career-scoring list.

From the post, James can better anticipate the moves of multiple defenders, watch for open passing lanes and create space for an easy shot with the threat of his drive.

Between the 2006-07 season and his first championsh­ip with the Heat in 2012, James nearly doubled his time in the post, according to Synergy Sports. Even now, as his speed and explosiven­ess have dipped with age, James has still been able to lean on this skill.

THE THREE-POINTER

Early in James’ career, the threepoint shot was the glaring weakness in his game. He did not take many, and he did not make many. But, in flowing with the evolution of the league, James has more than doubled the number of three-pointers he attempts a game since his rookie season. He is making about three times as many of them, too.

He can run hot and cold from deep, but this approach allows him to preserve his body while still scoring at a high level. According to Synergy Sports, the high-effort athletic drives that defined his early career have decreased by about one-third a game since the 2004-05 season.

When he is hitting his outside shots consistent­ly, opponents run out of options.

His step-back three-pointer is devastatin­gly simple. It reads as slow, but defenders, well aware that he can charge into the lane, never seem to react in time. In a disorienti­ng instant, James seems to wake up from a daydream, snapping back from a slow, methodical dribble into the smooth shooting motion that he has refined over the years.

That is his secret to being great: keeping defenders guessing. Abdul-Jabbar had a signature shot that everyone knew was coming and yet could not stop. James’ method has been different but no less successful. You never know how he is going to score on you — with a drive, a post-up or a wolf-in-sheep’s-clothing step-back three-pointer. But after 20 years and four NBA championsh­ips, you can bet he is going to get his points.

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