San Francisco Chronicle

On a star-filled night, LeBron was biggest

- By Greg Beahcam

LOS ANGELES — Bronny James stepped over to his dad’s locker and played the phone video he had taken of Tuesday night’s biggest moment. The NBA’s new scoring king tipped his head back in a rich, fullthroat­ed laugh when the audio revealed Bronny had anticipate­d that the historic basket would come on a fadeaway jumper.

“That’s tough, that’s tough,” LeBron James said. “That’s funny.”

For James, the greatest cost of nearly two decades in the NBA is the family time he misses. When he reached arguably the greatest individual basketball milestone of all by passing Kareem AbdulJabba­r’s career scoring record, James’ mother, wife and three children all witnessed the coronation.

They were right at courtside in a building packed with stars and roaring fans who rose in waves of anticipati­on every time he touched the ball.

James has been thriving under formidable pressure his entire adult life, and this was nothing the King couldn’t handle

— although the man who says he almost never cries had tears in his eyes after he made history with that nimble step-back shot in the third quarter.

“I had a moment when it happened, and I embraced that moment,” James said afterward. “Seeing my family and friends, the people that have been around me since I started this journey to the NBA, definitely very emotional right there. Just a kid from a small town in Ohio. I had a moment there, but I

don’t think it’s really hit me, what just transpired.”

When James surpassed Abdul-Jabbar’s record 38,387 points, a crowd that had roared for his every basket went the craziest of all.

“A lot of people wanted me to go to the skyhook to break the record, or one of the signature dunks,” James said with a grin. “But the fadeaway is a signature play as well.”

The Los Angeles crowd screamed and stomped with every point while James steadily surged toward the mark held since April 1984 by Abdul-Jabbar, who watched the game from a baseline seat near the Los Angeles bench.

With four championsh­ip rings and nearly every other honor available to a basketball player, James, 38, closed in on this next moment in history with the confidence of a player who has been even better than anyone could have expected two decades ago when the kid from Akron, Ohio, reached the NBA.

“The expectatio­ns were all the way out to Pluto, and he went ahead and created his own galaxy,” Lakers head coach Darvin Ham said before his team’s 133-130 loss to Oklahoma City.

The crowd was in its seats far earlier than normal in Los Angeles, and James got numerous ovations before the Lakers and Thunder got rolling. Lakers fans turned out in droves for the chance to see a once-in-a-generation achievemen­t, with tickets going for thousands on the secondary market.

The moment was irresistib­le to fans like Aaron Sanchez, one of the hundreds of jersey-clad Lakers faithful patiently taking turns posing in front of the statue of Abdul-Jabbar that stands on the plaza in front of the Lakers’ downtown arena.

“It’s basketball history, and that’s what the Lakers are all about,” Sanchez said. “LeBron is already one of the greatest Lakers ever, and getting this record in a Lakers uniform just makes it more certain. He was our leader after Kobe (Bryant) died, and he’s our leader now.”

Indeed, James already has earned a special place in Lakers fans’ hearts over his five seasons in purple and gold. Several months before he helped winthe franchise’s 17th championsh­ip in the Florida pandemic bubble, he became a part of Lakers lore with his inspiratio­nal words and steady leadership in the wake of Bryant’s death in a helicopter crash.

Inside the building, dozens of celebritie­s gathered to witness history: Denzel Washington, Jay-Z, Bad Bunny, LL Cool J, Usher, Andy Garcia and countless others. Dozens of basketball greats also turned out, including former Lakers James Worthy and Bob McAdoo along with Dwyane Wade.

The biggest star in the crowd was Abdul-Jabbar, who has verbally sparred with James in public over issues not directly related to basketball. The Lakers’ longtime center, known as Cap, wasn’t about to miss history, and he shared a warm hug with James before ceremonial­ly exchanging a basketball in a simple, touching gesture.

Although the final score chafed him, James said he’ll never forget this stop on his two-decade journey.

“This ride has been fantastic,” James said.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press ?? Lakers forward LeBron James poses with former Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar after James passed him to become the NBA’s scoring leader.
Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press Lakers forward LeBron James poses with former Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar after James passed him to become the NBA’s scoring leader.

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