LeBron James atop NBA all-time scoring list as Cavs, Akron cheer on
- Unmet expectations? Not for LeBron James. STVM coach Dru Joyce II reflects on pupil’s rise
- Did you know LeBron broke a record Kareem Abdul-Jabbar set in 1984 before James’ birth at Akron City Hospital?
- A Cavaliers legend wants to celebrate James a la the team’s 2016 championship parade
As the number of reporters waiting to ask LeBron James postgame questions ballooned to about 20 during his junior season with the St. Vincent-St. Mary basketball program, a decision was made to streamline interviews by holding news conferences.
“When we traveled around the country, there were some reporters that didn’t want to believe that he was that great,” STVM coach Dru Joyce II recently told the Beacon Journal. “There were some that thought that he was catered to, and they came at him like that. He handled it much better than most teenagers would.”
In the same season, a 17-year-old James appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated with the title “The Chosen One” and the following caption: “High school junior LeBron James would be an NBA lottery pick right now.” The magazine’s publish date of Feb. 18, 2002, came roughly 16 months before the Cavaliers drafted James first overall.
“When the Sports Illustrated thing happened, those are high expectations, but I always believed from those years in high school that he had the shoulders to handle it,” Joyce said. “He was a unique person who could handle all that’s been put on him.”
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of James’ legacy as a superstar athlete and international icon is how the Akron native never allowed an unfathomable amount of hype to derail his NBA career.
James, 38, didn’t just meet expectations. He shattered them like a glass backboard victimized by a ferocious slam dunk.
The resume includes four championships — in 2020 with the Los Angeles Lakers, 2016 with the Cavaliers and 2012-13 with the Miami Heat — four regular-season Most Valuable Player awards, four Finals MVPs and 19 All-Star selections.
And on Tuesday night, James added the NBA’s all-time scoring record to the long list of achievements he has compiled in his 20 seasons. He surpassed Hall of Fame center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s 38,387 career points, scoring 38 in the Lakers’ 133-130 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.
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