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Home»Sports

LeBron James makes his GOAT case with conviction as his legendary career nears its end

Shekari PhilemonBy Shekari PhilemonJune 11, 2026 Sports No Comments3 Mins Read
LeBron James
LeBron James (Photo credit: Shutterstock.com / A.RICARDO)
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LeBron James has never lacked for confidence, and as his NBA career drifts toward its final chapter, that quality has not diminished. Asked recently to weigh in on the greatest of all time debate that has followed him throughout his career, James made his position clear without hesitation. When it comes to choosing the best player in basketball history, he is not stepping aside for anyone, including Michael Jordan.

The remarks came during a wide-ranging interview published Monday as part of a profile for Time, in which James addressed his legacy, his rivals, and the uncertainty surrounding whether he will return for a 24th season in the league.

No argument, just confidence

James acknowledged that every generation’s greats, Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Shaquille O’Neal, Wilt Chamberlain, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, would likely make the same claim about themselves. That mutual conviction, in his view, is part of what made each of them exceptional. The difference, as James framed it, is that he believes a general manager scanning the full lineup of all-time greats and holding the first overall pick would find it very difficult to pass on him.

The argument is not purely self-promotional. James is the NBA’s all-time leading scorer. He is a four-time champion, a 22-time All-Star, and has played more games, won more games, and taken more shots than any player in league history. The statistical foundation beneath his confidence is as deep as it gets.

Influence beyond the game

The conversation also turned to the question of influence, and whether James believes he has surpassed Jordan in that dimension of an athlete’s legacy. His answer was characteristically self-aware. People who grew up watching Jordan will always see Jordan as the standard, he said. And he acknowledged that even people who came of age during his own era still tend to default to Jordan when that question is posed.

Rather than fighting that reality, James reframed it. He has never measured his journey against anyone else’s. His goals were never defined by what Jordan accomplished or what any other player left behind. What he brought to basketball, in terms of play, inspiration, and the way he carried himself in the public eye, is something he believes can stand on its own without requiring a direct comparison.

The question of a 24th season

Perhaps the most pressing question hanging over James right now is whether he will play at all next season. He enters free agency this summer as an unrestricted player, meaning he could return to the Los Angeles Lakers, sign elsewhere, or walk away entirely. He has been open about the fact that he has not made a decision.

His framework for knowing when to stop is revealing. James described his preparation rituals, the hours spent before games and practices getting his body and mind ready, as the true measure of whether he still belongs on the court. When those rituals stop feeling like something he wants to do, when the love for the process fades rather than just the outcome, that is when he will know his career is finished. Until then, the body, in his estimation, will follow wherever the mind leads.

At 40 years old, James remains one of the most compelling figures in American sports. What he decides to do next will generate the kind of attention that has followed him since he was a teenager in Akron. The GOAT debate will outlast whatever he chooses.

24th season all-time scorer basketball legacy free agency GOAT debate LeBron James los angeles lakers Michael Jordan NBA NBA history
Shekari Philemon

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