Basketball

LeBron James passes Michael Jordan for fourth in career scoring

LeBron James moved past Michael Jordan into fourth spot on the NBA’s career scoring list Wednesday night.

The Lakers whiz scored his 32,293rd point on a driving layup in the second quarter against the Nuggets, getting fouled in the demonstration and hitting the resulting free toss.

This accomplishment was especially uncommon to James, who experienced childhood in Ohio venerating Jordan. James tweeted his fervor about themilestone shortly before the game: “Can’t even front. This is going to be UNREAL!! Wow man.”

James started the night requiring 13 points to reach the mark. He now trails only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (38,387 points), Karl Malone (36,928) and Kobe Bryant (33,643).

Under direction from the NBA, the Lakers held up until the following timeout to respect James, who got an overwhelming applause from his new Los Angeles fans amid a tribute video. James, still charmed in the game, barely acknowledged the milestone after receiving hugs from several teammates.

The 34-year-old James is among the last active players who were mature enough to observe Jordan in his prime with the Bulls. LeBron has said he grew up in Akron admiring Jordan as “the best ever” while he led Chicago to six championships in eight years during the 1990s.

“There are certain milestones that it’s nice to take a moment and embrace and honor,” Lakers coach Luke Walton said before the game. “Michael is a guy that guys like LeBron, myself included, grew up watching. That is THE guy, Michael Jordan. So to pass him in anything, especially scoring, would be something that we aren’t going to see very often.”

Jordan found the middle averaged of 30.1 points in 1,072 games with Chicago and Washington. James, who entered the NBA at 18 years old compared with 21 for Jordan, began the night averaging 27.1 points in 1,189 games over 16 seasons with Cleveland, Miami and the Lakers.

Be that as it may, James has never been a score-first player, rather overwhelming the league and winning three titles with his blend of shooting, playmaking and beast physical brightness. Only eight days back, James moved into tenth spot on the helps list, turning into the first player in league history to make the top 10 in points and assists.

A few days earlier, James appeared in his 15th All-Star Game.

“To see where he is now is remarkable,” said Denver coach Michael Malone, an assistant coach with the Cavs from 2005-10. “He makes everybody around him better. … He made us look like really good coaches in Cleveland. I know that LeBron James is arguably one of the greatest ever to lace them up, and this is a great accomplishment in his career.”

Five of the top six scorers in NBA history played for the Lakers, who signed James as a free agent last summer. Although James has only played 47 games for Los Angeles, he has charged up the career scoring chart in that time: He passed Dirk Nowitzki for sixth place in October, and he passed Wilt Chamberlain for fifth in November.

James began the night averaging 27.0 points, 8.7 rebounds and 8.0 assists while hitting 51 percent of his shots and playing 35.7 minutes per game for the Lakers. He would have hit this milestone earlier in the winter, but a midseason groin injury on Christmas sidelined him for 17 games over five weeks — the longest injury absence of his career.

Although James’ numbers remain strong, his first year on the West Coast is shaping up as one of his worst in terms of team success. The Lakers (30-34) have faded ever since James was injured, going 10-20 and falling to the fringe of the playoff race even after his return.

Despite James’ 17 points, the Lakers trailed powerful Denver 66-49 at halftime, seemingly headed to their fourth straight loss.

James has played in the last eight consecutive NBA Finals, and he hasn’t missed the playoffs since 2004-05, his second NBA season. After they began the night 5½ games out of a playoff spot, the 10th-place Lakers would need an incredible late-season run — and an extraordinary collapse by two teams in front of them — to avoid missing the playoffs for the franchise-record sixth consecutive season.

“I knew coming into this year that it would be different,” James said after the Lakers’ loss to the rival Clippers on Monday night. “You take the challenge and you continue to stay positive, no matter what’s going on. Throughout it all, keep your head high, and you keep pushing forward.”