there's nothing a human can do against this.
Wilt wasn't human though.Wilt blocked his sky hook twice
He was the GOAT

there's nothing a human can do against this.
Wilt wasn't human though.Wilt blocked his sky hook twice

If I had to guess it’ll be:What’s those.
LeBron had lots of low points that are being overlooked.

He's saying wins and loses don't matter, which will knock out a huge portion of your argument.You just described the '69 Finals duel between Hondo and West...
The answer is they played to a draw but West shouldered more responsibility over the duration of their careers, so he'd get the lean as the better player. But it's close...
LeBron is the greatest player ever to me because he hit the pinnacle of success in his sport while under the stiffest microscope and facing the most on-court adversity in the most talent rich era of basketball ever. And to be clear, I'm not saying these other guys didn't have adversity, they all had some, and there is talent in all eras...
Bit the game continues to evolve, not devolve. None of these guys can compete against each other, but the same reasons guys favor Mike over Russell, the evolution of the sport was more talented in Mike's time, is the same reason I favor Bron over everyone else...
Since Bron entered the NBA in 2003-04:
•he has the most rings (Steph just tied him at 4, but no one has more than 4, and Bron is the only player since '04 to win more than 2 as a #1);
•he has the most MVPs (no one else has more than 2);
•he has the most All-NBAs and All-Stars;
•he has the most Finals appearances (no one else has more than 6);
•he has the most conference Finals appearances (no one else has more than 6);
This is thorough domination of your generation. He's played for 20 years and no one has more anything than him...
And in addition to all these he has arguably the greatest playoff resume ever. Mike doesn't have an '11 Finals series, bit most All-Timers do, and even with the '11 Finals, Bron has some of the most iconic moments in playoff history. Comebacks, buzzer beaters, scoring blitzes, clutch defensive plays, etc. But for that Dallas loss his playoff record is damn near unimpeachable...
He has higher highs than Mike in the playoffs. The Mike crowd loves pretending Mike only played those 6 seasons he won the title, he actually played 9 other years. We saw Mike with talent-poor rosters, a la the '07 or '18 Cavs, and Mike didn't get anywhere close to a Finals with those teams. He wasn't the floor raiser Bron was, thats not even debatable...
He has more playoff game winners than Mike. He shoots better in crunch time. He's the only one of the two who made series defining defensive plays. On and on and on...
And not to discredit the other names you posted, but these guys don't have the most everything in their eras except Mike. Mike is the only one close. No one else had the most rings + most MVPs + most All-Pros + most Top 5 MVP finishes + most appearances in the Finals and conference Finals, etc etc...
Mike is the only comp. There's a wide margin between Bron and everyone else...
He's the only 1-man dynasty in the history of basketball. Every dynasty in NBA history is tied to a coach and style of play, system. Bron won 4 MVPs in 5 years, won 3 championships in 5 years with two different teams, and won 4 championships in 9 years with 3 different teams---->for reference the Duncan Spurs are considered a "dynasty", for winning 3 championships in 5 years ('03 to '07), and 4 championships in 9 years ('99 to '07)...
As a team. LeBron equaled a team's output as just one player, multiple coaches, systems, philosophies, structure if the roster, etc. He's the only player whose ever done this and he never played with an All-Time coach or on an All-Time team. He's had the longest prime in NBA history, likely the longest peak ever (he won his first MVP in '09 and his last title in '20, nobody had a sustained run at the top this long). And his peak was higher than anyone's except arguably Mike's---->I could easily make the case Bron had the highest peak ever...
I don't care that he has 6 Finals losses. LeBron is the only All-Timer whose losses are magnified rather than their wins. He was the best player on the floor in at minimum 6 of his 10 Finals, the only exceptions being '07, '11, and depending on how someone feels about the Durant match-up in '17 and '18. He was a better player than Durant certainly, it's more than arguable though, that Durant had the better series both years. We understand Bron's 6 Finals losses aren't an indictment in him but rather evidence of playing superior teams...
Bron is the standard these guys are measured to. Not Durant. Not Giannis. Or Jokic or Kobe or Shaq or Duncan or any other player he lapped eras with. We compare these guys' to the standard of excellence Bron set...
I can keep going, but this is how I'd differentiate...
If I had to guess it’ll be:
1)Not making the playoffs his first 2 years
2) 2010 playoffs where he “quit” against the Celtics while scoring 27 and grabbing 15 boards (a nearly identical line to the finals MVP game 7)
3) Mavs 2011, it is what it is
4) cramping in the 2014 Finals Game 1
5) The Lakers tenure. Because somehow missing the playoffs in part because of injury outweighs winning a championship
6) and someone might throw in the 04 Bronze when Larry Brown didn’t play rookies
All people talk about is Lebron's low moments. Kareem has his fair share that people literally don't even know about.
1. Why does this matter to you? Mike made the playoffs with a 38 and 30-win teams; Kobe wasn't "Kobe" when he was a 6th man at best with no playoff starts and his team made the playoffs with him averaging 17.4 minutes per game, as his team made the playoffs his first two years; and not making the playoffs as rookies or Y2 players isn't held against Shaq, or Oscar, or Durant, or Steph, or Garnett, or anyone else...
These talking points literally never come up with any type of regularity, literally nobody says, "well you know KD has a hit on his resume not taking those Sonics/Thunder to the playoffs his first two years". Nobody says "Kobe has a hit on his resume for being a 6th man his first two years". Here's that sliding standard of accountability I talk about, this doesn't matter if we're not holding every All-Timer to this bar...
Because in the same breath you'd mention this you'd have to mention Mike playing on sub-40 win teams who backed into the playoffs, you'd have to mention West lucking into a situation that already had Elgin Baylor, Magic lucking into a situation that had Kareem, Duncan lucking into a situation that had Robinson, that lowered the burden of responsibility these guys had in "getting" their teams to the playoffs in the first two years...
This is a terrible talking point, you'd have to admit that...
2. This was a bad look. This point deserves to be mentioned in his story...
3. This is his career low point, nikkas talk about this as much as any high point, it's talked about ad nauseum...
4. This is silly, blame an injury on him?he was the best player in that series by a mile, Heat got nothing from anyone else. Come on, man...
5. His 5 years in LA have been significantly brighter than the 5 LA years that preceded his arrival, so while it's a lower point in his career, I don't see the relevance in people staying on this when we all see he rejuvenated a franchise whose leadership has shown us they'd still be floundering had he not come here...
He came here and brought a title, blaming injuries on an older player who is balling at an age most guys are out The League or buried deep into the rotation is ridiculous...
6. I don't know what you mean here...
There's a thread here somewhere where I traced Kareem's low points beginning with that '74 Finals choke and kept going---->it's absolutely true muhfukkas just don't know Kareem's blemishes, and then when presented with them, you get the "that's different" shyt...
Mike also has blemishes that are never talked about. LeBron is the only guy where we don't talk about how he overcame his adversity. Everyone else, Mike, Kareem, everybody, is celebrated...
He's saying wins and loses don't matter, which will knock out a huge portion of your argument.
Just for fun, let's have a discussion.
I can't agree that he faced the most on-court diversity, but I do agree with the microscope. However, Bill Russell played amongst death threats, discrimination, some of the worst possible conditions any one man should have to endure. And Kareem was on the front lines off court. Magic & Bird had to carry the league on their backs, a barely sustaining league, while also dealing with the embellished narrative of a rivalry of Black vs White. I also don't agree that the current game has evolved from what it was. I'd say it changed, in that one skill set was given up for another. Guards can dribble the air out of the ball, but can't make an entry pass or a pull-up midrange. Bigs can shoot a 3 at 34%, but can't score 4' away from the basket at 45%, don't know how to box out, rebound, or block shots. Even the argument "no spacing" translates to you don't know how to get to whatever spot or shot you want. People aren't learning the game. Even with off-the ball movement, watch the game and see how many teams have plays in which everyone is stationary, and they're just waiting for a pass for the wide open shot.
Since Bron entered the league, he played a good portion of his prime (4 years) with 2 of the Top 4 players of his draft class. That would eliminate some of his would be competition for a lot of awards.
Steph also came into the league 6 years after Lebron, so you're not even comparing the same window. Hell, they're not even peers.
All of your other points refer others among their peers - Mike, Cap, Magic, Logo, Wilt, Bill, Shaq, Kobe, Duncan, Sam Jones, Hondo, Cousy.
Every other player has "Comebacks, buzzer beaters, scoring blitzes, clutch defensive plays" in the Finals. Go watch the games. "Havlicek stole the ball." "Bird stole the ball and an incredible pass" The push-off shot/pose is iconic. And there are tons of others.
Phil wasn't an all-time coach until he coached Mike. That was like his 2nd year with them. Pop grew as a coach with the Spurs. He was only like 3 yrs in - Bob Hill was Admiral's coach. And Pop was under Nellie...his style is NOTHING like Nellie.
He doesn't have higher highs than Jordan in the Finals. In 93, Chuck had 25 14 & 5, and MJ had to average 41 to keep them at bay. There are plenty of others - Magic etc...He's also not the only player to drag a less than stellar cast to the Finals. Dream did it, AI, hell 94 Knicks, Jason Kidd did it twice...But you can't bring teams talk to it, without calling out Lebron as well. He had better players on his teams ever since the first Clev run. Lebron is supposed to be the difference maker.
Lebron is NOT the only all-timer who's loses affect his status. It's the ONLY thing that affects Wilt & Logo's status. If Wilt is 4-2 instead of 2-4, he's #3 easily. If Logo is 5-4, and not 1-8, he's Top 10. They were dominant but the loses in the Finals hurts. He also has a losing record to every team/player he faced in the Finals, save Jimmy Butler.
By most comparisons, you cannot blatantly say that Lebron was more dominant in his era than others were in theirs. And that's what this discussion is about. His highs aren't really higher than anyone else's. The other closest would be Mailman & Cap...perhaps Moses...they all tailed off year 17 & 18.
Lebron has the highest longevity/output ratio of any All-Timer, that's his claim to prominence.