LeBron James has built a Hall of Fame résumé on dominance, durability and records that once seemed untouchable, yet the defining principle of his career has never been about individual scoring glory.
Despite becoming the NBA‘s all-time leading scorer with 42,268 career points, James has consistently resisted being labeled a pure scorer, instead framing his legacy around a simpler, more demanding standard: playing the game the right way.
That philosophy was on full display Thursday night in Toronto, when James‘ historic streak of 1,297 consecutive regular-season games with at least 10 points finally came to an end during the Lakers‘ 123-120 win over the Raptors. For the first time in nearly 19 years, dating back to Jan. 6, 2007, James was held to single digits with eight points.
A moment that changed NBA history
With the game tied at 120 in the closing seconds, Toronto sent a double team at Austin Reaves, who had erupted for 44 points. Reaves found James at the top of the key with 3.5 seconds left, giving him a clear opportunity to rise for a potential game-winner and, in the process, extend his unprecedented scoring run.
Instead of forcing a contested shot, James found Rui Hachimura wide open in the corner, and Hachimura buried the buzzer-beating three to seal the win while also delivering James his 11th assist of the night. Afterward, LeBron summed up the moment in a way that captured the core of his approach better than any statistic ever could.
“Just playing the game the right way… always make the right play,” he said. “That’s been my MO my whole career, not even once second-guessing that.” When asked about the significance of the scoring streak ending, his response was just as direct. “None. We won.”
LeBron has every right to be considered the GOAT
The end of the streak may have drawn headlines, but the scope of what it represented only reinforces James‘ unmatched consistency. Only 24 players in NBA history have even played 1,297 games across their entire careers, let alone scored in double figures in all of them. James‘ streak surpassed the previous record by 431 games and currently sits 1,030 games longer than the active leader, Kevin Durant, whose own run stands at 267.
Yet through every milestone, James has continued to define himself not by point totals but by decision-making. Whether it has meant bullying his way to the rim, controlling tempo as a point forward, or deferring at the critical moment to set up a teammate for a cleaner look, the guiding principle has remained unchanged.
At a stage of his career when most stars are defined by what they can no longer do, James continues to shape games in multiple ways while anchoring the Lakers with his leadership and versatility. His refusal to chase numbers, even when history is on the line, underscores why teammates trust him and why his teams have remained relevant for more than two decades.
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