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Tuesday, November 25, 2025

LeBron James is the First Player to Participate in 23 NBA Seasons

LeBron James is entering uncharted territory by participating in his 23rd NBA season, breaking the record of 22 seasons set by Vince Carter. Last season, James played at an unprecedented level considering his age (40 years old) and experience (22 NBA seasons), averaging 24.4 ppg, 8.2 apg (sixth in the league), and 7.8 rpg. He made the All-NBA Second Team, and he finished sixth in regular season MVP voting. James' L.A. Lakers finished third in the Western Conference regular season standings before being upset 4-1 by the sixth seeded Minnesota Timberwolves in the first round.

James missed the first 14 games of the 2025-26 season because of sciatica, and he has now played two games, both versus the woeful Utah Jazz. 

In his first game of the season, James scored 11 points on 4-7 field goal shooting while passing for a game-high 12 assists and grabbing three rebounds as the L.A. Lakers defeated the 5-9 Jazz, 140-126. He had a +1 plus/minus number while every other Lakers' starter had a plus/minus number of at least +10. Luka Doncic scored a game-high 37 points on 11-22 field goal shooting while dishing 10 assists with a +10 plus/minus number in 34 minutes. Austin Reaves had 26 points on 7-11 field goal shooting, one assist, and a +10 plus/minus number in 33 minutes. 

In his second game of the season, James had 17 points on 8-17 field goal shooting, eight rebounds, and six assists as the Lakers defeated the 5-11 Utah Jazz, 108-106. James had a team-worst -14 plus/minus number in 34 minutes. Doncic scored a game-high 33 points, grabbed a game-high 11 rebounds, and passed for a game-high tying eight assists in 40 minutes while sporting a gaudy game-high + 33 plus/minus number. Reaves had 22 points, 10 rebounds, four assists, and a -1 plus/minus number.

This is clearly a small sample size of games from which no definitive conclusions should be drawn. It is worth noting that in his last game prior to this season, James had a team-worst -14 plus/minus number as the Timberwolves eliminated the Lakers, 103-96. James had five points on 2-7 field goal shooting in the fourth quarter of that game. 

For most of his career, James has been the focal point for his team and he has dominated the ball while other players--even future Hall of Famers--sublimated their games and accepted having reduced touches. That formula is not in the best interest of the 2025-26 Lakers, because Doncic is a future Hall of Famer who is just entering his prime. Doncic is in the best shape of his life, and he has been shattering records with his quick start to this season. Doncic should be the Lakers' primary scorer and primary ballhandler/decision maker. Reaves is well-suited to being a secondary scorer/secondary playmaker. 

Where does that leave James? Based on James' age, health, and current skill set level, he should be the third option. Reducing James' offensive load not only diversifies the Lakers' attack by enabling Doncic and Reaves to shine, but it also gives James the opportunity to be more impactful defensively. Offense is not a problem for the Lakers, but they need to play better defense, and if James wants too add to his championship ring collection then he will focus on elevating the Lakers' defense both by example and by mentoring the team's younger players. Older players tend to be injury-prone, and tend to not be as engaged or effective defensively. The Lakers need for James to be healthy and to be a net positive defensively; reducing his offensive workload is the best way to keep James healthy and to help him have enough energy to be effective defensively. James has carefully crafted a reputation for being unselfish while having a high basketball IQ; the unselfish, smart way for him to play now is let Doncic and Reaves cook offensively while shoring up the Lakers' defense.

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posted by David Friedman @ 3:09 AM

6 comments

6 Comments:

At Wednesday, November 26, 2025 9:32:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

All the playoff games -- 10 Finals runs -- plus the USA basketball teams make his longevity even more astounding, in a sport where there's constant pounding on the leg joints

 
At Wednesday, November 26, 2025 10:29:00 PM, Blogger David Friedman said...

Anonymous:

I agree. James epitomizes the cliche, "The best ability is availability." Of course, James has many abilities, but his consistent availability for more than two decades is remarkable.

 
At Thursday, December 04, 2025 2:36:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

There have been some darker rumors behind LeBron's longevity. I've seen some speculation about HGH usage, including that weird emergency trip he made to Miami in 2015 while on the Cavaliers.

 
At Thursday, December 04, 2025 3:25:00 PM, Blogger David Friedman said...

Anonymous:

Any evidence to support those rumors?

 
At Friday, December 05, 2025 12:55:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am referring to articles like this:

https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba/news/lebron-james-steroid-allegations-back-injury-hgh/c5334e4ab6db129ec0d4a50d

https://www.si.com/nba/lakers/onsi/news/former-lebron-james-teammate-refuses-to-address-whether-lakers-star-is-on-steroids-ak1987

 
At Friday, December 05, 2025 1:08:00 PM, Blogger David Friedman said...

Anonymous:

I asked if you have evidence to support those rumors.

The first link that your provided includes this conclusion by the writer:

"Performance-enhancing drug allegations have surfaced in connection with James from time to time, but they have exclusively come from dubious sources and fan speculation."

The second article also has no evidence, just an offhand comment by Dwight Howard, "You think it's steroids?"

Do you understand the difference between rumors and evidence?

I am not interested in rumors.

I was tempted to delete your comment because I don't deal with rumors, but I am leaving this thread here because it is instructive to talk about the difference between rumors and evidence; far too much media coverage focuses on rumors and allegations as opposed to focusing on evidence. For example, I don't know how the Clippers "scandal" will ultimately be resolved but I know that nothing the famous podcaster presented can be classified as evidence; the allegations he made may turn out to be true, partially true, or false, but what he presented were a lot of unfounded accusations made by anonymous sources along with a bunch of documents that don't necessarily prove what he insists that they prove.

I don't know if LeBron James took HGH, but I have not seen any evidence that he did, in contrast to the numerous MLB players whose illegal PED use has been well-documented and whose bodies changed in ways consistent not with normal aging/normal exercising but with PED use (including jawline and head growth that is not normal for an adult).

 

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