LeBron James continues to redefine greatness in the NBA, adding yet another milestone to a career already overflowing with historic achievements. On Saturday night, the Los Angeles Lakers superstar officially became the all-time leader in regular-season games played, appearing in his 1,612th game and surpassing the long-standing record held by Robert Parish.
The record is a testament not just to James’ talent, but to his extraordinary longevity. Now in his 23rd NBA season, which is a new league benchmark, James has outlasted generations of players. In fact, entering the game, 79 active NBA players this season were not even born when he made his debut on October 29, 2003.
Despite the significance of the achievement, James downplayed the milestone, emphasizing that record-chasing has never been his primary motivation. “It’s not like I’m writing things down and looking at the record book and saying: ‘I’m going to get that,’” he said. “It just kind of happened.”
Over the years, James has built a résumé that may never be matched. He holds records for most career points, most All-Star and All-NBA selections, most playoff games, and even highest career earnings. Each additional game, shot, and minute only widens the gap between him and the rest of the league.
Interestingly, even his teammates have taken notice of his seemingly endless list of accomplishments. Austin Reaves humorously pointed out that James might also lead in unofficial categories like “most sneakers worn” and “most shoestrings used,” a joke that reflects both admiration and amazement within the Lakers locker room.
While James has already achieved the goals he set out early in his career including NBA championships, MVP awards, and global recognition he admits that these later milestones carry a special kind of satisfaction.
“I wanted to be one of the greatest, if not the greatest, to ever play this game,” James said. “But some of the stuff that’s been happening over the last few years has been super-duper cool.”
At this stage, every appearance by James feels like history in motion. With records continuing to fall and no clear endpoint in sight, the question is no longer what he will achieve next but how much further he can push the limits of an already unparalleled career.
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