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LeBron James is setting records that NBA rules protect

At this point, there is no question that LeBron James is one of the greatest NBA players of all time. Especially when considering his countless achievements throughout his 16-year NBA career. One of his most impressive achievements is displacing Wilt Chamberlain on the NBA all-time scoring list.

Chamberlain is arguably the most dominant force the NBA has ever seen. One of his most memorable achievements is scoring 100 points in an NBA game. To this date, he is the only player to average over 50 points over the course of a season.

That is the caliber of player that James just dropped to sixth on the scoring list.  James has the opportunity to pass Michael Jordan on the list by the end of the season. He is in a rare position that very few in today’s NBA game will ever be in.

James is poised to possibly become the NBA’s all-time leading scorer one day due to three reasons; consistency, durability, and longevity. James came into the league straight out of high school at the age of 18, an option the NBA currently does not afford its players.

Since James came in at a younger age, his NBA career has a head start on most one-and-done players now. There is also the fact that he hit the ground running averaging 20.9 points per game in his rookie season. His lowest points per game average since his rookie season is 25.3.

James may not have numerous scoring titles like others on the list, but his longevity and durability elevate him up the list. The most games he has missed during a season is 13.

He does not have scoring seasons similar to Chamberlain’s 50.4 season or Jordan’s 37.1 season. However, his durability allows him to play practically every game in which he is consistently great.

His career average of 27.2 points per game speaks to that. Despite James not being a pure scorer similar to a Kevin Durant, his records are marks that Durant will likely never break.

Durant is arguably the best scorer in the NBA today and one of the greatest of all time. However, numerous circumstances make it practically impossible for him to reach some of the marks set by James.

Durant is a product of the one-and-done rule which means he was 19 when he came into the NBA. A few months older than James. While Durant got off to a great start similar to James, there was already a gap between them.

That also does not include the time Durant has lost to injury throughout his career. In one season Durant missed 55 games to injury.

Durant just turned 30-years old in September but if one were to compare James’ and Durant’s career point totals until the end of their age 29 seasons, the numbers do not lie.

Durant scored 20,913 career points by the end of his 11th season. While James scored 23,170 careers points by the end of his 11th season. He is a season’s worth of points ahead of Durant.

Durant’s only chance to catch him would be to play longer than James and to maintain a high scoring output while doing so. A feat that is highly unlikely.

James is the youngest to break many of the NBA’s scoring records due to coming out of high school. As well as his durability and consistency allow him to accumulate the stats to break such records.

Unless the NBA goes back to drafting kids out of high school, it is almost impossible that James’ records are eclipsed. Let alone the durability and consistency another player would need to rival his numbers.

James’ being the best player in the NBA in his 16th season is a testament to his greatness. He is an NBA anomaly, one the league will probably never see the likes of again.

Brendan Abban is the owner/creator of brendanabban.com and hosts the KBR Sports podcast. Follow him on Twitter @AbbanBrendan or email [email protected]

This article is an original post from thescorecrow.com.

Brendan Abban

Brendan is the owner and creator of brendanabban.com. He is a sports writer who has had articles featured on Bleacher Report, Yahoo Sports, and Fox Sports. He currently contributes to The Scorecrow and SB Nation. He also hosts his own podcast and Youtube channel named KBR Sports. He has formerly written for iSportsWeb, the Mace and Crown, and Endzonescore.