NBA General

LeBron James at 40: The statistical case for the greatest longevity in NBA history

LeBron James is playing meaningful NBA basketball at 40 years old. The historical context makes this absurd.

Career milestones (Source: Basketball Reference):

  • All-time NBA scoring leader (surpassed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in February 2023)
  • 40,000+ career points. No other player has reached this mark.
  • 20 consecutive seasons averaging 25+ points per game
  • Still averaging approximately 20+ points per game past age 39

The longevity comparison:

  • Michael Jordan at 40: Retired (his second retirement was at 39 with the Wizards, averaging 20 PPG but clearly diminished)
  • Kobe Bryant at 38: Retired after multiple major injuries. Averaged 17.6 PPG in his final season.
  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at 42: Still playing but averaged 10.1 PPG in his final season.
  • Tim Duncan at 40: Retired. Averaged 8.6 PPG in his final season.
  • LeBron at 39-40: Still an All-Star caliber player.

How he has done it:

  1. Investment in body maintenance. Reported $1-2 million per year on recovery: cryotherapy, hyperbaric chambers, personal chefs, sleep optimization. Source: The Athletic — LeBron training regimen reporting.
  2. Basketball IQ. As athleticism declines, LeBron compensates with court vision and positioning. He sees plays before they develop.
  3. Position evolution. Started as a small forward, evolved into a point-forward, now plays a positionless role that minimizes the athletic demands.

The GOAT debate impact:

  • The scoring record alone gives LeBron a permanent place in the top-2 all-time.
  • Longevity vs. peak: Jordan's peak was arguably higher, but LeBron's sustained excellence over 20+ years is unprecedented.

Sources:

  • Basketball Reference — career statistics and records
  • NBA.com — all-time records
  • The Athletic — LeBron training and recovery reporting
Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 2, 2026, 3:54 PM

4 Comments

40,000 career points will never be broken. Nobody in the current NBA is on pace to even approach it. That record is permanent.