
via Imago
LeBron James, Steph Curry, Michael Jordan

via Imago
LeBron James, Steph Curry, Michael Jordan
Legacy begins where time thinks it ends. Every year, when LeBron James returns to the court, he’s a year older in age and tenure in the NBA. His gray hair and extra wrinkles on his face say that maybe it’s time for a curtain call. But his body, his moves, and his impact tell a different story. The Akron Hammer is here to stay, maybe not for long. But long enough to leave his footprints in the sands of time like never before.
At 40, if Bron has to listen to critical voices pointing out his performance, then it’s nothing more than a joke. Because, well, overanalyzing his years and putting too much weight and stock into what he does in Year 22 seems a bit unfair. And then, there is the whole GOAT conversation: Who is the one? Michael Jordan or LeBron James. Well, Stephen A. Smith might just go all-out on you in this matter, but Austin Rivers might have a different outlook. And mind you, Rivers, too, is an MJ fanboy like most of us, including Bron himself.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Michael Jordan’s fanboy takes a jab at LeBron James’ critics for questioning his legacy amidst the GOAT debate
“My man is 40 years old and has been in the league for twenty-plus years. He’s probably gonna end up being on the All-NBA team at 40 years,” Austin Rivers told his co-host Pausha Haghighi on Off Guard with Austin Rivers. Interestingly enough, LeBron James is among the many names in discussion for the 2025 All-NBA Team. If he makes it through the cut, he’ll continue as the oldest player to All-NBA.
Meanwhile, River strongly claimed: “40 years old. He’s gonna be on an All-NBA team. Case closed. The book. I’m not saying for his career. I’m talking about this season.” James Sr. has averaged 24.4 ppg, 7.8 rebounds, 8.2 assists, and 51.2 FG%. In the disheartening Playoff series where the Lakers lost to the Minnesota Timberwolves, that 40-year-old man played some of his best defense.

via Imago
LeBron James
Therefore, Rivers further added, “If you’re judging LeBron’s legacy or anything on what he’s doing in Year 22—and other players don’t even get to this, really, ever—or if they do, they can’t move. Oh, ever. They don’t have—this is insane. To think that anything he does this year could hurt his legacy? That is just so shocking to me.” Rivers shuts it down—again. LeBron lost? So what. These last few seasons don’t count. Seriously, stop asking if they dent his legacy. They don’t. Never did.
“Jordan would’ve never. You’re right. Jordan would’ve never. He’s on a f—— golf course at 40 years old doing something wrong?” Austin Rivers further snapped. “He [MJ] did play with the Wizards. They weren’t competing for a championship, respectfully. Stop. There’s nothing that LeBron can do right now that can hurt his legacy. He can only, in terms of the basketball court can enhance and help it.” So, elevating the GOAT debate to the next level amidst LeBron James‘s uncertain Lakers future, Austin Rivers had something else to say.
What’s your perspective on:
LeBron vs. MJ: Has the GOAT debate finally reached a 50-50 split among fans?
Have an interesting take?
Amidst James’ uncertain Lakers future, Rivers gives him a “50-50” verdict
At 40, with a $52.6M player option on the table, LeBron James stands at a crossroads. The Los Angeles Lakers‘ bittersweet playoff exit exposed cracks beneath the greatness—fatigue, questions, and fading fire. Now, the offseason looms large. Will he run it back or rewrite the ending? Surely, LeBron’s future with the Purple and Gold suddenly looks bleak, but that doesn’t mean he’s off the conversation on everyone’s lips.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
Taking a jab at the critics who doubt James Sr.’s legacy in the sport, Austin Rivers gave his biggest verdict. He said, “They arguably already have him as the greatest player of all time. That’s the debate. It’s Michael and LeBron. And at this point, it’s like 50-50 with people. It used to be like 80-20. Then it was like 70-30. Then it was 60-40. Now it’s 50-50.”

via Imago
Mar 29, 2025; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) reacts during the third quarter against the Memphis Grizzlies at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
He further noted, “This guy [LeBron James]’s also coming off the Olympics. Hold the f—— flag for our country. Fall the fuck back. Good God. I got a text this day from all my homies. “Michael—you know—” No. Shut up! And I’m a Michael guy. Fall back!” Michael Jordan‘s empire is now LeBron James’s, and maybe that’s the reality many people are failing to accept.
ADVERTISEMENT
Article continues below this ad
The throne was never handed over—it was earned, bruises and all. Moreover, at 40, LeBron James isn’t chasing ghosts; he’s rewriting what longevity looks like. So, question the Lakers if you must, but don’t question the King’s crown. Because legacy, unlike time, doesn’t age.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
"LeBron vs. MJ: Has the GOAT debate finally reached a 50-50 split among fans?"