James checked back in to start the second quarter, attacking the basket 14 seconds into the period to set up the milestone score.
James passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s mark of 38,387 points to become the league’s leading scorer on February 7 last year against the Oklahoma City Thunder. He reached 39,000 points on November 21 in an In-Season Tournament game against the Utah Jazz.
Ham was a young fan when Abdul-Jabbar was finishing out his career and assumed the record would never be challenged, let alone surpassed in the way James has done.
“But here we are,” Ham said before the game. “It’s a testament to ‘Bron, just the time and resources he spends on himself, making sure not only he is healthy but he’s healthy at a high level.”
James, 39, has also played the second-most regular season and most playoff minutes in league history. He is the only NBA player with at least 10,000 points, 10,000 rebounds and 10,000 assists.
Nuggets coach Michael Malone spent five seasons with James as an assistant coach for the Cleveland Cavaliers from 2005-2010 and remains in awe of how he is able to still play at such a high level.
“I don’t get caught up in the number per se, but you just have to marvel at the continued greatness,” Malone said.
“Just to do what he’s doing at this stage of his career, and it doesn’t appear like he’s slowing down at all, which is even scarier. Really, when you take a step back, you just have to marvel at the longevity. But he’s just not playing at this. He is playing effectively.”