Julius Erving oddly left LeBron off his all-time NBA top 10 list because of role in superteams

OK then …

We’re at that period in the NBA season that falls somewhere between the All-Star break and the final stretch of the playoff hunt, which almost always seems like the point where the NBA all-time great debate gets re-litigated for the millionth time.

You know: LeBron vs. Jordan. Or maybe LeBron vs. Jordan vs. Kobe vs. Kareem. And so on.

But you’re almost guaranteed to have that all-time debate involve LeBron somewhere near the top because, well, he’s, at worst, the second best player of all time. So, I guess we can give former NBA/ABA great Julius Erving credit for finding a way to leave LeBron out of the discussion completely — even if his justification was nonsensical. Points for originality!

In an interview with Chris Haynes, Erving said he wouldn’t put LeBron on his first two all-time, All-NBA teams because LeBron played a prominent role in the league’s superteam movement.

And yes, LeBron did play a *large* part in teaming up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami. But he was far from the first player to team up with stars. Plus, playing on a team with good players didn’t change the fact that LeBron was way better than everyone else he played against.

It was a strange argument, and Haynes pointed it out to Erving that championship teams historically have had multiple All-Stars. But it was Erving’s list — he can compile it as he wants. It just won’t be taken very seriously.

https://youtu.be/DFtlwTh8aXQ