LeBron James explains what it meant to pass Oscar Robertson on all-time assists list

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James discussed his feelings on passing the Big O in all-time assists in the NBA.

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James once again moved up the ladder in a new statistical category.

After a seven-assist night in the loss to the Memphis Grizzlies Sunday, James ascended to No. 7 on the NBA’s all-time assists list. James passed Oscar “Big O” Robertson, who had 9,887 assists during his 14-year career from 1960 to 1973.

After the game, James — who didn’t yet know he passed Robertson — explained what it meant to elapse an NBA legend.

“I’m a historian of the game, and I know quite a bit about the Big O. From his times, from high school to the University of Cincinnati to playing for the Cincinnati Royals all the way to Milwaukee and so on so on, what he meant to the game — what he still means to the game — is something that’s just unparalleled,” James said.

James, a 6-foot-9 forward with adept ball-handling and vision for someone of his size, said big guards who could set up teammates helped build his own craft.

“Obviously, he’ll always have a connection with Russ (Westbrook), what they was able to do for multiple seasons. But he was one of the first premier big guards that could do pretty much everything out on the floor. But his ability to get teammates involved, his ability to provide that sense of joy on the floor because of the pass is something that I’ve always respected and gravitated towards. Guys like himself and J(ason) Kidd, Magic (Johnson)…anytime I’m connected with the greats is a true honor,” James said.

The next player for James to pass is Magic himself, who logged 10,141 dimes in 13 seasons.

James needs 254 assists to pass Johnson. LeBron is currently averaging 6.6 assists per game. With that average and 41 games left to play, James will have 270 if he doesn’t miss a game, which would top Magic.

John Stockton is No. 1 on the list with 15,806 assists, nearly 4,000 more than No. 2.

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LeBron James passes Gary Payton for 9th on NBA’s all-time assists list

LeBron James passes Gary Payton for 9th on NBA’s all-time assists list during loss to Bucks.

LeBron James has been creating open shots for his teammates ever since he set foot on an NBA court 17 seasons ago. Combined with this ability to dominate games as a scorer, LeBron’s propensity for dropping dimes is one of the factors that separates him among the handful of truly elite players to ever play this game. On Thursday, he further solidified his passing greatness by moving up another rung on the NBA’s all-time assists list.

James dished out 11 assists to complete a 21-point, 12-rebound triple-double during the Los Angeles Lakers 111-104 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks. In doing so, he moved past Gary “The Glove” Payton who LeBron trailed by eight dimes heading into to the Milwaukee game.

LeBron now has 8,970 assists for his career which is good for ninth on the NBA’s all-time list according to Basketball Reference. Payton slides to 10th on the list with 8,966. James is currently 91 assists behind Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas who occupies the No. 8 spot with 9,061. The King should catch Thomas this season, but from there he’ll trail Chris Paul in the seventh spot by roughly 300 dimes and counting.

After dishing out 11 assists during the loss to the Bucks, James continues to lead the NBA in that play-making metric by averaging 10.6 helpers per contest. LeBron and the Lakers are back home on Sunday for a matchup with the Denver Nuggets prior to their Christmas Day showdown with the Los Angeles Clippers.

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