James
surpasses Jordan as playoffs scoring leader
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[May 26, 2017]
(Reuters) - Cleveland forward
LeBron James moved past Hall of Famer Michael Jordan as the leading
scorer in NBA playoff history on his way to helping the Cavaliers
ease into a third successive NBA Finals series on Thursday.
James needed 28 points to surpass Jordan (5,987 points), as he
entered Game Five of the Eastern Conference Finals against the
Boston Celtics and reached the milestone in style late in the third
quarter with a three-point jump shot.
James celebrated the record by raising his right index finger to
signal number one, but quickly retreated to the backcourt to defend
as the game continued.
The three-pointer put the Cavaliers up by 32 points.
James promptly knocked down two more three-pointers before the end
of the third period.
With victory in the bag, he sat out the fourth quarter as the
Cavaliers routed the Celtics 135-102 to clinch the best-of-seven
series 4-1, and set up a third successive championship series
against the Golden State Warriors.
The 32-year-old James, who is seeking a fourth NBA title, took 212
post-season games to surpass Jordan, a six-time champion who played
179 playoff games.
James said he was honored to pass Jordan, his boyhood idol.
"I think first of all I wear the number (23) because of Mike," he
told reporters after finishing the game with 35 points to take his
total to 5,995 points.
"I think I fell in love with the game because of Mike, but when
you're growing up and seeing Michael Jordan it's almost like a god,
so I never did believe I could be Mike.
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Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) looks to pass around Boston
Celtics guard Avery Bradley (0) during the third quarter of game
five of the Eastern conference finals of the NBA Playoffs at TD
Garden. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-USA TODAY Sports
"The biggest thing for me sitting here after breaking the all-time
scoring record in playoff history, is I did it just being me.
"I don't have to score to make an impact on a game and that was my
mindset when I started playing, if I'm not scoring how can I still
make an impact on the game?
"It's carried me to this point now and it's going to carry me for
the rest of my career because scoring is not number one on my
agenda."
(Reporting by Andrew Both; Editing by Greg Stutchbury/John O'Brien) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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