Lots of Love as LeBron sets an assist mark
Associated Press
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
LeBron James rarely likes to talk about his individual achievements.
Tuesday he made an exception.
James had 11 assists in Cleveland’s 102-93 victory over the Detroit Pistons. In the process, he moved past Scottie Pippen for first place on the NBA career list for forwards. James now has 6,142 assists, seven more than Pippen.
“That means a tremendous amount to me,” James said. “It means a lot more than passing Allen Iverson on the scoring list in the last game, because I have always taken so much pride in my passing game. To me, the greatest rush has always been helping my teammates succeed, not succeeding myself.”
James wears No. 23 in Michael Jordan’s honor, but breaking Pippen’s record was special in another sense.
“When I grew up, I loved Michael, but when you are a kid, you don’t think you can grow up and be Michael Jordan,” he said. “I patterned a lot of my game after Scottie Pippen, because he was the kind of star I thought I could be. So that’s a great feeling to break a record he owns.”
Cavaliers coach David Blatt didn’t know that James had reached the milestone, but was excited to find out.
“That’s a fabulous achievement, especially when you considered that he just turned 30 years old,” Blatt said. “It not only proves his greatness as a player, it shows the ability he has to make the players around him equally great.”
Many of James’ assists, including the record-breaker in the second quarter, giving him 6,136 to pass Pippen, found Kevin Love wide open behind the arc. Love had 24 points on eight 3-pointers, tying his career best.
“Kevin had it going tonight, so I was looking to get him the ball,” James said. “That’s how we play. Find the hot guy and keep him going.”
James nearly had an odd triple-double, turning the ball over nine times, one short of his career high. Kyrie Irving added 18 points for Cleveland, which has won 17 of its last 19 games.
Reggie Jackson had 22 points, nine assists and eight rebounds in his second game with Detroit, while Kentavious Caldwell-Pope added 21.
“I thought Reggie has played very well,” said Pistons coach Stan Van Gundy. “He’s got to get better on the defensive end, so that’s something we have to work on, but I like the way he rebounded the ball, and he was aggressive on offense.”