Who is the greatest player of all time: Michael Jordan or LeBron James?
Those aren’t the only two candidates, but they do dominate the debate — which got new life this week when the Los Angeles Lakers won the NBA championship, giving James his fourth title.
We asked our ESPN Forecast panel a series of questions to get at the heart of the GOAT debate.
MORE: Are LeBron’s four titles better than MJ’s six? (ESPN+)
Here are the results of our ESPN Forecast poll:
For most of our panel, Michael is still the man. That was evident in most of the questions where we asked the panel to compare the players head-to-head.
Here are the receipts:
10 NBA Finals: 28%
Jordan’s 6-0 record in the NBA Finals provides the edge here, given that James has appeared in 10 Finals but won only four times.
Leading three franchises to NBA titles: 43%
Same question, different angle. The results were closer but still favored Jordan.
LeBron James: 18%
One reason NBA fans and our panel have difficulty putting anyone ahead of Jordan is that his ability to rise to any occasion seems unmatched.
That was clear when we asked which player had reached greater heights.
And here is the big question, for each player:
The second-greatest player of all time: 32%
An all-time top-five player: 6%
The greatest player of all time: 23%
The second-greatest player of all time: 55%
An all-time top-five player: 21%
While these are the top two players of all time for the majority of our panel, we asked for other nominees. The five other GOAT candidates mentioned most often were, in order, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Magic Johnson and Oscar Robertson.
More: What LeBron and MJ say about each other
LeBron James and Anthony Davis join Rachel Nichols to discuss the emotions of life in the bubble and where LeBron stacks up after his fourth title.
LeBron just received his fourth Finals MVP award and is still near his peak, remarkable for a player approaching age 36. That means the GOAT debate is far from done, especially with LeBron’s Lakers favored to repeat.
So we asked our panel two key questions:
Five: 70%
Six: 13%
Seven or more: 0%
Average: 4.95 titles.
Four (this title did it): 15%
Five (one more will do it): 11%
Six (matching MJ will do it): 28%
Seven (passing MJ will do it): 15%
LeBron cannot pass MJ: 17%
Total of 3-6 NBA titles: 69%
Our panel does, on the whole, expect LeBron to win another title. But that fifth title might not be enough to tip the scales in his favor, at least in the current view of our panel.
But as these results show, if LeBron can combine a sixth NBA title with his other accomplishments, we might have a new consensus GOAT.
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