After 1,297 games, LeBron James’ 10-point scoring streak ends with Lakers buzzer-beater

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TORONTO — One of the most historic streaks in sports history ended with LeBron James’ hands in the air. The player who had scored at least 10 points in nearly 1,300 straight regular-season games needed one more basket to move it along another game.

Instead, James whipped a pass to teammate Rui Hachimura in the corner for a buzzer-beating 3-pointer.

“Just playing the game the right way. You always make the right play,” James said. “That’s just been my M.O. That’s how I was taught the game. I’ve done that my whole career.”

Thursday night, for the first time in an NBA regular season since Jan. 5, 2007, James failed to eclipse the double-digit mark. He finished with eight points and 11 assists in the Lakers’ 123-120 win over the Toronto Raptors.

He raised his arms in triumph, a wild way for the statistical anomaly to come to a close.

“I remember him getting ridiculed for it early on, when he would make the right play and his teammate would shoot the game-winner,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “He did it like he’s done so many times.”

Asked if he had any reaction to the end of the streak, James said “none.”

“We won.”

The streak, which lasted 1,297 regular-season games and predates the announcement of the first iPhone, ended on a night when James couldn’t get a shot to fall. Raptors forward Scottie Barnes swatted a jumper with a minute left on what would be James’ final field goal attempt of the game.

“He’s always making the right play. That’s what he gets criticized for, for making the right play. It doesn’t make sense,” said Barnes, who was the primary defender on James throughout the night. “People want him to be different in that aspect. But he’s always going to make the right play.”

James’ run of double-digit scoring games dwarfed the second-longest streak in NBA history, set by Michael Jordan across 866 straight games from March 25, 1986 to Dec. 26, 2001. James had two playoff games where he failed to score 10 points since the streak began.

The new current longest active double-digit scoring streak is 267 games held by Kevin Durant. To match James’ streak, Durant, 37, would need to play until he’s nearly 50.

The run began after James scored just eight points in a 95-86 Cleveland win against the Milwaukee Bucks in early January of his fourth NBA season. He scored 19 in the following game to begin the streak.

There have been several close calls before Thursday night.

The streak nearly ended on March 20, 2021, when Solomon Hill crashed into James’ leg, causing James to suffer a high ankle sprain. James, who had seven points at the time, surprisingly stayed in the game and hit a 3 on the next possession before he exited. He missed more than a month with the injury.

He scored 10 points on a 4-of-16 shooting night last December against the Timberwolves, one of eight times in which he scored exactly 10 during the streak.

James’ streak also nearly ended Monday night in a blowout loss to the Phoenix Suns. He entered the fourth quarter with just six points, but hit a 3-pointer with just under seven minutes left to get himself to 10. The basket cut Phoenix’s lead to 22 points. James subbed out a minute later.

Former NBA veteran Chandler Parsons suggested James was stat-padding.

“I got to be honest, I didn’t like it,” said Parsons on FanDuel TV’s “Run It Back” show. “This was the first time in my life I saw an older LeBron James, who played and looked like his age. After sitting out the night before against New Orleans, I thought this was a perfect night for him to just go crazy and kind of carry this team to a victory. Luka (Dončić) went nuts early on, Austin Reaves was struggling, and LeBron James, he did not look like himself.

“For me, that’s the first time I’ve ever seen him like that. It was a nice gesture for (Lakers coach) JJ (Redick) to keep him in there, and he definitely was hunting for it, and he was not coming out until he got it. This just felt like the first step on the way out — catering to his legacy instead of focusing on this season and the game that was already over. Congrats, I guess, but I just didn’t love it, and it was just obvious what he was doing.”

James, the NBA’s all-time leading scorer, is playing in his record 23rd season. He missed all of training camp and the first 14 Lakers games this season because of sciatic nerve irritation.

“He’s been so dominant in the game for so long, you wouldn’t even be surprised,” Barnes said of the scoring streak. “It’s LeBron.”

—Shakeia Taylor and Eric Koreen contributed to this story.

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