LeBron: ‘Always special’ to match up with Melo
LeBron James reflects on playing against Carmelo Anthony again, noting that it is always a special moment for him. (0:38)
PORTLAND, Ore. — Nearly two decades after first meeting at a USA Basketball camp, LeBron James, playing for his third NBA team, and Carmelo Anthony, playing for his fifth, matched up once again in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 136-113 win over the Portland Trail Blazers on Friday.
James got the better of Anthony, putting up 31 points, eight assists and seven rebounds to the Blazers star’s 15 points, three rebounds and three steals.
“It’s always special,” James, 34, said of facing Anthony, 35, in 2019 after first connecting as teenagers. “I can’t even lie, it’s always special to be on the floor with a brother of mine.”
James and Anthony averaged an identical 24 points per game at the 2001 USA Basketball Men’s Youth Development Festival in Colorado Springs. James’ team won the tournament, serving as a precursor to the success he’d have over Anthony during their pro careers with James’ teams making nine NBA Finals appearances and winning three championships while Anthony’s teams never advanced past the conference finals.
The two paired up in countless All-Star games and won two Olympic gold medals together in Beijing and London (as well as a bronze in Athens), as their careers stayed interwoven from the moment they were both selected with two of the top three picks in the 2003 draft.
“We got so much history,” James said. “We’ve been competing for a long time, we’ve been on the same team with the Olympics and then just our brotherhood. That’s my brother, man. It’s always great to be able to compete and just be on the same floor, period. No matter if it’s, like I said, with Team USA, when we’re teammates or just competing on our respective clubs.”
With the win, James improved to 20-14 in their head-to-head battles in the regular season. In those games James is averaging 25.9 points, 7.5 assists and 7.0 rebounds, while Anthony is averaging 22 points, 6.4 rebounds and 2.9 assists.
“It was good,” Anthony said of Friday’s reunion. “It’s always fun going against him, playing against him in Year 17 for both of us. Being able to compete against one another at this level, and in now our 17th year, you can’t ask for more than that.”
James shot 2-of-3 for four points with Anthony as his primary defender in the halfcourt on Friday, according to ESPN Stats & Information research. When the matchup was flipped and James was on defense, Anthony went 0-for-2.
Not that either of them will focus on the stats from the game. Anthony told ESPN the pair caught up over dinner on Thursday and that basketball was hardly the focus of the conversation.
Anthony said that while he values James’ friendship, there was plenty more on his mind after getting released by the Houston Rockets after just 10 games last season than picturing what transpired Friday night and taking the court with James again.
“Not at all,” Anthony said. “I seriously didn’t think about basketball to be honest with you. It was kind of hard to think about basketball and going up against guys and things like that. It was kind of hard to.”
James and the 20-3 Lakers will move on from Friday, continuing their pursuit of a championship, while Anthony and the 9-14 Blazers have more modest immediate goals of simply getting back on the right side of .500.
But for a night, at least, the pair got to turn back the clock and fall back into the matchup that’s entertained basketball fans for years.
Said Lakers coach Frank Vogel: “It’s always good to see guys that have had such decorated careers that came into the league together, that have become friends, have an opportunity to compete for a game that matters.”