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One week into season LeBron closing in on pair of milestones
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NEW WORK (AP) — LeBron James has often said that being mentioned among the game’s all-time greats is humbling to think about now, and that accomplishments will mean more to him after he stops playing.

That said, he does savor milestones.

And he could reach two of them in his next game.

When Cleveland goes to Philadelphia on Monday, James will be 21 points from becoming the 20th member of the NBA’s 25,000 regular-season-points club — and just one point from becoming the 11th player with 30,000 points when adding playoff numbers to the overall total.

Monday would be James’ 915th regular-season game. Everyone ahead of him on the NBA scoring list has logged at least 1,000 games except Jerry West with 932; James should pass him for 19th in scoring in the next couple of weeks.

It’s obvious that James is in that never-ending argument for “best player ever,” but his stats are already eye-popping and will only get better from here. Consider: The only other player with as many points, rebounds (6,524) and assists (6,315) in his NBA career is Oscar Robertson — and James could pass him in scoring this season as well.

EVERYONE SHOOTING 3’S

The NBA’s “Bigs who shoot 3’s” club is growing.

New Orleans’ Anthony Davis made a total of three 3-pointers in his first three seasons; he needed three games to make that many from beyond the arc this season.

Atlanta’s Al Horford had one game in his pro career with two 3-pointers — and that was when he hit a meaningless one at a final buzzer — before this season, and then he did it on back-to-back days last week.

Charlotte’s Frank Kaminsky, a 7-foot rookie, took a 3-pointer for his first pro shot (a miss), then connected two nights later on one for his first basket.

But maybe the biggest long-range surprise in the early going this year is Sacramento’s DeMarcus Cousins. He had four 3-pointers in his last 167 games combined entering the season, then made four in the Kings’ season-opener.

STAT OF THE WEEK

2-0: That was Oklahoma City’s only lead in regulation Friday night against Orlando. The Thunder led for only 14 seconds in regulation, but got a desperation game-tying 3-pointer from Russell Westbrook in the final second of the fourth quarter and went on to beat the Magic 139-136 in double overtime in Billy Donovan’s first game against the team he technically coached for a couple days in 2007.