The debate between Michael Jordan and LeBron James took another entertaining turn after former NBA All-Star Baron Davis compared both legends to completely different types of cars.
Appearing on the ‘Games With Names’ podcast alongside former NFL star Julian Edelman, Davis gave one of the most creative breakdowns yet of the GOAT debate.
Baron Davis: “Michael Jordan would be one of one. NASA would have to build a car for him. LeBron James, he’s like a Bentley Arnage or something. Something big, fast, smooth, sleek, with versatility. But he’s not a sports car. LeBron’s not a sports car. Michael Jordan is a sports car. Michael Jordan is Formula One.”
Julian Edelman: “LeBron’s kind of like those new Lamborghini Uruses. They’re SUVs, but they’re also sports cars. They’re as fast as f***ing anything.”
Baron Davis: “He’s like a monster truck, dawg. LeBron is like a monster truck. Get the f**k out the way or he gonna run your a** over.”
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The conversation quickly went viral because, honestly, the comparisons fit both players surprisingly well.
Jordan represented speed, precision, killer instinct, and pure explosiveness. Everything about his game looked sharp and surgical. At 6-foot-6, Jordan moved like a guard but attacked like a predator. His footwork, mid-range game, fadeaways, and defensive intensity made him feel almost engineered specifically to dominate basketball.
That is why Davis comparing him to a Formula One car makes sense. Jordan’s game always looked smooth but dangerous. Efficient but relentless.
Statistically, Jordan’s resume still looks almost untouchable. He averaged 30.1 points for his career, won five MVPs, six championships, six Finals VPs, ten scoring titles, and a Defensive Player of the Year award. Most importantly for many fans, he never lost in the NBA Finals, finishing 6-0.
LeBron, meanwhile, has always been built differently. aAt 6-foot-9 and around 250 pounds during his prime, LeBron combined size, speed, strength, passing, and basketball IQ in ways the league had never really seen before. He often looked less like a traditional basketball player and more like a physical force crashing through defenses.
That explains why Davis called him a monster truck.
James is also the NBA’s all-time leading scorer, a four-time champion, four-time MVP, and arguably the most complete player in league history. The funny part about Davis’ comparison is that both descriptions highlight exactly why the Jordan versus LeBron debate remains impossible to settle.
Jordan was elegance, precision, and domination compressed into a shorter peak. LeBron has shown power, versatility, durability, and sustained greatness across more than two decades.
One feels like a Formula One machine. The other feels like something unstoppable rolling downhill toward you at full speed.

