Over 100 Ranker voters have come together to rank this list of LeBron James' Best Teammates Throughout His NBA Career
Voting Rules
Vote up the best teammates LeBron has ever had.
Who is LeBron James best teammate ever? King James had a lot of NBA All Star teammates over the course of his long and storied NBA career. LeBron James' greatest teammates have included NBA champions, longtime journeyman, and the rare rookie here and there. But who is the best LeBron James teammate of all time? Which of LeBron's teammates throughout his entire career do you love?
When it comes to LeBron's best teammates, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh have to be near the top. The trio took the league by storm won two NBA titles together in four NBA Finals appearance for the Miami Heat. Other LeBron teammates like Kyrie Irving, Kevin Love, and Anthony Davis were instrumental in winning titles alongside LeBron as well. Lest we forget, Lebron James teammates Rajon Rondo, Russell Westbrook, Dwight Howard, and Zydrunas Ilgauskas, who are among some the best NBA players of all time.
Vote up the best LeBron James teammates, and help decide which of LeBron's All Star teammates was #1.
The dynamic duo of Wade and LeBron unlocked the secret sauce in each other's games as they won two titles in four straight NBA Finals appearances with the Miami Heat from 2011-2014.
The only season Anthony Davis was fully healthy for the whole year, he won an NBA championship. Thankfully for LeBron and his legacy, that season came with the 2020 Lakers.
Bosh was the crucial third banana on the Miami Big 3 who won two titles in four trips to the NBA Finals. The Heat unlocked an all time lineup with Bosh playing the small ball 5 position.
Without Kyrie Irving's “The Shot," LeBron may never have won a title in Cleveland. However, if the flat-Earther point guard was healthy for all three of their trips to the NBA Finals, they may have took home multiple Larry O'Brien trophies.
Kevin Love was indispensable in the 2016 NBA title run, as Cavs third-scorer. Love shifted his game out of the post to the perimeter where he hit 41% of his threes in the playoffs.
Without Ray Allen's “The Shot," we're all looking at LeBron's legacy much differently. LeBron was lucky to play with the greatest shooter of a generation at the time.