LeBron: My style would've jelled with Jordan's

Many basketball fans enjoy debating who was better between Michael Jordan and LeBron James. But when the Los Angeles Lakers‘ star fantasizes about playing with Jordan, it’s as his teammate, not his adversary.

“Me personally, the way I play the game — team first — I feel like my best assets work perfectly with Mike,” James said in a video released Monday on Uninterrupted’s YouTube channel. “Mike is an assassin. When it comes to playing the game of basketball, scoring the way he scored the ball, [then] my ability to pass, my ability to read the game plays and plays and plays in advance.”

James, who grew up a Chicago Bulls fan, said he felt invigorated by watching Jordan in “The Last Dance” docuseries the past five weeks. He said he has thought about playing his patented point forward role alongside Jordan, the game’s greatest shooting guard, and how they could’ve blended together.

“I saw the things [Scottie Pippen] was able to do with Mike. I just think it would’ve been a whole ‘nother level,” James said. “Pip was one of my favorite players … It would’ve been a whole ‘nother level with me being a point forward, with me being that point forward alongside of him during those Chicago runs.”

James met Jordan and played in a pickup game with him in 2001, when LeBron was 16 years old, as Jordan was preparing to make his final comeback. “The dude looked like Jesus Christ to me. He was black Jesus to me,” James said of the experience. But they didn’t play on the same team that day at Hoops Gym in Chicago.

Two years later, James got the chance to play on the same team as Jordan. After James was drafted No. 1 overall and signed an $87 million deal with Nike, he was invited to take part in Jordan’s annual summer camp at UC-Santa Barbara.

“We used to play around 9 p.m. The camp would end … and we would stay along with the college kids that he would invite,” James said. “We would get a good-ass run in for about an hour, an hour [and] 15. I was on the same team with MJ, and we didn’t lose a game.”

James, 35, has played on a few teams with older veteran leaders, namely the 2008 Olympic team with Kobe Bryant and Jason Kidd and the Miami Heat with Dwyane Wade. James said Jordan’s sometimes abrasive leadership style — he punched teammates Steve Kerr and Will Purdue during practices — is something he would’ve embraced.

“I love when a teammate comes to me and challenges me,” James said. “When I was in Miami, [Dwyane Wade] used to come to me and be like, ‘All right, [No.] 6, let’s go.’ [Former Cleveland Cavaliers coach Tyronn] Lue used to challenge me a lot when I was in Cleveland. He was like, ‘All right, Bron, what you waiting on?’ I see that from Mike, and I feel like our games were a perfect correlation to be successful.”

James also revealed that he began to “train to be a football player” during the most recent NBA lockout in 2011, with business partner Maverick Carter weighing in that James was gifted a contract from Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones that is framed and displayed in James’ office.

“Myself and my trainer, we really started to actually train to be a football player when it came to, like, October and November,” James said. “We started to clock our times with the 40s. We started to add a little bit more in our bench presses and things of that nature.

“The thoughts came into my mind. Never having the ability to finish my high school career playing my senior year, I have dreams all the time about playing football.”