Just a few days after Kobe Bryant passed Michael Jordan to take the third spot on the National Basketball Association’s all-time scoring list, one of their common foes took to the airwaves to discuss the two legends.

His assessment: Absolutely no comparison.

“Michael Jordan on his worst day is 10 times better than Kobe Bryant on his best day.” That’s what Reggie Miller, a man who admittedly got schooled by both, told Dan Patrick on Wednesday.

Maybe Reggie still holds a grudge after this brawl with Kobe in 2002.

Then again, there wasn’t much love lost between Reggie and Michael back in the day, either.

Believe it or not, there has been some debate over who reigns supreme in the days following the scoring shake-up, but the Bryant side of the argument is flimsy, at best.

Numbers-wise, Jordan has more championships, NBA Finals MVP’s and regular-season MVP’s; plus he tops Bryant in scoring average, rebounds, assists, steals and shooting percentage. That’s not to mention the intangibles, like performance during playoff time, and Jordan is untouchable on that front.

Bryant, for his part, doesn’t hide from the fact that he followed his idol’s blueprint. In a piece penned for the Player’s Tribune after he moved up the scoring ladder, Bryant wrote of his inspiration.

“I learned that he had been cut from his high school team as a freshman; I learned he knew what it felt like to be embarrassed, to feel like a failure,” Bryant said. “But he used those emotions to fuel him, make him stronger, he didn’t quit. So I decided to take on my challenge the same way he did... Twenty-four years later, I pass my muse.”

To what degree did he emulate his “muse?” Check out these eerie similarities in their respective games. If nothing else, it’s pretty clear MJ has the first-mover advantage.