All-Time #NBArank has reached the cream of the crop.

To create All-Time #NBArank, we put together a ballot with the 150 greatest players ever. Then our ESPN expert panel voted on thousands of head-to-head matchups, with voting based on both peak performance and career value. The result is our all-time NBA Top 100, which concludes Wednesday.

All-Time #NBArank: No. 3

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LeBron James

Gregory Shamus/NBAE/Getty Images

Position

Small forward

Teams

Cleveland Cavaliers (2003-2010, 2014-present), Miami Heat (2010-2014)

Honors

Four-time MVP (2008-09, 2009-10, 2011-12, 2012-13), two-time Finals MVP, 11-time All-Star, 11-time All-NBA selection, six-time All-D selection, Rookie of the Year (2003-04), NBA scoring champion (2007-08)

Championships

Two (2012, 2013)

Career stats

27.3 PPG, 7.1 RPG, 6.9 APG, .496 FG%

Nickname

King James, The Chosen One

Did you know?

LeBron James and Michael Jordan are the only players in NBA history with four seasons of having a PER of 30 or higher. LeBron's performance in the 2015 NBA Finals will go down as one of the best of all time as he became the first player in NBA Finals history to lead all players -- from both teams -- in points, rebounds and assists. He scored or assisted on 57.7 points per game, the most by any player in NBA Finals history. -- ESPN Stats & Information

D. Lippitt/Einstein/Getty Images

King James conquered hype

No matter how many titles he ends up with, no matter if he has already won his last MVP award, no matter how many times he ultimately loses in the Finals, LeBron James will always be able to hold something over any other Hall of Famer that came before him.

No one has ever had as much hype as James has had to live up to, and James has delivered on every last drop.

The expectations and pressures on James as an 18-year-old were unparalleled: his Sports Illustrated cover, his $100 million Nike contract signed while he was still in high school, his nationally televised high school games, the documentary made about his high school years that played nationally in movie theaters, the 13,000 people at his first summer league game, his prime-time debut in his first NBA game.

Some people came to see the spectacle, more came to see him fail. Most left blown away.

So many of the overexposed teenagers in the preps-to-pros era squinted when the big spotlight arrived. Even the best needed more seasoning. Not James. His game was raw in areas, he was overwhelmed by the venom some of his peers had for him and maybe he pouted a little too easily, but oh did he impress. He has been worth not only the attention but the growing price of admission.

He later became the first superstar to have to navigate the social media age, and he rode it to become one of the most famous athletes in the world.

Nitpick his game, mock his receding headband, criticize his free-agency choices, start comparing rings. But never before had the game seen a teenager like him. By the time he was in his mid-20s he was no longer chasing opponents but chasing ghosts, the greats who'd come before.

Now he's trying to end a 50-year-old title drought for a city where he's one of the most treasured residents in its two centuries of existence.

Go ahead and rank that.

-- Brian Windhorst, ESPN Senior Writer