In the latest episode of "More Than An Athlete," LeBron James says his historic 2016 NBA Finals win made him the greatest player ever. Go to ESPN+ and subscribe now to view full episodes. (0:57)

When LeBron James reflects on the Cleveland Cavaliers' first NBA title in 2016, he says that accomplishment allowed him to think of himself as the best player in the game.

"That one right there made me the greatest player of all time," James said in Episode 7 of the eight-part ESPN+ series More Than An Athlete.

The Cavaliers, after falling behind three games to one to the Golden State Warriors in the 2016 Finals, rallied to win the last three games -- including two on the road, capped by a 93-89 win in Game 7. James scored 27 points and had 11 rebounds and 11 assists that night, and he was the unanimous MVP in the series, his third Finals MVP honor.

More Than An Athlete The eight-part docuseries, produced by UNINTERRUPTED and airing on ESPN+, will follow LeBron James and Maverick Carter's improbable journey from Akron to the global stage. Watch on ESPN+

"That's what I felt," James told friends and business partners Maverick Carter, Randy Mims and Rich Paul during the episode that began streaming on ESPN+ Sunday night. "I was super, super ecstatic to win one for Cleveland because of the 52-year drought. ... The first wave of emotion was when everyone saw me crying, like, that was all for 52 years of everything in sports that's gone on in Cleveland. And then after I stopped, I was like -- that one right there made you the greatest player of all time.

"Everybody was just talking -- how [the Warriors] were the greatest team of all time, like it was the greatest team ever assembled," he said. "And for us to come back, you know, the way we came back in that fashion, I was like, 'You did, you did something special.' That's probably one of the only times in my career I felt like, oh, s---, like you did something special. I haven't had, really had time, to really, like, sit back and think, but that ... that was a moment."

LeBron James says coming back and beating the Warriors in seven games to give the city of Cleveland its first major professional sports title in 52 years made him "the greatest player of all time." Deanne Fitzmaurice for ESPN

The argument of who is the game's greatest player -- James or Michael Jordan -- has been a lightning rod for NBA debate over the years. Jordan won six NBA titles to three for James. Jordan won five MVP awards, and James has won four. Both are 14-time All-Stars (James is likely to make it 15 this year), while James has made the All-NBA team 14 times to 11 for Jordan (James, who joined the Los Angeles Lakers this year, is in his 16th season; Jordan played 15).

James has long said Jordan was a role model for him as a youngster. He has talked at times about the challenge of being compared to MJ.

"My motivation is this ghost I'm chasing," James told Sports Illustrated in the summer of 2016, after winning the title in Cleveland. "The ghost played in Chicago."

He added: "My career is totally different than Michael Jordan's. What I've gone through is totally different than what he went through. What he did was unbelievable, and I watched it unfold. I looked up to him so much. I think it's cool to put myself in position to be one of those great players, but if I can ever put myself in position to be the greatest player, that would be something extraordinary."

After breaking Jordan's record for career playoff points in 2017, James said: "I wear the number [23] because of Mike."

In More Than An Athlete, James has shared his thoughts on his childhood, working with his longtime friends and his moves from Cleveland to Miami and back to Cleveland again. The first seven episodes are available to stream on ESPN+. The final episode is scheduled to be out on Jan. 8.