On the day he turns 29 years old, it’s pretty good to be LeBron James. He’s coming off two straight NBA championships, two straight Finals MVPs and two straight regular season MVPs. But how do his numbers stack up to the two players he’s most compared to, Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan?

Pretty favorably. In only 10 more games than Bryant, he’s totaled 2,523 more points, 1,681 more rebounds, 1,930 more assists, 193 more steals and 191 more blocks.

The comparisons between the cumulative numbers Jordan racked up through his 29th birthday and those of James and Bryant aren’t fair — Kobe and LeBron turned pro straight out of high school, at age 18. Jordan, meanwhile, played three seasons in college at the University of North Carolina and didn’t make his NBA debut until age 20.

Jordan also played in just 18 games in his second season, missing most of the year with a broken foot. Bryant had never played in fewer than 65 games through his age-29 season, and James has never missed more than seven in one year.

The question of whether James is better than Bryant or Jordan won’t be able to be answered until he’s done playing and his body of work can be viewed as a whole. Right now, he’s still in his prime and proving that he belongs in the discussion with some of the greatest players of all time.