
Shreveport’s Robert Parish Set a Durability Bar LeBron Is Chasing
LeBron James is closing in on the NBA regular season games played record held by Shreveport native Robert Parish. Parish finished his career at 1,611 games, a mark built over 21 seasons.

LeBron is now right on that doorstep at 1,600 regular season games, putting him within striking distance of passing “The Chief.”
Five “Parish Wins” That Show How Different the Grind Was
Parish did his record-setting work as an old-school center, living in the paint and paying the nightly price that comes with it. The per-game gaps below help explain why his path to 1,611 feels uniquely rugged.
- Offensive rebounds (almost triple): Parish 2.9 vs LeBron 1.1
- Total rebounds: Parish 9.1 vs LeBron 7.5
- Turnovers (fewer is better): Parish 2.0 vs LeBron 3.5
- Blocks (more than Double): Parish 1.5 vs LeBron 0.7
- Games through 21 seasons: Parish reached 1,611 in 21 seasons; LeBron was at 1,492 through his first 21 seasons
That last one is the cleanest snapshot of the difference. LeBron’s 1,492 is a great number, but Parish’s NBA total is the louder statement. Parish simply showed up more often across the same length of time.
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Why Parish’s Era Made It Even Harder
Parish played in a league that leaned far more toward interior physicality and half-court wrestling matches, especially for centers. Staying on the floor for two decades at that position is rare in any era, which is why his record stood for so long and why it still matters that he’s a Shreveport guy.
LeBron deserves his flowers too. Getting to 1,600 games while carrying the ball, running the offense, and handling modern pace is its own kind of wear and tear. Parish’s record just reminds us that availability used to be a superpower, and in his case it came with bruises.
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