NBA top 150 starter rankings Part 2: Where LeBron James, Stephen Curry fall in the top 10 for 2025-26

Stephen Noh

NBA top 150 starter rankings Part 2: Where LeBron James, Stephen Curry fall in the top 10 for 2025-26 image

Ranking all 150 projected starters in the NBA is a challenging exercise. In case you missed part 1 of this series, where I covered players 150 through 11, this is the first year where I'm attempting to do exactly that. 

As a reminder, only players who are projected to play the whole season are included, so you won't see Jayson Tatum, Tyrese Haliburton, or other injured stars on this list. 

The top 10, filled with true superstars, is going to come under much heavier scrutiny. Everybody has an opinion when it comes to this range, and there is no real consensus. Here's my top 10. 

MORE: Ranking the 15 best games on the 2025-26 NBA schedule

Ranking all 150 starters in the NBA: Top 10

Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic

1. Nikola Jokic

Jokic has finished top two in MVP voting over the past five years, winning the award three times during that span. If there is one guy you want to build a team around next year, it's him. 

Jokic is the best passer in the game, using elite court vision, feel, and skill to whip the ball through the tiniest openings. He also might be the best scorer. He averaged a career-high 29.6 points per game last season, buoyed by a career-high 42 percent from 3. That newfound 3-point shot makes him truly an impossible cover. He was already deadly with his midrange fadeaways, post ups, and the best floater in the league. 

Jokic isn't a great defender. His athletic tools will always hold him back there. He finds ways to contribute though, kicking the ball to allow the Nuggets defense to reset or using his excellent hands and anticipation to generate steals. 

2. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

Gilgeous-Alexander was the best player on the best team in basketball. He is a driving machine, getting into the paint and collapsing opposing defenses with his twisty contortions. He's great from the midrange, a capable 3-point shooter, and draws a ton of fouls. His detractors call him a free throw merchant, which does a disservice to the extremely high skill level he possesses. 

MORE: Investigating Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's 'free throw merchant' label

Gilgeous-Alexander is a rare two-way superstar. He was an important piece of the Thunder's all-time great defense, getting a ton of steals. He's not close to the team's best on-ball defender, but he's not a liability either. 

3. Giannis Antetokounmpo

The Greek Freak added an automatic midrange jumper to his game last season, making up for a still-poor 22 percent shooting from 3. That outside shot has made his drives even tougher to stop. He's too fast, strong, and long to keep out of the paint, where he is a great finisher at the rim. 

Giannis has only one Defensive Player of the Year award but finished top 10 in voting for seven consecutive years. He's not quite as dominant as he was six or seven years ago, but he can still cover a ton of ground and is one of the best help defenders in the league. 

4. Luka Doncic

Doncic is a magician with the ball, averaging 7.7 assists last season between the Lakers and Mavericks. He's only two years removed from winning the scoring title. He has a great step-back 3, a bully-ball driving game, and a killer deceleration step that he uses at the rim. There's no good way to guard him — he routinely picks apart every type of coverage due to his tremendous feel. And he looks like he's coming into this year in the best shape of his life.

5. Victor Wembanyama

Wemby is already the league's best defender at the age of 21. Opponents are afraid to challenge him at the rim, u-turning their drives in the lane when they spot him near the basket. He has still led the league in blocks per game in both years of his career. He's also a terrific defensive rebounder, thanks to his eight-foot wingspan. 

Wembanyama isn't quite as polished on offense. He's an adequate 3-point shooter who takes some very tough looks and isn't afraid of deep bombs. His catch radius is enormous, and he should get more easy gimmes at the basket with the Spurs' improved point guard play this year. He finds ways to score efficiently, and he's also turning into a plus passer. 

6. Stephen Curry

Curry is still the best movement shooter in the league and a nightmare for opposing coaches. He led the league in 3-pointers made and attempted per game, connecting on 40 percent of those looks last year. He also had the league's best free throw percentage, hitting 93.3 percent from the line.

He has perfected his role in the Warriors' motion offense, flying off screens and making perfect passes when he draws a swarm of defenders. Defensively, he has mastered the hedge-and-recover that the team oftentimes uses to keep him out of bad matchups. He has gotten much stronger throughout his career, helping him guard his position. 

Anthony Edwards

7. Anthony Edwards

Edwards has always been one of the league's premier athletes. He also became one of the best high volume 3-point shooters too last season. He led the league in made 3's while connecting on 39.5 percent of those shots. He's a fantastic driver, showed remarkable growth as a passer throughout the season, and is an unstoppable scorer. 

Edwards also has the tools to lock in defensively and make it a nightmare to get past him. His off-ball defense isn't nearly at that same level, which should be the next stage of growth for him. 

8. Donovan Mitchell

Mitchell is a fantastic three-level scorer who is capable of creating quality looks for himself and others. He has the speed, agility, and athleticism to get to the rim or rise up for pull-up 3's. He has improved his passing over the past few years, taking over some point guard responsibilities when Darius Garland has been out.

While his lack of defensive intensity went viral at times in Utah, he has been very locked in ever since joining the Cavs. He has a 6-foot-10 wingspan that he uses to his advantage. 

9. Jalen Brunson

Brunson plays way bigger than his 6-foot-2 size. He tries to hit opponents first, relishing physicality and contact. He chains together dribble moves like he's playing in a video game, getting defenders off balance and hitting tough shots from all over the floor. That allows him to hit huge shots in the clutch, when the Knicks can clear out and let him go to work one-on-one. 

Brunson's small stature is always going to make him a target on defense. He draws a lot of charges, executes the team's schemes well, and has held up better than expected on switches, particularly against the Celtics in last year's playoffs. 

LeBron James

10. LeBron James

LeBron made his 21st consecutive All-NBA team last year, and it was based strictly on merit. He's still one of the 10 best players in the league even entering his 40's. 

LeBron is a freight train going to the rim, where nobody can stop him once he gets a head of steam. He has turned himself into a good 3-point shooter, hitting 39 percent of his looks over the past two years. When he gets the ball in the high post, there isn't a better decision-maker on the planet. His high feel, passing, and scoring are still elite. 

LeBron isn't able to lock into defensive possessions and chase players around the floor throughout the entire season any more. He picks his spots wisely. He will still get highlight chase-down blocks, and he is more of a quarterback now, calling out coverages and directing teammates where to go. He can still be disruptive and switch onto wings and centers when he needs to. 

THE NBA'S GOAT: The case for Michael | The case for LeBron

Sporting News ranking of Top 150 NBA starters

RankPlayerTeamNotes
1.Nikola JokicNuggetsBest passer and scorer in the league
2.Shai Gilgeous-AlexanderThunderGumby driver, steals magnet
3.Giannis AntetokounmpoBucksBest motor of any superstar
4.Luka DoncicLakersUnguardable savant
5.Victor WembanyamaSpursWill go down as an all-time defender
6.Stephen CurryWarriorsStill the most dangerous shooter 
7.Anthony EdwardsWolvesGreat shooter now to go with drives
8.Donovan MitchellCavsAll-around scorer, improved defense
9.Jalen BrunsonKnicksPhysicality + deep bag
10.LeBron JamesLakersStill this good in Year 23
11.Anthony DavisMavericksLobs + elite defense
12.Kevin DurantRocketsScoring unc
13.Cade CunninghamPistonsTall floor general
14.Devin BookerSunsThree-level scorer
15.Tyrese MaxeySixersBest no. 2 in the league
16. Pascal SiakamPacersStar in any and every role
17.Evan MobleyCavsDPOY with improved offense
18.Karl-Anthony TownsKnicksBest shooting big
19.Joel EmbiidSixersStill great at 70 percent
20.Jaren Jackson Jr.GrizzliesImproved offense / killer defense
21.Jimmy ButlerWarriorsThunder to Curry's lightning
22.Jalen WilliamsThunderDo-everything star
23.Jaylen BrownCelticsConsistent scorer, inconsistent habits
24.Kawhi LeonardClippersStill that guy when healthy
25.Franz WagnerMagicShooting hitch holding him back
26.Trae YoungHawksNightly floater/lob 15-hit combo 
27.Zion WilliamsonPelicansTop 10 player when healthy
28.Bam AdebayoHeatAmazing defender with limited bag
29.Paolo BancheroMagicHighly skilled, needs better efficiency
30.De'Aaron FoxSpursGifted with the ball in his hands
31.James HardenClippersStill makes all of the passes
32.Ja MorantGrizzliesAcrobatic at the cost of hard falls
33.Darius GarlandCavsUnderrated passer, shoots from Mars
34.LaMelo BallHornetsBest in creativity, worst in tattoos
35.Jamal MurrayNuggetsOne of the best with 0 All-Star games
36.Domantas SabonisKingsMonster stats, flaws exposed in big games
37.Ivica ZubacClippersHigh feel, do-your-job on both ends
38.Alperen SengunRocketsTurkish Kevin McHale
39.Amen ThompsonRocketsFreak athlete with a great motor
40.Derrick WhiteCelticsBest glue guy in the league
41.Desmond BaneMagicShooter with T-Rex arms
42.Chet HolmgrenThunderGo-go-gadget arms and silky-smooth 3s
43.Lauri MarkkanenJazzThree-level scorer in a bad situation
44.Draymond GreenWarriorsA+ defender but declining offense
45.Aaron GordonNuggetsSafety blanket who can shoot now
46.Tyler HerroHeatBig scorer, defense exposed in playoffs
47.O.G. AnunobyKnicksSteals magnet and play finisher
48.Julius RandleWolvesMonster scorer who can pass now
49.Scottie BarnesRaptorsPoint forward with versatile defense
50.Jalen JohnsonHawksDo-everything athlete
51.Trey Murphy IIIPelicansAll-star talent fighting Pelicans injury curse
52.Norm PowellHeatScore-first guard with infinite confidence
53.DeMar DeRozanKingsDeadly pump fake / midrange game
54.Mikal BridgesKnicksTalented but floats through games
55.Zach LaVineKingsElectric scorer stuck in bad fits
56.Austin ReavesLakersOverrated by Lakers fans, underrated by the rest
57.Dyson DanielsHawksSteals savant with a nice floater
58.Jrue HolidayBlazersElite defense, offense has fallen off
59.Rudy GobertWolvesHistoric rim protection with zero bag
60.Jarrett AllenCavsAthletic rebounder who needs to show up in big games
61.Myles TurnerBucksStretch big who is still a good defender
62.Brandon IngramRaptorsHigh volume scorer, must shoot more 3s and defend harder
63.Coby WhiteBullsUndersized gunner/playmaker
64.Isaiah HartensteinThunderAutomatic floater, rock-solid on both ends
65.Jaden McDanielsWolvesStreaky offense, consistently awesome defense
66.Cam JohnsonNuggetsHigh feel 3-and-okay-D
67.Lu DortThunderHellacious defender with moon ball 3s
68.CJ McCollumWizardsCan still shoot it from everywhere
69.Jalen SuggsMagicPhysical defender, streaky shooter
70.Paul GeorgeSixersBody starting to fail him
71.Deni AvdijaBlazersGood defender, physical driver
72.Michael Porter Jr.NetsBlack hole gunner, good rebounder
73.Herb JonesPelicansNot on Herb, 3-pointer comes and goes
74.Andrew NembhardPacersInsanely smart on both ends
75.Josh HartKnicksPlays with reckless abandon
76.Aaron NesmithPacersPhysical defender, knockdown shooter
77.Christian BraunNuggetsHigh motor role player
78.Brandon MillerHornetsPoor man's Paul George
79.Anfernee SimonsCelticsGreat shooter who can't defend
80.Brandin PodziemskiWarriorsDo-it-all coach's favorite
81.Josh GiddeyBullsFlawed stat stuffer
82.Rui HachimuraLakersPhysical scorer with defensive issues
83.Toumani CamaraBlazersAmazing defender, capable shooter
84.RJ BarrettRaptorsBull in a china shop
85.Ausar ThompsonPistons90's center in a wing's body
86.Andrew WigginsHeatGood role player, weak motor
87.Cooper FlaggMavericksShould be good right away
88.Jakob PoeltlRaptorsSolid at everything but shooting
89.Devin VassellSpursInconsistent 3-and-D talent
90.Dereck Lively IIMavericksLobs, blocked shots, and passing
91.Onyeka OkongwuHawksUndersized but makes it work
92.Dorian Finney-SmithRocketsReliable 3-and-D vet, knows his role
93.Jalen DurenPistonsGreat athlete and rebounder
94.Jordan PoolePelicansCloser to his Warriors form now
95.Jalen GreenSunsUp-and-down scorer
96.Bradley BealClippersCan still score
97.Stephon CastleSpursGreat defender, inefficient scorer
98.Immanuel QuickleyRaptorsCan he ever stay healthy?
99.John CollinsClippersUnderrated all-around scorer
100.Tobias HarrisPistonsReliable veteran leader
101.Jaden IveyPistonsCan he play off the ball?
102.Miles BridgesHornetsBig scorer with low feel
103.Klay ThompsonMavericksStill shoots well, has lost a step
104.Keegan MurrayKings3-and-D wing who had a down year
105.Dillon BrooksSunsA pest with an edge
106.Quentin GrimesSixersScorer who can scale down
107.Cam ThomasNetsPro bucket-getter who can't defend
108.Khris MiddletonWizardsCan still shoot, body is failing him
109.Max StrusCavsUltimate competitor on both ends
110.Deandre AytonLakersTalent with effort issues
111.Nikola VucevicBullsTalented scorer who can't defend
112.Buddy HieldWarriorsMistake-prone but elite gunner
113.Walker KesslerJazzBlocks shots but what else?
114.Nic ClaxtonNetsGood defender, limited shooter
115.Wendell Carter Jr.MagicJack-of-all-trades big who forgot how to shoot
116.Donovan ClinganBlazersRim protector who fouls too much
117.Mike ConleyWolvesGetting by on smarts
118.D'Angelo RussellMavericksElite shooter, coach's headache
119.Malik MonkKingsSpark plug scorer
120.Shaedon SharpeBlazersTremendous athlete, good midrange game
121.Bennedict MathurinPacersAthletic scorer with limited vision
122.Gary Trent Jr.BucksShooter that lives on the edge
123.Jaylen WellsGrizzliesReliable with good two-way feel
124.Matas BuzelisBullsShot-blocking demon with no fear
125.Harrison BarnesSpursVeteran shooter whose defense has faded
126.Mark WilliamsSunsHuge body that can't stay healthy
127.Zaccharie RisacherHawksRisacher is French for versatility
128.Alex SarrWizardsDefense is there, efficiency is not
129.Reed SheppardRocketsCan shoot and get steals
130.Zach EdeyGrizzliesScreen-setter, rebounder, and finisher
131.Royce O'NealeSunsKnows his 3-and-D role
132.Kevin Porter Jr.BucksTalented but mistake-prone
133.Kentavious Caldwell-PopeGrizzliesCan he recover his 3-pointer?
134.Chris BoucherCelticsLimited stretch big 
135.Isaac OkoroBullsThe MJ of Wayne Seldens
136.Isaiah JacksonPacersHigh-energy two-way big
137.Kel'el WareHeatGreat athlete who needs more focus
138.Yves MissiPelicansRaw, talented vertical athlete
139.Bilal CoulibalyWizardsGood defender with shaky offense
140.Kyle KuzmaBucksThe Wizards broke him
141.Kon KnueppelHornetsShooting gives him a high floor
142.Ziaire WilliamsNetsToolsy wing, lacks offensive polish
143.Bub CarringtonWizardsGood passer with size
144.Ace BaileyJazzNatural bucket with limited vision
145.Moussa DiabateHornetsHustle king 
146.VJ EdgecombeSixersDefensive athlete, transition terror
147.Isaiah CollierJazzDriver who needs to learn to shoot
148.Keyonte GeorgeJazzScore-first guard with bad efficiency
149.Neemias QuetaCelticsEnergy big man who can rebound
150.Egor DeminNetsPlus passer, can he generate advantages?

Stephen Noh

Stephen Noh started writing about the NBA as one of the first members of The Athletic in 2016. He covered the Chicago Bulls, both through big outlets and independent newsletters, for six years before joining The Sporting News in 2022. Stephen is also an avid poker player and wrote for PokerNews while covering the World Series of Poker from 2006-2008.