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What LeBron's rookie season may tell us about Wembanyama's future

Switching positions has helped take Victor Wembanyama's game to another level. Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images

LeBron James famously debuted for the Cleveland Cavaliers during the 2003-04 season, and he did so as the team's shooting guard. James played in 79 of 82 games in his age-19 season, mainly at guard, and fantasy basketball managers certainly enjoyed the numbers.

James averaged 20.9 PPG, 5.5 RPG and 5.9 APG, but there was always a sense that things would get considerably better in Year 2. They sure did, and for every season after that and still going, perhaps partly because the Cavaliers quickly realized James was better suited to play small forward.

Fast forward 20 years later and it is the San Antonio Spurs boasting the next teenage superstar in Victor Wembanyama.

The French prodigy is 7-foot-4, among the tallest players in the sport, but coach Gregg Popovich and the Spurs, perhaps in an effort to ease his defensive duties and dalliances with stronger, wider, rougher centers, mainly deployed the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft at power forward for his first 19 games. His numbers were excellent, as he averaged 18.9 PPG, 9.7 RPG and 2.6 BPG.