Lebron James: Lakers star says final NBA season will be played with his son in interview with The Athletic
Lebron James said there are no certainties over his future in the NBA, though he is certain about one thing -- he'd like to play his final season alongside his son.
The
37-year-old Los Angeles Lakers forward is currently back in Cleveland
for the NBA All-Star weekend, the city where he spent 11 years across
two spells with the Cavaliers.
As
he prepares to captain Team LeBron against Team [Kevin] Durant in the
71st All-Star Game at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Sunday -- his
record-equalling 18th appearance -- James said the "door's not closed" on a third stint in Cleveland.
"I'm not saying I'm coming back and playing, I don't know," James, who is a free agent after next season, told The Athletic on Saturday.
"I don't know what my future holds. I don't even know when I'm free."
James
was named the league's rookie of the year in 2004 after being drafted
as the first overall pick of the draft by the Cavaliers, winning
back-to-back Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards in 2009 and 2010 before
leaving to join the Miami Heat.
He
returned to Cleveland in 2014, subsequently leading the franchise to
their first ever championship two years later in yet another MVP winning
season.
Like Father like Son
In
2018 he again left the Cavaliers to sign with the Lakers, with
California now boasting two James' -- Lebron and his son, Bronny, who is
now 17.
A high school point-guard, Bronny was ranked 43rd by ESPN in their 2023 class of 60 with a four star rating.
James'
second-born child Bryce, 14, is similarly rumored to be following in
his father's footsteps, already impressing at high school level.
Regardless
of whether he returns to Cleveland, James asserted that whenever his
final season comes, it will be played alongside his eldest son "whatever
it takes."
"My
last year will be played with my son," James said. "Wherever Bronny is
at, that's where I'll be. I would do whatever it takes to play with my
son for one year. It's not about the money at that point."
When
that final season will be remains to be seen. At the age James has
enjoyed another stellar year despite an underwhelming season for the
Lakers, sat ninth in the Western Conference with a negative 27-31
record.
Yet with 29.1 points per game, James trails only Joel Embiid
and Giannis Antetokounmpo in the league this season, and last weekend
passed hall of famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the most combined regular
and postseason points in NBA history.
James
needed 19 points on the road against the Golden State Warriors to pass
Abdul-Jabbar's 44,149 record, and proceeded to sink 26 to go clear at
the summit with 44,157.
"I
love the game of basketball. I love being a part of the NBA and being
able to, to inspire ... so many different sets of generations," James
said after breaking the record.
"Along that way, when you're able to accomplish things individually
then, at some point I guess have an opportunity to kind of sit back and
think about it."
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