basketball

King me: Believe it or not, LeBron James is a Hall of Famer as a Laker alone

By Tom HaberstrohYahoo Sports

If this is it for LeBron James as a Laker, he can walk away with pride. After signing in 2018, he played eight wildly successful seasons and became the all-time leading scorer, passing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 2023. The 41-year-old won an NBA championship in six playoff runs and reached the conference finals twice, all without missing a single playoff game.

Individually, he took home a number of accolades, including eight All-Star nods, seven All-NBA appearances and even a 2019-20 assist title by averaging a career-high 10. 2 assists per game. For most NBA players, an eight-year heater like that would be the stuff of dreams.

But after the Game 4 loss against Oklahoma City on Monday night, James’ future is uncertain. He is set to be an unrestricted free agent and his days in LakerLand could be in the rearview mirror. LeBron told reporters following the loss: “I don’t know what the future holds for me.

” Even in his age-41 season, James rated as one of the best players in the league, averaging a team-high 23. 2 points, 7. 3 assists and 6.

7 rebounds this postseason for the short-handed Lakers. With Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves (also a free agent) struggling to stay healthy, the need for James’ versatility, leadership and production remains high. He could re-sign with the Lakers or pick up elsewhere with the Golden State Warriors, Cleveland Cavaliers or other title-aspiring teams needing a veteran impact.

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