LeBron James only has 2 real options ahead of uncertain offseason
LeBron James' ring-chasing days are over.
LeBron James doesn't know what the future holds for his basketball career. But at 41 years old, he couldn't rule out retirement after the Los Angeles Lakers were swept out of the playoffs by the Oklahoma City Thunder. "Iโll go back and recalibrate with my family and talk with them, and spend some time with them, and when the time comes, obviously, you guys will know what I decide to do," James said after Monday's game .
The decision shouldn't be a complicated one. As far as I can tell, he only has two real options: run it back with the Lakers or retire. And because James' contract with the Lakers is up, it may not be his decision to make at all.
Look, I'm not here to tell James to do with his career. If he wants to keep playing basketball, he should. And while we can assume the Lakers would be glad to have him back for the right price, the off-chance they wouldn't want him back could force him to look elsewhere for that 24th season.
But putting my feet in his size 15 shoes, I couldn't imagine uprooting my life in Los Angeles, where I get to play basketball with my first-born, to go through the grind of another 82-game season at 40-plus for any other organization than the one I've been with the last eight years. If they wouldn't have me back, I'd be more than happy ending things as the most accomplished (and compensated) player in NBA history. Of course, I can't fit James' shoes.