yahoo - 5/12/2026 11:07:36 AM - GMT (+2 )
LOS ANGELES —Three minutes into a sudden second quarter Thunder storm, as the Lakers gathered around each other in hopes of solving a growing problem, LeBron James plopped into a seat a few slots down from the group.
The uneasiness and nervousness that had enveloped the building in the moments leading up to tipoff — despite a brief shift toward excitement and belief in extending a series — were back once again. From a micro lens, the bulk of apprehension centered around avoiding a sweep but the potential outcome of the game — and to a larger extent, James’ future — provided an eerie backdrop on a clear spring night.
Eight years ago, James walked out the same tunnel onto the floor for his Lakers home debut, offering a flurry of fistbumps, high-fives and handshakes to eager onlookers. That evening, hope was on the cards, for a better future, together — despite being overtaken by a massive brawl that ended in ejections and suspensions. On Monday night, with the 41-year-old staring a second-round sweep in the face, the first of his storied career, a different fight ensued. The fight to win a game. The fight for dignity. For ego. For maybe, just maybe, the next chapter of his basketball journey.
“What my future holds, I don’ t know,” James said following the Lakers’ 115-110 loss. “Obviously, we’re still fresh from losing. I don’t know. I don’t know what the future holds for me as it stands right now tonight. I got a lot of time, I’ll sit back and recalibrate with my family. Talk with them, spend some time with them and when the time comes, you guys will know.”
The wounds from defeat are likely still too fresh for James and the Lakers to fully process. They certainly were for the thousands of fans in the stands, trapped between emotions so strong that James shook the hands of his opponents and walked off the floor without as much as a smattering of applause, attempting to come to terms with a sweep. They certainly were for James’ teammates as they shared embraces and said their goodbyes in the locker room afterward, some wondering what the next few months will hold for the individuals as well as the collective. And they certainly were for an emotional JJ Redick as he sat on the podium, praising his soldiers for enduring a long, confusing season while acknowledging the great unknown on the horizon.
“I believe in continuity,” Redick said. “But I do think that if you’re trying to win a championship and this organization is, you have to be realistic and assess where you’re at and we’re not good enough right now. There probably will be some continuity and there probably won’t be, but that’s what the next two months are for.”
Regardless of your point of view — whether watching the game remotely, in person or even as a member of the media — nothing suggested that this would be the last time that James took an NBA floor. James spoke at length about the “process” of basketball, detailing a routine that has allowed him to remain at the top of his game for over two decades and shuddered at the mention of him falling out of love with the game. His Game 4 performance — 24 points, 12 rebounds, 3 assists and a block — giving everything he had on both ends of the floor didn’t resemble a player that suddenly wants to call it quits. The ability to rest, recover and mentally prepare for a final season on his terms certainly has appeal from an outsider’s perspective.
“I don’t think it’s his last year,” Suns forward Dillon Brooks, who was in attendance, told Yahoo Sports. “I think he got one more in him. I watched him when I was in the NBA, when I was a kid in high school. He’s got a phenomenal career and battled everybody and done it at a high level throughout. It’s been amazing to watch overall, a pleasure to battle against him.”
The real question, the one that will dominate airwaves, water cooler talk and group chats within the basketball world for the next few weeks and months, is whether or not James’ next steps will be with the Lakers. Austin Reaves, Marcus Smart and Deandre Ayton — 60 percent of the Lakers’ playoff starting lineup — all have player options for the 2026-27 season. Los Angeles’ brass will be tasked with presenting a plan for James to still remain a viable contender in an increasingly competitive top layer of the basketball ecosystem. Is such a plan more advantageous — not just to James, but to the organization as well — than a homecoming to Cleveland, landing in New York or finally syncing up with Steph Curry? Should the Lakers be so willing to pony up millions of dollars for James’ services, who will be 42 by year’s end, as opposed to fully committing to a heliocentric system tailored to Luka Dončić’s skill set?
The truth is somewhere in the middle. James, entering his 24th season, is likely a hard sell as a commanding size of a team’s cap space — especially in today's restricted economy — while still retaining value as an elite playmaker, connective tissue, positive rebounder and transition defender, in addition to the marketing/revenue boost his presence dictates.
“I haven’t even thought about that,” Redick said pertaining to James’ future. “We’ll deal with the offseason in the offseason, which is the next two months.”
James’ and Redick’s preference to kick the can down the road is understandable, but any decision will likely involve the deconstruction of the now-completed Western Conference semis. The absence of Dončić increases the difficulty of proper evaluation, but the Lakers’ 109.6 postseason offensive rating with James as a No. 1 option would rank just above the Brooklyn Nets over the course of the regular season and their net rating lines them up with a bottom-ten unit. Consequently, miscalculations on the shooting and scoring prowess of Thunder guards Ajay Mitchell and Jared McCain, Chet Holmgren’s complete two-way dominance (and Ayton’s gradual erasure) also play a part. Additionally, James’ decline in shooting efficiency — 97th percentile in shot usage, 46th in true shooting percentage — and a game plan gone awry (surrounding James with floor spacers yet finishing the postseason ranked 18th out of 20 in 3-point rate) must be addressed as well.
Before every Laker game, the jumbotron shows a montage of the franchise’s most iconic moments — with cameos from Magic Johnson, Shaquille O’Neal, the late Kobe Bryant and others. James’ accomplishments over eight seasons, the most he’s spent with any team, are also featured. But the duality of hope, as Los Angeles has come to experience over the last few weeks, is crippling by nature. James’ Lakers legacy, while not as robust as some of the names that have come before him, is still deserving of a fitting end in purple and gold. But what that exactly looks like, and how the greatest player of this generation plans to navigate unforeseen waters, will keep an organization in a holding pattern until clarity takes over.
“S*** I left everything I could out on the floor,” James said. “I control what I can control and I can leave the floor saying even though I hate losing, I was locked in on what we needed to do. I tried to make sure that our guys were locked in throughout the postseason. We fell a little short but I’m not looking at my year as a disappointment, that’s for damn sure.”
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