HOUSTON — There’s a moment in every great player’s career when the noise around them gets loud enough and the world decides it knows what the ending should be before the final chapter has been written. 

For LeBron James, that moment came in early March. 

James missed three games between March 6-10, and the Lakers were 3-0 without him. In their dominant victories over the Pacers, Timberwolves and Knicks, the team appeared to play freer without him. They looked younger, faster and even better on defense. 

Fans and analysts alike pointed to James’ absence and said the Lakers would be better without him. Some even suggested he come off the bench. The audacity. The lazy analysis. James heard it all. 

“But it sells papers a lot easier … if you say their team is better off without LeBron,” he said. “They’re absolutely wrong.”

So, LeBron didn’t just go out and say it. He proved it on the court. 

Before we explain further, let’s rewind to the beginning of the NBA season. 

James missed training camp and the first month of the season with sciatica. The Lakers went 10-4 without him, powered by Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves. 

When James returned, he was rusty and still not in game shape. Still, they went 6-1 in his first seven games back. Then injuries stalled things. Reaves went down with a calf strain and missed the next two months. The team drifted without him, 10-10 over a 20-game stretch that felt a lot longer than it actually was. 

All three were healthy after the All-Star break, but the fit wasn’t seamless. They went 4-4 over their next eight games before James missed those three consecutive in early March. 

Most superstars would push back on the narrative that the team is better off without them. 

Instead, James leaned in.

He watched. Studied. Adjusted. And then, quietly, he stepped aside.

He told Doncic and Reaves to keep playing free. To not worry about feeding him the ball on offense. He was happy playing the third fiddle if that meant the team would continue winning. That’s not a small concession for a player who has spent over two decades being the system instead of learning to play inside of one. 

But its credit to James and his evolution. His decision to be the third scoring option behind Doncic and Reaves changed everything. 

The Lakers ripped through March with a 16-2 record in an 18-game span. Not because James was dominating the ball but because he was dominating in other areas of the game. Defense. Rebounding. Pace of play. He became the connective tissue of the Lakers’ new identity instead of its centerpiece. 

But then came April 2. Doncic and Reaves went down with injuries. With just five games left in the regular season, the Lakers were on the brink. 

This is typically where the fairytale ends. Everyone wrote off the Lakers. 

But, instead, James rewrote the script. 


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He went back to being the engine that drives the Lakers. The primary scorer, ball handler and playmaker. Not out of ego but out of necessity. And now, the Lakers have a lead in their first-round playoff series against the Rockets, who were heavy favorites before the series began. 

“LeBron is making it very known to not get too comfortable,” Lakers center Deandre Ayton told reporters at practice Thursday. “This is the playoffs. Anything can happen.”

When James goes up 2-0 in a series, his teams are 24-0. That’s not a coincidence. Against all odds, he’s carried the team on his back long enough for Reaves to return soon, and Doncic might not be far behind him. 

Even at 41 years old, James is averaging 39 minutes, 24 points, 10 assists and eight rebounds per game in the playoffs. Those numbers would be impressive for a player in his prime, let alone someone who has already lapped the league’s timeline twice over. 

LeBron’s production in this series forces the only question that now matters for the Lakers: How can you walk away from this after the season inevitably ends?

Yes, the future of the Lakers’ franchise belongs to Doncic. Yes, Reaves will become a free agent and deserves to get paid. Yes, the cap sheet is tight, and the CBA is unforgiving. Every dollar matters. 

But so does context.

James has already shown he can adjust his role. He has already taken less to help the roster. And now he’s shown — again — that when everything breaks, he can still carry the weight of the world on his shoulders. 

That’s not a luxury. That’s a safety net you don’t discard and do everything in your power to keep it in Los Angeles. 

If LeBron wants to play a 24th season, then the Lakers can’t get cute. They can’t overthink it. They don’t chase financial flexibility over tangible greatness. 

Bring him back. 

For James, that likely requires a pay cut. But that’s the reality regardless of which team he signs with if he wants to compete for a championship. The market will correct that conversation quickly.

So if the dollars flatten out across the league, why leave?

His son, Bronny, is under contract with the Lakers next season. His life and family are rooted in Los Angeles. His legacy is already intertwined with the franchise’s history. And more importantly, basketball is still being played at a high level. 

The blueprint of this season can be the blueprint for next season. 

The Lakers don’t need LeBron to be who he was. 

They just need him to be exactly who he’s become. 

And over the past two months, including the playoffs, he’s reminded everyone that version might be just as valuable. 

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