LeBron James has blown the NBA wide open before free agency even starts, and that includes a scenario few Celtics fans probably ever imagined: Boston as a possible landing spot.
Shortly after noon on the East Coast, Shams Charania of ESPN reported that James “has informed the Los Angeles Lakers that the franchise can move on without him because he will play elsewhere”, a stunning development that instantly shifted the conversation around the league.
James is no longer in his prime, but he remains a highly valuable player, and now he’ll enter unrestricted free agency with his next move completely unresolved. There has already been reported interest from the Warriors, and the possibility of a return to Cleveland will always linger, but his exact priorities are still unclear.
The options are limited from a cap standpoint. Only three teams currently have cap space, and the Bulls, Nets, and Lakers are not realistic destinations here.
If James wants to stay in California or head somewhere familiar, that narrows the field even further. If his goal is simply to chase the best chance to win and he’s willing to take the minimum, the picture changes fast.
That’s where Boston comes in.
If James is looking for a contender, a big market, and the best realistic money available from a contender, the Celtics become a fascinating fit. The full midlevel exception gives Boston roughly $15 million a year to offer him, which is as much as he can get from any contender.
For Celtics fans, that idea will land with a thud in plenty of living rooms. A lot of them want nothing to do with James, and that reaction makes sense. The longtime Boston nemesis has spent more than two decades on the other side of this story, and there’s no reason to pretend that history disappears overnight.
Still, if you strip away the emotion and focus strictly on basketball, the fit is hard to ignore.
James could slide in behind Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, assuming Brown is still on the roster, and add exactly what Boston can always use: playmaking, passing, and pressure at the rim. He’s not the defender he once was, but in a system built around elite defenders, he could still be a positive. And when the playoffs arrive, he’s proven he can still turn it up and take on more.
The idea of Boston rolling out three jumbo two-way wings who can do a little bit of everything is a pretty tempting one.
For James, the appeal would be different but just as real. He’d get another shot at a legacy franchise and a chance to chase a fifth championship ring with four different teams. It would also mean a title with both the Celtics and Lakers, which is the kind of twist that sounds absurd until a morning like this.
It’s still a long shot, and it may never get past the rumor stage. But with free agency about to begin, this much is true: just about anything is in play now, including LeBron James in Boston.
In Other News...
Red Sox Suddenly Face A Tough Deadline Call On Resurgent Veteran
A bullpen-needy Texas team sitting atop the AL West is exactly the kind of contender that can start circling a relief market before the trade deadline, and Aroldis Chapman is the sort of arm that naturally gets mentioned. The Rangers have enough results to stay in the race, but their relief corps has lacked the kind of bat-missing stuff that can shorten games in October, which is why any available high-leverage reliever is going to draw attention.
For Boston, though, the calculus is not nearly as simple. Chapman has helped stabilize the back end for a Red Sox club that has made real ground in the playoff picture, and recent success has made it harder to picture the front office turning into a seller. If Texas wants to make a move for bullpen help, the path likely depends on Boston deciding the moment is right to listen, and that is no longer a given. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Deadline Debate Just Shifted Around One Roster Problem
Even with the Red Sox sitting behind in both the division and the wild-card race, the deadline conversation in Boston keeps circling back to the same place: the middle infield. If the club does decide to behave like a buyer, that spot has emerged as the clearest need, with the front office trying to sort out how to stabilize a position that has not given the team enough certainty this season.
The search is made tougher by the fact that the market does not offer many easy solutions, especially for a club that still has to balance present-tense urgency with longer-term value. Boston is at least doing the kind of homework that suggests it will explore options, but the gap between asking around and actually landing the right fit is where this deadline puzzle really starts to get interesting. [Read more 🡒]
Willson Contreras' Second Straight Ejection Has Red Sox Fans Fed Up
Willson Contreras found himself at the center of another ugly scene Saturday night, this time in a confrontation with Cade Cavalli that helped turn Cardinals-Nationals into a full-blown mess. After the exchange with the Washington pitcher, benches emptied and the umpiring crew handed out ejections, with Contreras, Nate Eaton and Miles Mikolas all sent off as tempers boiled over.
For Red Sox fans watching from afar, the frustration is easy to understand because this was Contreras' second straight game ejection and the pattern is getting hard to miss. The latest flash point came after a tense night against Washington, and it only added to the sense that the situation around him has become more combustible with each passing inning. [Read more 🡒]
