The San Antonio Spurs have already been floated as a team that could swing big this offseason, but the latest idea is a jaw-dropper: a path to adding LeBron James.
That possibility surfaced when The Ringer’s Bill Simmons discussed the Spurs as a potential landing spot for the 41-year-old superstar forward through a sign-and-trade with the Los Angeles Lakers. Simmons pointed to the Spurs’ need for veteran leadership and said the fit could make sense alongside Victor Wembanyama.
“Yeah, you could sell that really fast," Simmons said last Sunday. "Like Pops (Gregg Popovich) there.
I’ve had a long relationship with him, his team’s close. I could be the missing piece.”
“I watched them in the finals for five games. They were missing that one veteran leader. And by the way, it could be a trade where it’s like (Luke) Kornet and Keldon Johnson’s expiring (contract) and then you could figure out how to pay LeBron (James) $30 million a year for two years.”
For now, though, the Spurs look like a long shot. All signs currently point to James heading to the Warriors, with Stephen Curry and Draymond Green emerging as the most logical destination after James’ Tuesday morning decision to leave the Lakers.
Still, San Antonio can be mentioned in the conversation. If the Spurs were somehow able to land James in a sign-and-trade, it would mean moving on from Kornet and bringing in one of the league’s most dangerous offensive players, a future Hall of Famer who is still producing at a high level at 41.
At the moment, it reads more like a fantasy than a real possibility.
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Marcus Smart had been brought in with Luka Doncics recruitment helping grease the wheels, and he looked like a useful fit right away in his first season with the Lakers. His blend of edge, defense and steady guard play gave the roster a different look, which is why his departure leaves more than just a thin spot on the depth chart, even before the full next-step picture comes into focus. [Read more 🡒]
Lakers Keep Adding Pieces Around Luka After Kessler Trade
Fresh off the trade for Walker Kessler, the Lakers kept working the margins of the roster in free agency, bringing in Quentin Grimes, Collin Sexton and Sandro Mamukelashvili to round out the rotation around Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves and Kessler. The trio gives Los Angeles a little more of what it has been hunting for all summer - scoring, defense and shooting - while also helping spread the responsibilities that used to sit in one place on the floor.
Grimes arrives with the profile of a versatile wing who can help on both ends, Sexton adds another scoring guard to the bench mix, and Mamukelashvili gives the Lakers another frontcourt option with shooting touch. Taken together, the moves suggest a front office trying to build out a more complete supporting cast piece by piece, even as the bigger question around how all of these parts fit with the teams new core still hangs over the roster. [Read more 🡒]
