LeBron James’s decision to move on from the Lakers could do more than reshape Los Angeles’ summer plans. It may also tighten the screws on the Utah Jazz in their effort to keep Walker Kessler.
ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday that James will not be re-signing with the Lakers this summer and intends to play elsewhere, setting up a major pivot for Los Angeles as it reshapes its free agency plans. That shift matters beyond LeBron’s own future, because the Lakers have had steady interest in Kessler and could now have a cleaner path to chase him.
That connection has been building for a while. The Lakers have been linked to Kessler through recent weeks, and even in earlier offseasons and trade deadlines, which makes their current position easy to read: they appear ready to push hard if the opportunity is there. They’re also among the teams expected to meet with Kessler in California when free agency opens on Tuesday night.
The Jazz, though, still control the most important lever. Kessler is a restricted free agent, which gives Utah the right to match any offer sheet he signs.
And all signs have pointed to the Jazz staying aggressive in trying to keep him, even if that means going above the previously reported five-year, $140 million offer. He remains a central part of what Utah wants to build.
Still, the Lakers have the kind of cap room that can complicate everything. Los Angeles is projected to have more than $50 million in space when free agency begins, and it has a clear need at center. That makes Kessler an obvious target if the Lakers decide to spend big enough.
The real question is how big that number gets. If the Lakers want to pry Kessler away, they’d likely need to put together an offer that makes Utah hesitate before matching. Whether that means $35 million or something closer to $40 million is unclear, but those kinds of figures could force the Jazz to think twice.
There’s also a line where the money gets so steep that the Jazz have to consider other options. Kessler is clearly important to their future, but near max-level money for a player who appeared in just five games last season and has never been an All-Star is a serious decision. At that point, a sign-and-trade or another type of exit could even come into play.
The Lakers may not be eager to go that high either. They could decide that paying Kessler that kind of money is too steep and turn their attention elsewhere, including another big man such as Jalen Duren.
Either way, LeBron’s departure has the potential to ripple into Utah’s offseason in a real way. What happens next in Los Angeles could end up shaping whether the Jazz keep their defensive anchor in the middle.
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