LeBron James is running it back for at least one more season - just not in a Lakers uniform.
The 41-year-old superstar has decided to continue his NBA career into the 2026-27 season, which would make it a record-setting 24th campaign. But ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Tuesday, just before free agency officially opened, that James has told Los Angeles he’ll be playing elsewhere next year.
That leaves the league’s next LeBron watch wide open. A third stint with Cleveland is on the table, and the latest buzz has pointed to Golden State, where the Warriors are said to be very interested in pairing him with Steph Curry after the two played together on Team USA at the 2024 Olympics. Draymond Green has already declined his player option for the upcoming season in an effort to help make that happen.
Even with the uncertainty around his next stop, James keeps stacking numbers that belong in a museum. During the 2025-26 regular season, he put up 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds, 7.2 assists and 1.2 steals across 60 games, averaging 33.2 minutes. In the playoffs, he turned it up again, posting 23.2 points, 6.3 rebounds, 7.3 assists and 1.3 steals per game before the Lakers were swept by the Thunder in the second round.
Wherever he lands next, James will enter the 2026-27 season sitting atop or near the top of the NBA record book in just about every direction you can look. He is the league’s all-time leader in points (43,440), games (1,622), minutes (61,030) and field goals made (15,961). He’s also sixth in three-pointers (2,636), fourth in assists (12,061), sixth in steals (2,417) and 24th in rebounds (12,095).
And there’s still room for the numbers to move. With another solid season, James could climb into the top 20 in rebounds, pass Jason Kidd (12,091) for third on the all-time assists list, and even threaten Chris Paul for the No. 2 spot (12,552).
The resume keeps getting stranger in the best possible way. James owns the highest value over replacement player in NBA history (156.61), leads the league’s career box plus/minus list (8.53), and is the only player ever to reach 40,000 points, 11,500 rebounds and 11,500 assists.
His path to this point has stretched across eras and franchises. Cleveland made him the No. 1 pick in the 2003 NBA draft, and he stayed there through the 2009-10 season. The Cavaliers reached the Finals in 2007 and were swept by the Spurs, and James left in 2010 after repeated postseason failures.
He joined Miami next, teaming up with Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh. The Heat lost the 2011 Finals to the Mavericks, then won back-to-back titles in 2012 and ’13 before falling to the Spurs in ’14.
After that, he returned to Cleveland for four years. The Cavaliers lost to the Warriors in the Finals in his first season back, then James helped engineer one of the signature comebacks in league history in 2015, rallying from 3-1 down to beat Golden State in seven games for the franchise’s first title. Cleveland then lost to the Warriors again in the 2017 and ’18 Finals before James moved on once more.
He signed with the Lakers in the summer of 2018 and has been there ever since. Los Angeles missed the postseason in 2019, won the championship in 2020, and has had only fleeting playoff success since.
For all the hardware and all the records - four MVP awards, 22 All-Star selections, a record 13 All-NBA first-team honors, plus four second-team and three third-team nods - James still appears to be chasing the one thing that matters most to him: another ring. He already has four NBA titles, and he was named Finals MVP for each one. His most recent championship came with the Lakers in the NBA’s COVID-19 bubble in 2020.
In Other News...
Timberwolves Suddenly Linked To A Rumor That Changes Everything
Minnesotas roster already looks different after the front office moved on from Julius Randle and Naz Reid while bringing in LaMelo Ball, and the latest wrinkle only adds to the sense that this group is still being shaped. The Timberwolves have spent the summer reworking the pieces around Anthony Edwards, and any star-level addition would naturally change the conversation around what this team can be in the West.
A report from Sam Amick of The Athletic has now put a far bigger name into the mix, though the idea remains very much in rumor territory. For a franchise trying to keep climbing, even the hint of interest in a player of that stature is enough to turn heads, but the gap between speculation and something real is still wide enough to leave this as more intrigue than certainty. [Read more 🡒]
Timberwolves Early Free Agency Move Says A Lot About Their Priorities
Minnesota moved quickly to bring back Bones Hyland in the opening stretch of free agency, another sign that the Wolves want to keep a certain kind of depth intact while they sort through the rest of their roster. Hylands one-year minimum deal keeps a useful bench scorer in place after he gave the team 8.5 points and 2.6 assists a night last season, and his speed gives the second unit a different look when Minnesota wants to push the pace.
The early return also comes with a wider roster question still hanging over the Wolves. Mike Conley and Kyle Anderson remain unsigned, leaving two familiar rotation pieces in limbo as the front office weighs its next steps, and Minnesota still has a clear need to address at power forward if it wants the group to feel complete. [Read more 🡒]
Lakers Bombshell Could Quietly Change Everything For The Timberwolves
LeBron James latest career pivot has immediate ripple effects across the Western Conference, even if Minnesota is not in position to chase him. The Lakers star has told Los Angeles he intends to keep playing in 2026-27, but he wants to do it elsewhere, and that alone changes the backdrop for every team watching the West, including a Timberwolves club still shaping its own roster around salary constraints and future flexibility.
For Minnesota, the bigger takeaway may be what James leaving does to the Lakers rather than any fantasy of landing him. If Los Angeles loses that kind of centerpiece, its margin for error gets a lot thinner, which matters for a Wolves team trying to climb higher in the conference. Minnesota still has roster work to do, including a need at power forward, but it also has reason to believe that internal growth and bargain hunting can keep pushing it forward while a rival in the West deals with a major void. [Read more 🡒]
