Los Angeles: For much of the past two years, LeBron James has seemed restless and impatient. The Los Angeles Lakers star’s chase of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s NBA scoring record had provided structure, motivation and attention early in the 2022-23 season, but there wasn’t much waiting for him on the other side of the milestone.
But when James opened his 22nd season at Lakers media day Monday, the nagging ennui was gone. In its place, he said, was “pure joy.” Even though the NBA’s oldest player will turn 40 on December 30, James said he was reinvigorated by his run to a gold medal at the Paris Olympics and is intent on cherishing his time with 19-year-old son Bronny, whom the Lakers selected with the 55th pick in June’s draft.
“I have not thought about what the future holds,” James said. “I’m just living in the moment. With Bronny being here, I don’t want to take this moment for granted. This is a moment I may enjoy a little bit more. ... It gives you a lot of life when you’re around young guys. I had a lot of fun this summer with [Anthony Edwards], Tyrese Haliburton and some of the young guys on the [Olympic team]. They give you a lot of energy and life. To be alongside [Bronny], it just gives you some more life.”
After going 47-35 and suffering a first-round playoff exit last season, the Lakers return all five projected starters - James, Anthony Davis, Austin Reaves, D’Angelo Russell and Rui Hachimura - and will welcome back Jarred Vanderbilt and Gabe Vincent from major injuries. While their playing rotation changed little this summer, Los Angeles hired JJ Redick, a 15-year NBA veteran and James’s former podcast partner, as their coach.
Wide smiles were common but there was little talk of retirement or rings after James and his son posed for portraits and sat side by side - No. 23 in gold next to No. 9 in gold - for a television interview. James solemnly dedicated last season to his oldest son, who suffered sudden cardiac arrest before his freshman season at the University of Southern California. Bronny James entered the draft after averaging 4.8 points and 2.8 rebounds as a freshman.
Lakers General Manager Rob Pelinka revealed last week that the NBA’s first father-and-son teammate tandem went head-to-head in a recent scrimmage. Both laughed and talked trash as they gave their version of events to Spectrum SportsNet, the Lakers’ local broadcaster. “This is freaking amazing,” Lakers legend turned commentator James Worthy said. “Can you see the freaking resemblance in their answers and mannerisms?”
James said the two don’t get together for stern talks at the dinner table, and he lamented that “there’s not really much interaction on a day-to-day basis” because his son “comes down, eats and goes to his room and plays his video games.” The four-time MVP declared Bronny wouldn’t be allowed to call him “Dad” on the court - “2-3,” “Bron” and “GOAT” were acceptable alternatives. Bronny, for his part, used his media day interview to shut down the idea that they would be carpooling to practices and games.
Even so, the family boundaries remain a work in progress.