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Posted: 2024-07-31 02:28:16

The NBA has found itself shrouded by claims of nepotism in the last month after Bronny James, the eldest son of the league's all-time leading scorer LeBron James, was drafted by the Los Angeles Lakers. 

James Jr was selected with the 55th overall pick in the draft, historically not a game-changing draft slot, and has since signed a four-year, $7.9 million contract with the Lakers. In comparison, the Lakers' other pick from the 2024 draft, Dalton Knecht, signed a four-year, $18.4 million deal after being taken in the first round (No.17 overall).

The James duo are slated to be the first father-son teammates in NBA history, provided junior is ready to handle NBA minutes in his rookie season. Whether he is ready to take that step up remains to be seen. 

James turned out in the summer league for the Lakers and although his on-court production proved to be well and truly a mixed bag, his presence brought an undoubted buzz to Las Vegas where the tournament took place. 

While the story of a father and son potentially playing together for the first time in league history seems to be objectively awesome on the surface, the James family reunion on the Lakers has also left many onlookers feeling incredibly uncomfortable. 

Here is a look at what has been an interesting first month in Bronny James's NBA career.

Why has James's selection caused so much controversy?

To put it simply, the way the James camp engineered James Jr's move to the Lakers left a sour taste in a lot of fans' mouths. 

James surprised many draft experts by throwing his hat in the ring for this year's draft after an extremely underwhelming debut season in the college system with the University of Southern California (USC). 

The 19-year-old started just six times en-route to averaging 4.8 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game in 25 appearances. James shot 36.6 per cent from the field and 26.7 per cent from three-point range in 19.3 minutes per contest. 

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Those are the kind of numbers that would cause almost any other draft prospect to go back to college in a bid to improve their draft stock, but James isn't any other draft prospect. 

James declaring he would enter the draft indicated he likely had a promise from his father's team to get selected. 

There's important context that needs to come with those college stats. After coming into his college season as a four-star recruit out of high school, James collapsed during a USC practice session. 

It was eventually revealed that James collapsed after suffering a cardiac arrest due to a congenital heart defect. ESPN draft expert Jonathan Givony had James ranked as a top-10 draft prospect prior to his collapse.

Some of the chatter surrounding James's ability has made it seem like he was plucked out of absolute obscurity by the Lakers, this couldn't be further from the truth. 

Prior to his college career, James was selected as a McDonald's All-American in 2023, and looked the part in that game while sharing the court with eventual lottery selections from his draft class such as Matas Buzelis (the No.11 pick), Stephon Castle (No.4) and Reed Sheppard (No.3).

Following his hospital stay, James struggled to emulate the level of play he'd shown prior to his collapse, causing his draft stock to plummet. Before he threw his hat in the ring for the 2024 draft, most draft experts did not expect James to be one of the 60 players to be drafted.

James' agent, Klutch Sports CEO Rich Paul, who also manages his father's affairs, revealed prior to the draft that he'd only worked out individually for two teams — the Phoenix Suns and the Lakers.

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