Sports

LeBron James Makes Feelings Clear About Sharing Lakers Locker Room With Bronny

LeBron James has nothing left to prove. The rings are there, the records are his, and the legacy is already written. But something has clearly clicked for him this postseason, and it has less to do with chasing another title and more to do with who's sitting a few lockers away.

Having Bronny James in the same locker room has changed how LeBron approaches the day-to-day grind of an NBA season. It's given his routine a different kind of purpose. It's less about personal motivation and more about setting a standard that his son can actually see up close.

On the "Mind the Game" podcast with Steve Nash, the 41-year-old opened up about what that's meant for his preparation and his mindset going into games.

"To be able to have Bronny in the locker room has definitely helped out a lot as well. I have a job and a responsibility to show him what it means to be a professional," LeBron said. "Yes, he's seen it from the outside looking in throughout the course of his life, but now, being in the locker room, being in film sessions, being on a plane, being in everything that surrounds how to be a professional."

"I hope it's paid off in the sense for Bronny, in a sense of my teammates, that they get to see how I approach the game. It comes way before the lights come on, and the popcorn is popping, and everyone is filled in their seats, and whatever the case may be."

That approach is showing up in the numbers. Through the Los Angeles Lakers' first-round win over the Houston Rockets, LeBron averaged 23.2 points, 7.2 rebounds and 8.3 assists. At 41, he's not just hanging around. He's producing at a level that still moves the needle for a 53-29 team.

 Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (left) and guard Bronny James. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (left) and guard Bronny James. Kirby Lee-Imagn Images Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Lakers Face a Steep Challenge Against the Thunder

The Western Conference Semifinals bring a different kind of test. The Los Angeles Lakers went 0-4 against the Oklahoma City Thunder in the regular season, losing by an average of 29.3 points. Those numbers are hard to ignore heading into a second-round series where the margin for error shrinks considerably.

For the Lakers to be competitive, several things need to go right at once. Perimeter shooting has to improve, turnovers need to come down and controlling tempo becomes critical against a Thunder team that dominated them all season. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander presents a matchup problem that doesn't have a clean answer on the roster.

That's where LeBron comes back in. At 41, the same age as both head coaches in this series, he's still expected to carry the offensive load and make the right reads when games get tight.

LeBron James knows what's required as the opponent is the best in the West. And somewhere on that bench, Bronny is watching every move his father makes.

Related: NBA Playoff Schedule: Conference Semifinals Dates, Matchups, and How to Watch

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This story was originally published May 5, 2026 at 7:40 AM.

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