The Cleveland Cavaliers are once again vying for LeBron James’s services in free agency and could be in the driver’s seat for doing so. However, they may have to wait a couple more days to figure out whether James is coming back home.

James’s agent, Rich Paul, told Mark Medina of Forbes that he doesn’t “think this happens anytime soon.” When asked whether that means it’s days or weeks away, Paul said, “I don’t think it’ll be the next few days.”

This timeline lines up with when James made most of his other free agency decisions.

The Decision to sign with the Miami Heat in 2010 came on July 8. The return to Cleveland in 2014 came on July 11. The second week of July is when James usually makes his free agency decisions, which lines up with what Paul is hinting at. The one exception to this was when he signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in 2018. That was decided on July 1.

Support us and Let ‘Em Know with Homage!

Anything bought from the links helps support Fear the Sword. You can also shop all of Homage’s Cavs gear HERE. The link to the 2016 championship shirt HERE.

There’s a lot of speculation and rumors out there about what direction LeBron may be leaning. At this point, those are just that. James is supposedly valuing happiness and a chance to compete for a title on his next team. Both of those characteristics are pretty subjective. Only LeBron knows what makes him happy and what he values from an on-court fit on his next team.

The other teams that are reported to be in the mix for James’s services are the Golden State Warriors, Minnesota Timberwolves, Philadelphia 76ers, Miami Heat, and Denver Nuggets.

We’ll see how this drawn-out free agency process plays out for the Cavs. Does this force them to make a move to try to impress LeBron? Trading for Anthony Davis or someone else close to James could be a way of doing that. Or are the Cavs going to stand pat, confident in their current group’s ability to compete for a title if James were added to the fold? After all, we’re talking about a core that did just make a conference finals run without James.

LeBron has spent the last eight seasons with the Lakers. The 41-year-old averaged 20.9 points, 7.2 assists, and 6.1 rebounds on .513/.317/.737 shooting splits last season.

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version