This isn’t how the Los Angeles Lakers envisioned their season ending. Not after orchestrating one of the most jaw-dropping trades in recent NBA memory — a seismic move that brought Luka Dončić to Los Angeles and instantly reshaped both their identity and trajectory.

No.3 seed in the Western Conference

Not after racking up 50 wins and locking down the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference — their strongest showing since the 2020 title run, and the first time they’d secured home-court advantage to open the playoffs in over a decade. In the latest videos of the Lakers YouTube channel, you see that results are not satisfying. Fans are worrying and they are active in the YouTube comments section. It seems that LA has to power-up the defense, suggested by fans in the comments. 

 

Not after a remarkable season from 40-year-old LeBron James, who defied Father Time once again. Not after Austin Reaves stepped into the spotlight with a breakout year. And not after the impressive debut campaign of rookie head coach JJ Redick, who earned respect league wide for his composure and schemes. Within the organization, expectations were clear: at minimum, a deep playoff run — if not a return to the conference finals. A first-round exit, and in just five games, was not part of that vision.

 

“Every season begins with one goal — to hang another banner in the rafters,” said Rob Pelinka, president of basketball operations and general manager, who recently signed an extension on April 18. “And when we fall short of that, we fall short of what it means to be the Lakers.”

Concerns about Lebron’s future

A source familiar with James’ mindset indicated he is likely to play up to two more seasons — carrying him through the 2025–26 campaign. The most straightforward path would be for James to exercise his $52.6 million player option before the June 29 deadline, then ride off into the sunset on his own terms. Should that be his decision, the Lakers are expected to embrace it with open arms — planning a farewell campaign worthy of his legacy, echoing the fanfare of Kobe Bryant’s iconic goodbye tour during the 2015–16 season. Conveniently, the NBA All-Star Game returns to Los Angeles next year — a perfect stage to honor one of the game’s greatest. But if James envisions playing beyond next season and seeks a contract extension, sources inside the organization say it will reignite a familiar and pivotal question: Is LeBron still truly happy in purple and gold?

 

That single question has defined James’ relationship with the franchise since his arrival in 2018. If his answer remains yes, the Lakers are ready to talk. But if not, the door to a dramatic ending — and potentially a final chapter elsewhere — begins to creak open. Only LeBron knows what lies ahead — and by all accounts, even he might still be searching for clarity. However, one thing is certain: the Lakers’ swift playoff exit in five games raised more doubts than answers. Their lack of frontcourt depth, exposed brutally by Minnesota in Game 5, reinforced long-standing concerns James has had about roster construction — concerns that, according to league sources, haven’t gone away.

 

As James pointed out, unfiltered as ever, the lack of a playable center made an already uphill season even harder. The question now is whether he sees a future where those problems are solved — or whether he’s ready to walk away from them altogether.