For the James family, Thursday wasn't just another day - it was a double milestone.
In the morning, Bryce James walked across the stage at Sierra Canyon High School, diploma in hand. His mom, Savannah, couldn't have been prouder. "This is only the beginning!" she posted on Instagram, sharing throwback photos and emotional words for her youngest son. Bryce, now committed to play college ball at Arizona, is officially on the launchpad.
That same afternoon, his father reminded the world he's not going anywhere just yet.
LeBron James was named to the 2024-25 All-NBA Second Team, extending a jaw-dropping streak that has only missed one season: his rookie year. At 40 years old, he ed Steph Curry, Anthony Edwards, Evan Mobley, and Jalen Brunson on the squad - further proof that he's still one of the most dominant forces in the league.
As Bryce prepares for college, LeBron is still rewriting the rules on aging in the NBA.
While the Lakers' early playoff exit stirred plenty of conversation, it wasn't LeBron holding them back. His efficiency, leadership, and endurance remain elite - even as he recovers from a Grade 2 MCL sprain that would've sidelined him regardless of their postseason fate.
But what really lit up the internet wasn't just the All-NBA nod. It was the growing belief that LeBron might actually pull off something unprecedented: playing alongside both of his sons in the NBA.
With Bronny Jr. already one year in, Bryce becomes draft-eligible in 2026. That timeline just happens to line up with LeBron's current Lakers contract - which has a player option for the 2025-26 season. Whether he stays in LA or moves to match Bryce's future team, the opportunity is there.
According to 247Sports, Bryce is a four-star recruit ing a powerhouse Arizona program that made it to the Final Four this year. If he delivers, he could enter the league just in time for the final chapter of his father's career.
And knowing LeBron, he's probably already visualizing the jump ball.