BusinessMirror

Lebron: We’ll see what happens going forward

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LOS ANGELES—LEBRON James began the final game of his 20th National Basketball Associatio­n (NBA) season with the highest-scoring postseason half of his matchless NBA career. He ended the night by questionin­g how much longer he plans to chase history after his Los Angeles Lakers were swept out of the Western Conference finals. James set a personal record with 31 points in the first half of

Game 4 on Monday night, but he missed two potential tying shots in the final minute as the Denver Nuggets ended the Lakers’ season with a 113-111 victory.

The 38-year-old James finished with 40 points, 10 rebounds, nine assists and immense frustratio­n after Los Angeles’ remarkable late-season surge ended with four consecutiv­e defeats.

Although the top scorer in NBA history spoke about himself as part of the Lakers next season, James also said he hasn’t made up his mind.

“We’ll see what happens going forward,” James said in the final answer of his postgame news conference. “I don’t know. I don’t know. I’ve got a lot to think about, to be honest. Just for me personally going forward with the game of basketball, I’ve got a lot to think about.”

James is under contract for $46.9 million next season with the Lakers, but he is in charge of his future after surpassing Kareem Abdul-jabbar’s career scoring record earlier this year. He hasn’t previously suggested much personal conflict about finishing his contract alongside Anthony Davis, and his play hasn’t significan­tly declined after two decades in the NBA— although his health has grown less sturdy, particular­ly in his balky feet and ankles.

“It’s all about availabili­ty for me and keeping my mind sharp, and things of that nature,” James said. “Being present on the floor, being present in the locker room and bus rides and plane rides, things of that nature. It’s challengin­g, for sure. It was a very challengin­g season for me, for our ballclub, and obviously we know whatever went on early on (in the Lakers’ 2-10 start to the season). It was cool, a pretty cool ride.”

James missed a month of the regular season with a foot injury down the stretch, but he returned with a series of stellar playoff performanc­es while the Lakers knocked off second-seeded Memphis and eliminated defending champion Golden State. That didn’t matter much to James, whose frustratio­n broke through at several points after Game 4.

“I don’t like to say it’s a successful year, because I don’t play for anything besides winning championsh­ips at this point in my career,” James said. “You know, I don’t get a kick out of making a conference (finals) appearance. I’ve done it a lot, and it’s not fun to me to not be able to be a part of getting to the (NBA) Finals.”

In his Nba-record 282nd career playoff game, James dropped 21 points in a dynamic first quarter in Game 4. He added 10 more in the second while playing nearly the entire half of a do-or-die game against the top-seeded Nuggets.

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