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LeBron James’s Simple Message About Retirement Decision Headlines All-Star Press Conference

As he has for the last couple of seasons, LeBron James held his own All-Star weekend press conference on Sunday ahead of the actual All-Star Game itself.

The Lakers superstar was not voted as a starter for the first time in decades but was included as a reserve to continue his remarkable, historic streak of 22 consecutive All-Star selections. Even still the NBA opted to hold James’s media availability on Sunday after his fellow All-Star attendees spoke on Saturday. It’s the fourth year in a row James has been given his own timeslot for All-Star interviews.

Given this season’s ongoing speculation about what James will do when his contract expires with Los Angeles at the end of the year, it was easy to wonder if a big announcement might come during his solo presser ahead of the ASG. That was not the case. James took questions as if it were a standard press conference and hit a variety of topics. He did, however, take one question about his NBA future—and the simple message he conveyed in response made for the biggest takeaway of Sunday’s availability.

Over the recent seasons James has responded to inquiries about his potential retirement the same way: he does not yet know for sure what next season holds. Nevertheless, he was asked if he had an “inkling” of what he wanted to do next year.

“I want to live,” James replied bluntly. He let that line sit for a moment before continuing.

“When I know, you guys will know. I don’t know. I have no idea. Just want to live, that’s all.”

LeBron James on his plans for next year 😂

"I want to live." pic.twitter.com/pLwgEC8bKV

— The Sporting News (@sportingnews) February 15, 2026

At 41 years old, James is still entirely capable of playing NBA basketball at an elite level (and clearly has been watching Kyle Shanahan press conferences). He is no longer an unholy terror on the hardwood who can win games by way of sheer will, but the future Hall of Famer is scoring 22 points to go with 7.1 assists and 5.8 rebounds per game in his 23rd professional season. Thus, unlike many past athletes in his situation, James’s decision to walk away will be entirely his rather than a reality forced upon him by his decline on the court.

Chris Paul’s decision to step away from the NBA earlier this week shines a further spotlight on James because it is another reminder of just how long he’s been around. James was already the best player in the NBA by the time Paul was drafted in 2005 and remains among the top tier with Paul hanging up his sneakers in ‘26. How much longer can James go on?

It is a question that was asked of him in this press conference and will be asked at regular intervals in the coming future until James has an answer. On Sunday he reiterated he still does not have that answer.

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