LeBron James walks off court with Luka Doncic after Lakers game during season of role adjustments
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LeBron James and Luka Doncic during a Lakers game as reports about their relationship are disputed by team insiders.
Los Angeles Lakers insider Dan Woike forcefully shut down a viral claim about LeBron James and Luka Dončić, pushing back on the notion that the two stars have a strained relationship.
“This is not accurate,” Woike wrote on X, responding to a resurfaced quote from Bill Reiter that suggested friction inside the Los Angeles Lakers locker room.
Reiter, a former CBS Sports columnist now hosting on 97.1 The Fan LA, made the comments during a guest appearance on 92.3 The Fan:
“I know (LeBron and Luka) don’t get along very well. (LeBron) doesn’t do well when he’s in a locker room that’s toxic. I would imagine that being in Cleveland with James Harden, who he’s close to, with Donovan Mitchell… I just think it would be a happier place for LeBron as a basketball player.”
"I know (LeBron and Luka) don't get along very well. (LeBron) doesn't do well when he's in a locker room that's toxic. I would imagine that being in Cleveland with James Harden who he's close to, with Donovan Mitchell…I just think it would be a happier place for LeBron as a… https://t.co/jP3ciAsVGI pic.twitter.com/XgU78kSZNx
— 92.3 The Fan (@923TheFan) May 11, 2026
Multiple Reports Push Back on LeBron James–Luka Dončić Rumor
Woike’s blunt rebuttal was echoed elsewhere.
ClutchPoints’ Brett Siegel offered a sharply different view, writing: “Luka Dončić and LeBron James are very close.”
Taken together, the pushback from reporters with direct league and team connections undercuts the narrative that tension exists between the Lakers’ two stars.
Lakers Found Formula With Luka Dončić as Primary Option and LeBron as NBA’s Best No. 3 Option
Beyond the competing reports, the Lakers’ on-court results offer a clearer picture of the dynamic between Dončić and James.
After early-season inconsistency, Los Angeles found its rhythm in March by shifting Dončić into the primary offensive role — a move that coincided with the team’s most dominant stretch of the season.
The Lakers went 15-2 during the month, powered by a highly productive trio of Dončić, Austin Reaves and James.
During that run, James embraced a supporting role behind Dončić and Reaves, averaging 18.5 points, 6.9 rebounds and 7.0 assists while maintaining efficiency and playmaking impact. The adjustment highlighted his willingness to adapt within the offense rather than compete for control — a key indicator of functional chemistry.
Role Flexibility Undercuts Narrative of Tension
James’ role, however, remained fluid based on availability.
When both Dončić and Reaves were sidelined by injuries late in the regular season and into the start of the playoffs, James seamlessly returned to a primary scoring role, once again serving as the Lakers’ top offensive option.
That ability to shift between roles — from lead initiator to facilitator — became a defining feature of the Lakers’ identity and further complicates the idea of friction between the team’s stars.
Instead, the evidence points to a roster that adjusted around health and matchups, rather than one impacted by internal conflict.
LeBron James Addresses Uncertain Lakers Future After Season
Still, the biggest question facing the franchise remains James’ future.
Following the Lakers’ season-ending Game 4 loss, the four-time champion acknowledged that he has not yet decided whether he will return for a 24th NBA season.
“With my future, I don’t know. Honestly,” James said. “It’s obviously still fresh from losing. And I don’t know. I don’t know what the future holds for me… As it stands right now, tonight, I got a lot of time.”
According to Woike, league sources continue to say James is “sincerely unsure” about continuing his career. While a return to the Lakers remains a strong possibility, the situation is fluid — especially with James positioned to become an unrestricted free agent if he opts to play again.
LeBron’s Upcoming Complicated Decision
If James returns, his contract could become a major subplot. He earned $52.6 million during the 2025-26 season, and any pay cut would mark the first year-over-year salary decrease of his career.
Such a move could open the door for roster flexibility, but it could also invite interest from other contenders should he explore options outside Los Angeles.
Despite that uncertainty, the Lakers — led by general manager Rob Pelinka — have made it clear they want to retain both James and Reaves moving forward.
‘Love of the Process’ Could Decide LeBron’s Future
For James, however, the decision appears rooted less in money or fit and more in his willingness to continue the grind that has defined his career.
“I think for me, it’s about the process,” James said after his 23rd season ended. “If I can commit to still being in love with the process of showing up to the arena five and a half hours before a game… diving for loose balls and doing everything that it takes to go out and play.”
“I’ve always been in love with the process and not the outcome,” he added.
Luka Dončić Injury Complicates Lakers Outlook
Any evaluation of the Lakers’ season — and their star dynamic — must also account for Dončić’s absence in the playoffs. The All-NBA guard missed the entire postseason with a hamstring injury, leaving James to carry a heavier load as Los Angeles was swept by the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder in the second round.
That context further weakens the idea of internal dysfunction, as the Lakers’ limitations were more closely tied to health than chemistry.
For now, the reporting closest to the situation — and the results on the court — point in the same direction: the Lakers’ stars have shown alignment, not tension, as the franchise heads into a pivotal offseason shaped largely by James’ next decision.