This story has an easy-to-read version. The 41-year-old LeBron James leads the Lakers to a first-round sweep of the Houston Rockets despite having Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves absent for the majority of the series. The legend spreads.
The arguments in the barbershop pause momentarily out of respect. Everyone gives a nod. However, that narrative of events began to falter around Game 4, and now that the series is tied at 3-2 going into Game 6 in Houston, it’s difficult to avoid feeling that something that was meant to be strong is shifting.
| Category | Information |
|---|---|
| Full Name | LeBron Raymone James Sr. |
| Date of Birth | December 30, 1984 |
| Age | 41 years old |
| Birthplace | Akron, Ohio, USA |
| Position | Small Forward / Point Forward |
| Current Team | Los Angeles Lakers |
| NBA Draft | 2003, 1st Overall Pick |
| Championships | 4 (2012, 2013, 2016, 2020) |
| Finals MVP Awards | 4 |
| Regular Season MVP Awards | 4 |
| All-Star Selections | 21 |
| NBA All-Time Leading Scorer | Regular Season & Postseason |
| 2025–26 Series | Lakers vs. Rockets — 2026 Playoffs |
| Series Record (at time of writing) | Lakers lead 3–2 |
| Coach | JJ Redick |
In the first three games of this series, the Lakers created something truly amazing. No, Luka. a crippled supporting cast. a fresher, longer, and younger opponent. And yet there was James, doing what he has always done: finding the crease, completing the play, and reading the defense a half-second quicker than anyone else on the court. It felt more like a lesson given to those who hadn’t paid enough attention in class than a playoff series as he tormented the Rockets in those early games. The man is forty-one. Due to sciatica, he missed the first 14 games of this season. He continued to be the greatest player on the floor each and every night.
The Rockets then discovered something. Perhaps Ime Udoka finally worked out the correct defensive wrinkle, or perhaps it was just superior shot selection or confidence. The Lakers committed 23 turnovers in Game 4, and James was mostly absent during the first half. Even though Game 5 was closer, it was still really heartbreaking.

He made a strong comeback in the fourth quarter to cut a 13-point lead to three points, but he missed crucial baskets and committed a crucial turnover to Reed Sheppard. It was painful to watch that one. It wasn’t because James didn’t play well overall, but more because you could see him wishing for a victory and the universe turning him no.
It’s possible that this is just a competitive team refusing to give up. Even without Kevin Durant, the Rockets are a formidable team. Alperen Şengün has proved problematic. However, something more seems to be stirring. Houston no longer uses the same body language. They’re playing like a team that has looked into the eye of elimination and determined that it blinks first, moving more quickly and shooting with greater conviction. The Lakers, on the other hand, appear to have begun counting the second round before the first had concluded.
After missing a month due to an oblique injury, Austin Reaves returned for Game 5 and finished with 22 points. However, he shot 1-for-8 in the fourth quarter, which was exactly when the Lakers needed him most. In the first two games of this series, Luke Kennard averaged 25 points; but, in Game 5, he failed to make a single field goal. Despite being the Lakers’ most dependable defensive player, Marcus Smart was essentially unnoticeable. These are not minor details. These are the kinds of performances that make the difference between a team’s survival and eventual demise.
The commentators have already begun to load up. The murmurs about Michael Jordan, leadership, and the implications of the best player of his time overseeing the most disastrous collapse in playoff history are audible in the background hubbub. Teams with a 3-0 lead have an overall record of 159-0. From that position, only four series have ever advanced to Game 7. It wouldn’t simply be a poor playoff outcome if the Lakers managed to be the first team to lose after leading 3-0. It would remain a footnote forever. It would always accompany James into discussions about his historical significance.
Naturally, he is aware of this. He muttered, “Try to flush this one,” following Game 5. That’s LeBron being LeBron: calm, collected, and unflinching in front of the cameras. In a way that no other living member of this league has, he has been here before. In 2016, he orchestrated the 3-1 victory over the Warriors. He has led ten different teams to the NBA Finals. Prior to this series, he had an incredible 41-15 record in closeout games. For him, the muscle memory of significant events is real. It is not insignificant.
Even so. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that this Lakers squad is operating on fumes in a manner that winning teams just don’t. Right now, one poor night—one James off-game, one cold shooting performance, or one quarter in which the Rockets catch fire—is all that separates sports history from catastrophe. A storm is building in Houston. For a player whose margins were meant to be permanent, the margin has never felt so thin.
