The King, it seems, is leaving his court.

The news

LeBron James has informed the Lakers that he intends to play elsewhere next season, with his agent, Klutch Sports' Rich Paul, delivering the message as the NBA's free-agency window opened, ESPN's Shams Charania reported. James, who turns 42 in December, intends to keep playing — just not in Los Angeles, where he has spent eight seasons. The development is based on reporting; James has not signed anywhere, and nothing is yet finalized. The Lakers and James's camp had not held substantive talks about his future even as free agency arrived, other reporting indicated — a silence that appears to have hastened the decision.

Eight years, one ring

James signed with the Lakers in 2018 and became the franchise's center of gravity and, in 2020, its champion — the title won in the pandemic "bubble," with James named Finals MVP, remains the only one Los Angeles has celebrated since Kobe Bryant's farewell. Across his Lakers tenure he climbed into the top tier of the franchise's all-time scoring and assist leaders, and his overall career scoring total — over 43,000 points — stands as the NBA record by a wide margin. This past season he also saw his decades-long streak of All-NBA selections end, a reminder that even the most durable career bends eventually.

A family subplot

His time in Los Angeles also produced a first in league history: a father and son on the same roster, after his eldest, Bronny James, joined the team. Bronny's contract with the Lakers became guaranteed this week, KTLA reported, the day before his father's intentions became public.

Where next

Where James lands is, for now, the subject of fast-moving reporting rather than fact. ESPN reported the Golden State Warriors as an aggressive suitor, exploring a roster that would pair James with Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Anthony Davis — with Green declining a player option to free up money. Any such move is described as conditional and unfinished; no trade or signing has been completed, and other teams could emerge. For Lakers fans, the immediate question is what comes next for a roster losing the player who defined its past eight years — a rebuild that, like James's own next step, is only beginning to take shape.