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NBA Insider Explains Why LeBron James Trade Would Likely Require 'At Least 3 Teams'


NBA insider Marc Stein believes "at least three teams" would need to be involved in order for the Los Angeles Lakers to facilitate a potential LeBron James trade.

This is because both the Lakers and whichever team acquires James would likely have strict requirements as to how much they could give up in the blockbuster trade, Stein noted.

Additionally, Stein outlined that any team looking to add James would need to avoid giving away key pieces to remain a title contender.

James holds a full no-trade clause, and his agent Rich Paul made it clear in a June statement to ESPN's Shams Charania that his client "wants to compete for a championship" next season.

Stein added that the Lakers would likely be looking for "a return package that adds no burdensome long-term salary" given their plans to build around Luka Dončić in the future.

ESPN's Dave McMenamin previously reported when describing why the Lakers let Dorian Finney-Smith leave to join the Houston Rockets in free agency that the franchise wants "to preserve cap space for 2027, when the team expects to have space to sign a max-salary free agent."

Those requirements could introduce at least one third-party team, potentially a franchise that is not an immediate contender, who could help take on salary in the deal.

The Brooklyn Nets, which Spotrac projects are heading into the 2025-26 season with an NBA-high $20 million in cap space, are a candidate to take on undesirable contracts in exchange for assets that could accelerate the team's rebuild.

One theoretical three-team trade recently proposed by Bleacher Report's Eric Pincus involved the Lakers sending James to the Dallas Mavericks while the Nets facilitate the trade by taking Dalton Knecht and Maxi Kleber from the Lakers as well as Olivier-Maxence Prosper and Dwight Powell from the Mavs.

Given the relatively new restrictions of the luxury tax aprons, which led to the Kevin Durant trade that made history earlier this month when seven teams got involved the deal between the Phoenix Suns and Houston Rockets, any transaction that ultimately moves James from the Lakers could end up involving even more outside parties.

Despite the complications involved, speculation over a potential James trade isn't likely to die down anytime soon. ESPN's Ramona Shelburne and Brian Windhorst reported earlier this month that the Lakers have not yet seriously discussed an extension with James, who is currently set to play his age-41 season on an expiring $52.6 million player option.

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