LeBron James playing for the Timberwolves next season?
Chances are slim and none.
And slim just left the building at 600 First Avenue North.
James, the greatest age 40-plus player in NBA history, is looking for a new home after playing his last eight seasons with the Lakers. Reportedly 27 of 30 league teams have contacted James’ agent about his availability after averaging 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 7.2 assists in 60 games last season.
Rich Paul, James’ agent, revealed a shorter list of possibilities earlier this month that included the Timberwolves. Local fans are hopeful the 41-year-old will fill the team’s glaring need for a power forward and join a four-some of Anthony Edwards, LaMelo Ball, Jaden McDaniels and Rudy Gobert in a lineup that could propel the Wolves into a top five NBA team.
Fuhgeddaboudit.
If I am wrong I will push a basketball with my nose on the sidewalk outside Target Center before the start of next season.
ESPN insider Shams Charania said recently the Cleveland Cavaliers, Miami Heat and the Philadelphia 76ers are the top three choices for landing spots. I would throw in the Golden State Warriors for a top four of possibilities.
All of the above, except perhaps the Warriors, make so much more sense than the Wolves. An Akron, Ohio native, James could close the circle of his career by joining the Cavs, the team that drafted him in 2003. He’s never severed his northeast Ohio ties and besides the emotional connection the Cavs have a talented roster.
In Miami, James would experience another homecoming. He played for Heat front office legend Pat Riley and head coach Erik Spoelstra. They are still running the show in south Florida and James could form a Herculean front line with Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bam Adebayo. The Heat, with that threesome, would join the top five gang, too.
Nobody is blowing smoke to speculate James would elevate the 76ers to elite title contenders. A starting lineup of stars would include guards Jaylen Brown and Tyrese Maxey, center Joel Embiid and James. The offensive might of that group probably moves the 76ers ahead of the World Champion New York Knicks as Eastern Conference favorites in 2027.
A title would be much more difficult to attain if James goes to San Francisco and joins the Warriors. Coach Steve Kerr’s team has a big need for James, and he could be part of a dynamic duo with superstar guard Steph Curry, his former Olympic teammate. Then, too, forward Draymond Green is one of James’ best friends. James has a passion for golf and some of the world’s best are in the Bay Area, but Warrior fans are probably whistling on the water about getting the “King.”
Regardless of who James signs a deal with, his compensation will be drastically reduced from past earnings. That’s because of the NBA salary cap, with estimates he can earn between $3.9 million and about $16 million next season. The Wolves could offer only $3.9 million, per a story today by ESPN.com’s Bobby Marks and Brian Windhorst.
Your nose-pushing basketball writer believes in storybook endings and thinks James will choose a return to Ohio where he has a mansion and all kinds of favorite things including Ohio State football.

Sorry, the Wolves connections to James run a wee bit less. Owner Alex Rodriguez has a relationship with Paul and his Klutch Sports Group.
It’s a tantalizing treat, though, to think of James in a Wolves uniform. His ability to run the floor, outlet pass to teammates, power his way to the basket with brute strength, deliver thunderous dunks and float three-point shots into the basket would have brought the house down at the old gym on First Avenue.
It would be the “ShowTime Wolves” with the jaw dropping passes from James and newly acquired point guard Ball. And imagine, too, the acrobatic show of Edwards swooping to the rim or cross over dribbling, the two-way athleticism of McDaniels and the in your face defense of Gobert.
The James impact on team leadership and decision-making would have been less subtle but just as valued. Known as a team that self-inflicts problems, the unselfish James would make the Wolves far more consistent and intelligent in their play.
Alas, at what might have been.




