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Kendrick Perkins Claims LeBron James Needs To Retire To Protect His GOAT Legacy
Isaiah J. Downing-USA TODAY Sports

ESPN NBA analyst Kendrick Perkins has made a plea to LeBron James, asking the NBA's all-time leading scorer to retire to not damage his legacy any further after a first-round exit in the 2024 NBA Playoffs.  

“I hate to say this but I believe it in my soul. I wish LeBron James would retire. Not because I don't want to see more of LeBron James or appreciate him. But I honestly believe the more LeBron James continues to play the game of basketball, the more it's going to hurt his legacy and the more it's going to continue to hurt his GOAT argument. 

Perkins reiterated his reasons not being because of LeBron's play but the expectations his name carries.

"As long as he steps onto that floor every season, there's going to be an expectation on him of winning a championship. when he doesn't do that, we're going to look at him and go, 'What happened now?'”

(Starts at 2:47)

LeBron averaged 25.7 points, 7.3 rebounds, and 8.3 assists in his Year 21 season, shattering records for individual performances at his age (39) and with the miles on his body. But with LeBron, his statistics over the season aren't the bar to be judged on, it's postseason success. 

The Lakers were comprehensively beaten 4-1 by the Nuggets in the first round, a team who they held multiple double-digit leads over and ended up blowing them. They're just not good enough and James not being his prime self is one of the reasons.

LeBron can continue playing at an All-Star level for a few more seasons, but it's clear he can't lead a team to a title single-handedly like he had been expected to do for years. 

He's trying to make his GOAT case with pure longevity and statistical domination, so that case will only get stronger. It's highly unlikely he can win two more titles at this point, so waiting for him to win a sixth title is anyway fruitless.

Kendrick Perkins Blames LeBron James For Darvin Ham's Firing

Perkins spoke extensively on LeBron's role in Darvin Ham's axing by the Lakers and the role LeBron played in it. Perkins cited how Ham proved he could succeed without LeBron through the end of last season.

"This situation, in particular, looks bad with him and Darvin Ham. No. 1, think about last year when the Lakers were at the All-Star break. Rob Pelinka made a couple of trades to bring in Rui Hachimura and D'Lo, LeBron James was out for a majority of the end of the season and Darvin Ham coached his behind off with Anthony Davis leading the way to get them in the Playoffs and then the Western Conference Finals."

Perkins questioned why James wanted Ham gone when he knew the team's personnel was the issue based on his desire for the Lakers to make trades in the winter.

"LeBron James at the trade deadline was sending so many subliminal for Rob Pelinka to make a move because he knew the Lakers didn't have enough. He knew they wanted a Dejounte Murray to come over but Pelinka held on to Austin Reaves and D'Angelo Russell because he knew in the West, he needed guys on the perimeter that will defend. Darvin Ham got the most of what he had."

James is taking a lot of blame for Ham's firing. It was clear that the locker room was disillusioned with Ham for months. Anthony Davis called him out publicly, and D'Angelo Russell made sarcastic comments about Ham's leadership just for Ham's final quote as Lakers head coach throwing Russell under the bus for his struggles.

It was a bad situation overall. Could LeBron have helped with it? Maybe, but it was clear that Ham was disliked by the entire roster. A coaching change is coming at the right time for the Lakers.

This article first appeared on Fadeaway World and was syndicated with permission.

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