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USA Today Sports Media Group
USA Today Sports Media Group
Sport
Robert Marvi

Report: Bronny James may take years to become NBA-ready

As LeBron James gets closer to the end of his NBA career, attention has been focused on his son, Bronny James, who is a senior at Sierra Canyon School in the San Fernando Valley.

The younger James has been mentioned as a college and even an NBA prospect for years, and his father has made it clear he wants to play on the same team with his son.

The earliest the younger James would be eligible to enter the NBA draft under current rules is 2024, which is one year after his class will graduate from high school.

Although he has already received official interest from some prominent colleges, some NCAA basketball coaches don’t think he is that hot a prospect.

Via Lakers Daily:

“The Athletic spoke to eight college coaches who have evaluated the younger James as well as two NBA scouts who have seen him play.

“They offered some interesting thoughts on who the younger James is as a player.

“‘Evaluators say Bronny’s path to the NBA might be aligned more with a player such as Villanova (University)’s Josh Hart,’ wrote The Athletic’s Dana O’Neil. ‘A top 100 player, Hart became the Big East’s sixth man of the year as a sophomore and finally following his senior year, a first-round draft pick in 2017. He is not an NBA star; he still will make $12 million with Portland this year.

“‘Bronny, the evaluators say, is a good ballhandler and good shooter, but not great yet at either. Everyone knew Jalen Suggs would get the ball as soon as he walked onto the Gonzaga campus; ditto Derrick Rose at Memphis and Lonzo Ball at UCLA. Bronny is not them. He might start, one coach opines, on a team in the bottom of a power league but not at a top 25 program. Bronny wouldn’t, the coach adds, start for him.’

“It sounds like the James family has been ‘fantastic to deal with’ throughout the recruiting process for the young guard.

“‘Coaches say LeBron wants his son to be treated like an ordinary recruit and they say the James family has been nothing but fantastic to deal with – “as low maintenance as a megastar can be,” one says,’ O’Neil wrote. ‘Savannah James, Bronny’s mother, takes point on most of the recruiting, though LeBron and longtime business partner, Maverick Carter, are involved and have fielded calls. Coaches believe LeBron longs for Bronny to be coached, and coached properly, and that LeBron understands where his son falls in terms of talent.’

“Notably, it sounds like some coaches and scouts believe the younger James won’t be ready to play at the NBA level for a little while.

“‘Most coaches and scouts who spoke to The Athletic say Bronny might not be NBA-ready after two or even three years,’ O’Neil wrote. ‘He might develop into an NBA player, but the consensus is that it will take time. They say he needs reps against other high-caliber players to succeed, to fail, to adjust, to grow. That was how Jalen Brunson (Villanova), Corey Kispert (Gonzaga), Malcolm Brogdon (Virginia), Ochai Agbaji (Kansas) and many others got to the NBA, but they question whether that pathway would sit well with Bronny and his family.'”

There is no doubt that being the son of an all-time great will help the younger James get his foot in the door at the college level and possibly even in the NBA, just as it has helped Scotty Pippen Jr., the son of Hall of Famer Scottie Pippen.

But in the end, the younger James will have to put in the work if he is to follow his father’s footsteps in any way.

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