Rob Pelinka and JJ Redick say Bronny James has earned his place. But letâs be honestâBronnyâs spot on the Lakers is the most debated âachievementâ in recent NBA history.
Last season, Bronny was statistically one of the worst players in the league: a box plus-minus of minus 7.2, ranking 679th out of 735 players who logged a single minute. This year, heâs shooting just 16% in preseason, even when left wide open. In 22 minutes on the floor, the Lakers lost over a point per minute with Bronny playing. Five turnovers in limited action, and yet the internet explodes over a single alley-oop dunk.

NBA.com called the dunk âunreal.â SportsCenter and House of Highlights plastered LeBronâs reaction everywhere. Basketball Forever recreated the iconic Wade-to-LeBron alley-oop photo, captioned âWelcome to the new era.â But in four games, Bronnyâs made just one field goal, averaging half a point per game.
Bronny doesnât know how to run a pick and roll. Defenders say, âHeâs just the 55th pick!â But why does the 55th pick get a guaranteed $8 million contract and a roster spot over Quincy Olivariâa better player who was waived so Bronny could stay? JJ Redick, essentially hired by LeBron, lets Bronny rack up turnovers with zero accountability.
Bronny was the eighth-leading scorer on a USC team that didnât make the NCAA tournament, yet now heâs logging NBA minutes. His career is tied to LeBron, whoâs on an expiring contract and battling sciatica. When LeBron retires, what happens to Bronny? The Lakers can cut him free after next season.
Right now, with the Lakersâ point guard depth decimated by injuries, this should be Bronnyâs moment to prove he belongs. But he still canât crack meaningful minutes. If his name wasnât LeBron James Jr., heâd be gone.
Bronnyâs not an NBA-caliber playerânot now, maybe not ever. Thereâs nothing creative or crafty about his game. This isnât hating the kidâitâs calling out an organizational failure, a media propaganda campaign, and a fatherâs ego project wasting a roster spot while better players sit at home.

The only reason Bronnyâs on the Lakers is popularityâjersey sales and clicks. Thatâs not the mark of a serious franchise. The Lakers are supposed to compete for championships, not run a Make-a-Wish program for LeBronâs son.
Bronny is protected from criticism, guaranteed his spot no matter what. Maybe heâs not literally the worst player in NBA history, but heâs the worst to receive this much guaranteed playing time, media coverage, and protection while performing so poorly.
This isnât about Bronny the personâitâs about what his story represents. The NBA used to be a league where talent ruled, not last names. Where you earned your minutes, not inherited them. Now, the media twists itself into pretzels to convince fans that four points on two-for-eleven shooting is âprogress.â Itâs not progressâitâs privilege.
The leagueâs integrity takes a hit every time someone is rewarded for connections instead of performance. Maybe Bronny improves, maybe he doesnât. But right now, if his name was anything other than James, heâd be playing overseasânot wearing a Lakers jersey.
Nepotism got him here. Results will decide if he stays. The NBA isnât a father-son charity project; itâs the highest level of basketball on Earth, where greatness is earned through sweat, not surnames.
Every night, players fight for contracts, minutes, and careers. Bronnyâs spot feels untouchable. Thatâs not developmentâitâs protection. The Lakers can pretend this is about potential, but fans know the truth: you canât build championships on family favors.
At some point, the numbers, the tape, and the effort have to speak louder than the name on the back of the jersey.