The pride was undeniable. As the Arizona Wildcats stormed the court after claiming the Big 12 conference tournament championship, LeBron James — one of basketball’s greatest ever — could not hide how deeply the moment moved him. Watching his youngest son, Bryce, be part of something this significant clearly struck an emotional chord for the Los Angeles Lakers star.
LeBron James made no effort to downplay just how meaningful this chapter has been, describing the entire Bryce experience at Arizona as one of the most rewarding things about his own season. He reflected on the long-term value this environment will provide his son, and drew notable parallels between the two of them — hinting that Bryce carries much of the same personality and competitive fire that helped shape one of the greatest careers in NBA history.
Bryce’s Redshirt Year Has Been Anything But Passive
Bryce is not playing minutes this season. The decision to redshirt preserves a year of eligibility, but his presence has been constant and visible — locked in on the sideline for every game, absorbing everything around him, and pushing his teammates simply by being there.
What LeBron envisioned for his son appears to be playing out exactly as hoped
- Immersion in a winning culture from day one
- Learning from experienced, high-level players up close
- Building toward a larger role next season with a full year of preparation
- Gaining championship experience before ever taking a college shot
The Arizona program, under head coach Tommy Lloyd, has become precisely the landing spot the James family was looking for when Bryce made his college decision.
Bryce and Arizona Enter the NCAA Tournament as a No. 1 Seed
The Wildcats are not just playing well — they are one of the hottest teams in the country heading into March. Arizona finished the regular season with only two losses, both within Big 12 play, and earned a coveted No. 1 seed for the NCAA tournament.
What makes this even more impressive is context. This is only Arizona’s second year competing in the Big 12 after transitioning from the Pac-12. Winning the conference tournament this early in that new chapter is a statement about the program’s ceiling — and about what Lloyd has built in Tucson.
The Wildcats open tournament play against Long Island University in the Round of 64 and are widely considered among the favorites to make a deep run.
LeBron’s Two Sons, Two Very Different College Stories
The James family has now sent two sons through the college basketball experience, and the contrast is striking
- Bronny James — Spent one season at USC before declaring for the NBA Draft. His team never qualified for the NCAA tournament during his time there.
- Bryce James — In his first college season, already celebrating a conference title and entering March as a No. 1 seed.
Whether Bryce eventually follows Bronny into professional basketball remains an open question. But even before playing a single college minute, Bryce has already collected something his older brother never had at the collegiate level — a conference championship and a top seed in the national tournament.
What This Bryce Moment Means for the James Legacy
For a family that has lived its basketball journey so publicly, this felt like a defining chapter. LeBron James has spent years carrying the weight of expectation, building a legacy game by game. Now, watching Bryce absorb those same lessons — in a championship setting, surrounded by winning — the next generation of the James basketball story is taking shape, with the James legacy continuing to evolve before everyone’s eyes.
The road ahead for Bryce is still being written. But the foundation? Already stronger than most college players ever get.

