LeBron James is leaving.
For a family vacation, that is.
The
Miami Heat star said that's his first order of business, and during the
time away from basketball he'll start the process of moving past this
season and looking toward the future.
"I just want to win. That's
all that matters to me," James said Tuesday after emerging from the
final team meeting, one where coach Erik Spoelstra urged his team take
plenty of pride from the season, even though the end result was an NBA
Finals loss to San Antonio. "I haven't even begun to even think about
what my future holds or what I have in store. I will sit down with my
team at some point, my family as well. Today definitely wasn't the day.
"If my family is happy, then I'm happy and able to perform at a high level."
If
so, then they've been happy during his first four years in Miami: James
has been to the NBA Finals all four seasons in which he's played for
the Heat, capturing two championships, and no one in the league over
that span has logged more minutes, made more field goals or won more
games than the four-time MVP.
And now he could leave.
James,
Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh can all become free agents, though none have
made decisions on whether they'll opt out. They came together amid much
fanfare in 2010, and this summer might be similar in many ways for that
trio, the Heat and the NBA as a whole — with all eyes on what they'll
do.
"I feel more at ease this time," James said, adding that
"2010, it was out of control. It was the craziest summer I've ever been a
part of. ... I'm definitely in a better place right now even though in
2010 I got put out in the postseason earlier than I expected or didn't
accomplish what I wanted to, and I have kind of the same feeling now."
James
said that at some point, he, Wade and Bosh will gather to talk about
their plans. They have until June 29 to inform the Heat whether they
will exercise their rights to become free agents — moves that in all
three cases would not prohibit them from returning to Miami. Bosh
revealed Tuesday that the group will meet with Heat president Pat Riley
as well, to get the team's vision for what next season's roster would
look like.
"I'm sure Riley has a finite plan moving forward," Bosh
said. "I guess it kinds of really starts with him, just listening to
him, kind of get his feel for the situation. He'll plug 'em wherever
something is needed."
The basketball court was still in place
inside Miami's arena on Tuesday, but there will be no game there until
next season. Game 6 of the NBA Finals would have been Tuesday night and
for the first time since 2011, the Heat were saying goodbyes to one
another without the backdrop of a championship parade.
"There's
not a whole lot you can say that's going to alleviate some of the pain
and frustration that we're all feeling right now," Spoelstra said. "We
understand why our team was built. There's high expectations. And with
that when you don't get to where you want to go, there's sometimes that
pain that's deep."
Spoelstra said he's concentrating more on the
draft right now than mourning the end of the season, or getting ready
for free agency.
"We have a couple weeks to figure it out,"
Spoelstra said. "We have a great track record. And we have a
championship, first-class organization. That is our best selling pitch."
James said he didn't need to hear what Miami has to offer. He already knows.
"I understand what this team and this franchise brings to the table," James said.
In
the coming weeks, he'll have a better sense on whether if he'll need to
go grab a seat somewhere else to win more championships.
"That's
what Riles is so great at and obviously Spo's going to get into it and
see guys who can help us get better," James said. "Every team in the NBA
continues to get better every year and we need to get better as well.
We have some holes that need to be filled."
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