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LeBron James Return to Cleveland Could Set Up a Win-Win Blockbuster Trade

· 5 min read
LeBron James Return to Cleveland Could Set Up a Win-Win Blockbuster Trade
Rowan Fisher-ShottonBy Rowan Fisher-Shotton0ShareNewsweek is a Trust Project memberSee more of our trusted coverage when you search.Prefer Newsweek on Googleto see more of our trusted coverage when you search.

LeBron James potentially returning to Cleveland has dominated headlines for weeks. But now, it's starting to feel like it could actually happen.

Things intensified after the Cleveland Cavaliers’ Eastern Conference Finals collapse against the New York Knicks, where Cleveland was swept and blown out by 37 points on its home floor in Monday night’s elimination game.

With the emotional pull of a homecoming, Cleveland in win-now mode, and the lingering sense of “unfinished business,” there is a growing belief that James could seriously consider one final run with the Cavaliers.

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The biggest obstacle, however, has always been the same: How would either side make the finances work?

On Tuesday, May 26, NBA insider Brett Siegel highlighted how a potential LeBron-to-Cleveland sign-and-trade could involve Jarrett Allen heading to the Los Angeles Lakers, noting that Allen has previously surfaced in Lakers trade speculation.

Suddenly, the idea starts to feel very real, and potentially too good to pass up.

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The Lakers have spent years trying to find a long-term answer at center, someone who can consistently protect the rim, rebound, space the floor, and move defensively.

Allen supplies all of it.

At 6-foot-9 with elite lob-finishing ability and All-Star credentials, he gives Los Angeles the athletic interior anchor it has often lacked when relying on smaller lineups or patchwork big-man rotations.

He’s also under contract for three more seasons and is set to make $28 million in 2026-27, making him expensive, but still manageable from a salary-cap standpoint.

A sign-and-trade is one of the NBA’s most complicated roster maneuvers. In simple terms, James would sign a new deal with the Lakers and then be immediately dealt to Cleveland.

But teams acquiring a player via sign-and-trade become hard-capped at the first apron, meaning the Cavaliers would likely need to carefully restructure their payroll.

Moving Allen’s salary could be one of the few realistic paths toward making a LeBron reunion financially viable.

Now, the obvious question becomes whether the Cavaliers would actually consider giving up a 28-year-old All-Star caliber center for a 41-year-old LeBron James.

The answer could absolutely be yes.

Cleveland is built to win now. Donovan Mitchell is in his prime. The Cavs just reached the Eastern Conference Finals but were swept, exposing questions about leadership, late-game execution, and whether this core has enough championship experience.

LeBron still addresses all three.

Even at this stage of his career, he can steady an offense in high-pressure moments and bring the kind of veteran presence every contender covets.

For the Lakers, losing LeBron would be seismic from a basketball, branding, and cultural standpoint. But if a post-LeBron era is coming anyway, Allen could soften the blow by giving L.A. a younger defensive anchor to build around entering its next chapter.

LeBron going home. Allen heading to Hollywood. Two franchises solving very different problems in one swift move.

Why not?

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