C
Celeb Spill Daily

Lakers Rumors: LeBron James 'Over,' 'Frustrated' with Anthony Davis amid Trade Buzz | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

Author

Isabella Ramos

Published Mar 25, 2026

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 04: LeBron James #6 stands alongside Anthony Davis #3 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the national anthem prior to facing the Golden State Warriors in game two of the Western Conference Semifinal Playoffs at Chase Center on May 04, 2023 in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James is "over" and "frustrated" with teammate Anthony Davis, according to CBS Sports' Bill Reiter.

Reiter reported on the Zach Gelb Show that James "doesn't believe" in Davis' toughness, and there's at least a very slim chance the eight-time All-Star is shipped out this offseason:

Zach Gelb @ZachGelb

.<a href="">@sportsreiter</a> has heard LeBron James is frustrated and is over Anthony Davis. <br><br>Full Zach Gelb Show on <a href="">@CBSSportsRadio</a> with Bill Reiter here: <a href=""> <a href="">

This isn't the first time a story surfaced about a level of discord between the Lakers' best players. Fox Sports' Colin Cowherd reported in February on his radio show James "is not happy" with Davis and wanted to see more accountability extended to AD:

Herd w/Colin Cowherd @TheHerd

"LeBron has always tried to get along with everybody... Michael Jordan would have just called out Westbrook or Anthony Davis." <br><br>— <a href="">@ColinCowherd</a> <a href="">

At that time, Los Angeles was under .500 and out of the play-in picture entirely. A broad sense of irritation was understandable, which could bleed into any interpersonal dynamics within the locker room.

Then the Lakers turned things around in the second half of the year en route to making the Western Conference finals.

Davis played well during the postseason run, averaging 22.6 points, 14.1 rebounds and 3.1 blocks while shooting 52 percent from the field. Los Angeles' exit wasn't any sort of indictment of the 6'10" big man as the Denver Nuggets were simply a better team.

But the sweep did lay bare how the Lakers are flawed as currently constructed and need to make some improvements this offseason. Maybe it caused James to reassess whether Davis is the ideal star lining up alongside him as well.

It's tough to envision L.A. actually trading the 30-year-old because teams rarely get equal value in return when dealing a player of his caliber. That would also be antithetical to the Lakers' organizational ethos of attracting rather than jettisoning marquee names.

However, the dynamic between James and Davis might be a storyline to follow in 2023-24.