
Welcome to another Summer of LeBron.
(And don't argue that summer technically hasn't started yet. Summer goes from Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day weekend, regardless of what the calendar might tell you).
Summers of LeBron James are seemingly on a World Cup schedule. The first one was in 2010, when James announced he was "taking his talents to South Beach" and joined the Heat.
After appearing in four NBA Finals — with two titles — LeBron then had his second summer in 2014, culminating with a return to Cleveland.
And now after four more finals berths — all against the Warriors, with one more title — we've reached the third and possibly last real Summer of LeBron in 2018.
James can opt out of his contract and become a free agent, a scenario that seems likely. Or he can stay with the Cavaliers, which seems plausible. Or he can opt-in on his contract with the intent of having the Cavaliers trade him — something Cleveland might be amenable to given they stand to get nothing in return if LeBron simply leaves as a free agent.
At first blush, all of this would appear to have very little to do with the Timberwolves. But there are some factors that could, in fact, make the Summer of LeBron have a local impact. Let's examine some likely outcomes and impacts:
*Dream scenario: OK, so the dream scenario is that LeBron somehow winds up on the Timberwolves. This is far-fetched because of the Wolves' salary constraints and about 47 other things, but James could do far worse than to join Jimmy Butler, Karl-Anthony Towns and co.