National Basketball Association
NBA Champion*
National Basketball Association

NBA Champion*

Updated Jul. 17, 2020 7:58 p.m. ET

LeBron James is a Cleveland legend. LeBron James is a Miami legend.

And now, LeBron James knows that if he can win a title in Los Angeles, he can officially become a Laker legend.

Before the NBA closed up shop due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Los Angeles Lakers appeared to be on track to hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy in June, or at least be one of the few teams that had a shot.

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They currently sit atop the Western Conference standings, and prior to the league's suspension, James was playing his most dominant basketball of the season.

But now, with the season on hold, two questions have arisen in LA and in the NBA world:

1. If the season is salvaged, will the layoff help or hurt the Lakers' chances to win a championship?

2. If the season is salvaged and the Lakers win the championship, will it come with an asterisk?

That's probably LeBron throwing the ball at anyone who answered yes to the second question.

But let's start with the first inquiry.

For James, he believes the layoff will hurt him specifically.

And even though James has been keeping fans up-to-date on his workout regimen via social media, Shannon Sharpe agrees with the King: jumping directly into postseason basketball if/when the season returns would be a tall task for players.

Skip Bayless, on the other hand, thinks LeBron is trying to pull the wool over our eyes – time off is just what the doctor ordered for the King.

As of March 11 – the day when the season was suspended – James had played 48,329 regular season minutes, the eighth most in NBA history.

He has played 10,049 postseason minutes in his career – the most all-time.

That's a lot of movement, Chosen One.

Now, on to question No. 2 – the real question.

For Skip, a title in a shortened season would equal an asterisk for LeBron and the Lakers.

On the other side of the argument is Shannon, pointing out that the title won by Tim Duncan and the San Antonio Spurs in 1999 isn't regarded as tainted and neither is King James' first title in Miami in 2012.

In the 1998-99 season, the regular season amounted to only 50 games due to the third lockout in NBA history.

In fact, the two teams that faced off in the NBA Finals – the Spurs and New York Knicks – never faced each other in the regular season.

In the 2011-12 season, the NBA faced its fourth lockout in league history, resulting in a 66-game regular season schedule.

So far this season, the Lakers have played 63 regular season games – just three less than the Heat in the 2011-12 season and 13 more than the Spurs in the 1998-99 season.

And before play was suspended just a few weeks ago, the Lakers had an argument as the best team in basketball, having defeated the league's top team, the Milwaukee Bucks, on March 6, and then following that win with a March 8 victory over in-t0wn rival, the Los Angeles Clippers, on March 8.

If the 2019-20 NBA season does continue, there will certainly be some that discredit a Lakers or Bucks or Clippers championship.

But in the end, the trophy will still weigh the same.

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