ESPN now has Bronny James being drafted in the 2025 Draft, not 2024 anymore.
Not really controversial, but I personally don't see anything in him. It's only because of his name and being Lebron's son he even has a hint of hype.
I was reading an article about that, it's in his best interest as well. He's not ready for the NBA right now, whether it was because of his heart condition or just not good enough, and he would be better served staying in college for at least another season, maybe even a third. He's averaging 6ppg and he's not finishing games because there are deemed to be 5 better players in USC's roster to do that.
And that's ok...everyone develops at their own pace. If you compare him to Isaiah Collier, Collier is clearly NBA ready. Bronny is not. And if the Trojans don't think he's ready then why would any NBA team? The Athletic's John Hollinger suggests his ceiling might be like that of Gary Harris, who played 2 seasons at Michigan State and is in his 11th season as a backup guard for the Magic. If Bronny can replicate Gary Harris's career he'll have done pretty well.
It's interesting...I remember when MJ's kids were going into college, Jeffrey didn't have much buzz around him as he never really showed anything remotely like his dad's ability in high school, so he ended up walking on at Illinois in 2007 or 2008 and he just petered out after that...his younger brother Marcus played for UCF a year or so after and he was better but nothing special. Both were a bit smaller than MJ physically, and clearly didn't have the drive their dad did. But because social media was in its infancy there wasn't this huge focus on them like Bronny has. Plus MJ had retired nearly a decade ago, so there was some separation between his career and that of his kids. LeBum's still playing right now, and is probably still better than Bronny right now.
In a way it's unfair on the kid, he didn't ask to be LeBum's kid and have the James surname, but he does so he will forever be overshadowed by his famous father. Imagine being at work in a company your dad built, kind of like Succession...and everything you do gets compared to your dad. You're never really you, you're just "so and so's son or daughter". But that's life, on the flip side, he'll always be looked after, he'll never want for anything. Except maybe the privacy to choose his own path in life.