LeBron James, since the moment he entered the NBA as a wide-eyed teenager, was destined for greatness. How great? Very few could’ve predicted. He became one of the greatest to ever touch a basketball (we won’t start the GOAT debate here), but even the best have their moments of doubt, especially when those moments come right after a crushing heartbreak.

That was exactly the case in 2015, when LeBron’s Cleveland Cavaliers fell short against the Golden State Warriors in the NBA Finals. The King was exhausted, emotionally drained and vulnerable in a way few had ever seen him before. Speaking to reporters after the loss, he delivered a brutally honest reflection that revealed just how much the defeat stung.

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“You question it, especially when you get to this point. I always look at it, would I rather not make the playoffs or lose in the Finals? I don’t know. I don’t know. I’m almost starting to be like, I’d rather not even make the playoffs than to lose in the Finals,” James said, as per the book “The Return of The King.”

The King’s Finals record

If there’s one thing critics have always pointed to when dissecting LeBron’s legacy, it’s his underwhelming Finals record. By 2015, it stood at 2–4. After enduring his battles with the San Antonio Spurs and Oklahoma City Thunder, the emerging Warriors became the new dynasty to beat. Led by the greatest shooter of all time in the making, Stephen Curry, they were young, fast and ready to brawl.

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Meanwhile, LeBron was coming off five straight Finals appearances, yet he had left the stage empty-handed three times. The grind was relentless, and this latest loss felt heavier than the rest. Despite putting together one of the most dominant Finals performances in NBA history — averaging 35.8 points, 13.3 rebounds, and 8.8 assists — the Cavaliers fell short.

To put that into perspective, James became the first player ever to lead both teams in points, rebounds, and assists in a Finals series. Better than Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson or Wilt Chamberlain ever managed. He was playing without Kevin Love and with an injured Kyrie Irving, carrying a depleted Cleveland roster against a fully healthy Warriors team. And still, he nearly pulled off the impossible.

But when the dust settled, and the reality of another Finals defeat hit, LeBron was in a dark place. His words perfectly summed up the toll of a heartbreak on the biggest stage.

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LeBron got his revenge the year after

Maybe those words were spoken in the heat of the moment, but LeBron bounced back in spectacular fashion the very next season. No, he didn’t miss the playoffs — far from it. He made it back to the Finals, and this time, he was taking no prisoners. The King had promised the city of Cleveland a championship, and in 2016, he delivered on that promise in storybook fashion.

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Down 3–1 against those same Warriors who had haunted him a year earlier, LeBron led one of the most iconic comebacks in sports history. The Cavaliers clawed their way back, shocking the world and finally ending Cleveland’s (the city) 52-year championship drought.

LeBron would go on to make ten NBA Finals appearances, including an unprecedented eight straight between 2011 and 2018, and he has four championship rings to show for it.

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This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Oct 28, 2025, where it first appeared in the Old School section. Add Basketball Network as a Preferred Source by clicking here.