Bronny James, Recovering From Cardiac Arrest, Goes Home From the Hospital
Three days after LeBron James Jr. collapsed during a basketball practice, a cardiologist at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles said on Thursday that he “has been discharged home, where he is resting.” His father, LeBron James, said on social media that his family was “together, safe and healthy.”
And in a signal of the family’s optimism and relief, LeBron was back in the gym on Thursday, working out with another young basketball star.
The younger James, known as Bronny, who was recruited to join the U.S.C. basketball team in the fall, suffered cardiac arrest on Monday while working out at the university’s Galen Center. He was treated in intensive care initially and had been at Cedars-Sinai since Monday.
The Los Angeles Fire Department on Thursday released a redacted portion of a 911 call made Monday morning from the Galen Center.
In the call, an unidentified individual urgently requested medical assistance.
“Listen, listen, listen, listen,” the caller said. “Get an ambulance here — now.”
A dispatcher asked the caller if a doctor or registered nurse was on the scene, and the caller said there was not a doctor around.
“Help is already on the way,” the dispatcher said. “We’re already on the way, sir. Fire department, paramedics are already on the way.”
Bronny was treated by U.S.C. medical staff and then taken to Cedars-Sinai.
LeBron James’s workout with a young prospect had been scheduled for Wednesday before being postponed after Bronny, 18, collapsed during a practice.
The young star whom LeBron James worked out with on Thursday was AJ Dybantsa, the highly touted 16-year-old from Brockton, Mass., who was in Los Angeles with his father to meet with agents, including representatives from James’s agency, Klutch Sports.
“I felt for the man,” Ace Dybantsa, AJ’s father and a Boston University police officer, said of LeBron James by phone following his son’s hourlong workout Thursday. “After what he’s been through, he showed up, put on a good face and worked with the kid. I had chills, man.”
For AJ Dybantsa, a 6-foot-8 forward who has transferred to Prolific Prep in Napa Valley, Calif., from St. Sebastian’s in Needham, Mass., the workout was the latest in a series with N.B.A. superstars.
When asked what it meant that James showed up after what happened to Bronny, AJ Dybantsa said, “he cares.”
He continued, “Didn’t know what was going to happen to his son, but even though it took him an extra day, he still showed up and worked out.”
Bronny James and his family also received well wishes from Ohio State Coach Chris Holtmann. In September 2022, during Bronny’s senior year at Sierra Canyon School in Los Angeles, Bronny and his father visited Ohio State for a football game against Notre Dame. The fans chanted, “We want Bronny.”
Ohio State was the school that LeBron, an Ohio native, had said he likely would have attended had he gone to college rather than jumping straight to the N.B.A. as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2003 draft.
Holtmann said that he and his staff had been genuinely interested in landing Bronny.
“It was a situation where we just were really open about making sure it fit what they were looking for and vice versa,” Holtmann said by phone on Wednesday. “We knew it was going to be an experience where he may not be in college very long, so you want that experience to be a great one.”
Bronny James would be eligible for the N.B.A. draft after his freshman year; there has been speculation that he will jump to the N.B.A. in 2024, when LeBron will turn 40.
As a senior at Sierra Canyon, Bronny averaged 14 points, 5.5 rebounds, 2.4 assists and 1.8 steals. He was named to the McDonald’s All-American game in March, where he scored 15 points on 5-of-8 shooting from the perimeter while adding 4 assists and 2 steals.
The U.S.C. men’s basketball team is scheduled to leave for a 10-day exhibition tour to Greece and Croatia on Aug. 5, but it remains unclear if the team will still travel, or if Bronny will make the trip.
Jesus Jiménez contributed reporting.