Bryce James, the youngest son of NBA legend LeBron James, has committed to the University of Arizona.
The 17-year-old, a three-star guard, will join the Wildcats as part of their 2025 recruiting class.
Bryce is believed to have chosen Tommy Lloyd's program over offers from Duquesne and Ohio State, among others.
Bryce, whose older brother Bronny joined their father with the Los Angeles Lakers last year, ranks as the No. 257 player overall and No. 46 shooting guard in the class of 2025.
The teen took to Instagram to break the news, sharing a photoshopped image of himself in an Arizona uniform.
“100% committed,” he captioned the post on the social media platform.
Bryce James, youngest son of NBA legend LeBron James, has committed to Arizona
The 17-year-old announces the news of his engagement with an Instagram post on Wednesday
Bryce is the second child of Lakers superstar LeBron and his wife Savannah (second right)
Her famous father also celebrated the engagement online, posting the same photo on his own profile.
CONGRATULATIONS MAXIMUM!! SO PROUD OF YOU!!! #JamesGang,” the NBA's all-time scorer wrote, adding several prayer, praise and heart emojis.
LeBron hadn't shied away from his desire to play alongside his oldest son Bronny in the NBA, and he finally fulfilled that dream after the Lakers drafted the 20-year-old.
Los Angeles selected Bronny with the 55th pick in last April's draft and the pair became the first father-son duo to play together in an NBA game during the Lakers' season opener against the Minnesota Timberwolves on October 22.
However, Bronny was assigned to the Lakers' G-League affiliate early last month and is expected to shuttle between Los Angeles and the South Bay this season.
Like Bronny, Bryce has played basketball at the high school level at Sierra Canyon School in Los Angeles.
But Bryce may not complete a James trio in purple and yellow after making his feelings about playing alongside his father very clear.
“Not gonna lie, that's OD (too much),” Bryce said on Instagram last June. 'Wait until… no, that's too long. That's too much, no. No, good sir. He's going to be 42, brother.'
More to follow.