Alperen Sengun meant it when he claimed there’s no deference when it comes to LeBron James. In fact, it’s a burgeoning rivalry across two different generations. Since the Houston Rockets mounted a gritty comeback in the series, the Los Angeles Lakers are on edge. With emotions peaking, tempers flared in the fourth quarter of Game 5, which the Rockets won 99-93, trimming the Lakers’ series lead to 3-2. The animosity between Bron and Sengun just got a whole lot spicier, and it’s the kind of generational fire that makes NBA playoffs must-watch TV.
The tension boiled over at the free-throw line with about 5:30 left in the fourth when Sengun, frustrated by a whistle that went James’ way, muttered what sounded like, “soft a– call” within earshot of the four-time MVP. James immediately spat out his mouthguard and fired back, schooling the young center on the realities of being a superstar in the league.
Advertisement
“You don’t say that! You’re the only person here who ain’t allowed to say that! ‘Soft a call,’ yeah, Ight!” James repeatedly barked at Sengun before getting to the free throws that he made.
This isn’t the first time we’ve seen a veteran superstar put a rising star in check over respect and officiating. Think back to LeBron’s heated on-court battles with Dillon Brooks during the 2023 playoffs- Brooks trash-talked and poked the bear, only for James to drop 40 in a closeout game while reminding everyone who’s still running things.
Or rewind further to Michael Jordan’s legendary clashes with brash young challengers; these moments aren’t anomalies- they’re the fuel that turns good series into unforgettable rivalries.
The verbal sparring capped a physical night where Sengun had earlier delivered an elbow to James’ face that felt more like MMA than hoops. The exchange is further straining a relationship that has become increasingly volatile as the series progresses.
This exchange is straining a relationship that turned volatile fast. It echoes the Game 4 officiating mess, where Lakers center Deandre Ayton was ejected for a flagrant-two elbow on Sengun, free-throw disparities sparked fines for Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard after their confrontations with officials, and James stayed mostly focused on his team’s 23 turnovers publicly—though it’s clear the whistle frustration lingered.
Advertisement
When Sengun complained about a “soft” call favoring LeBron, the veteran reminded the 23-year-old he was in no position to talk, tying directly back to that prior drama.
Despite the individual battles, Houston managed to stave off elimination. It’s looking a lot different from the LeBron-Kevin Durant dominating series everyone anticipated. Tonight, a series that looked like the Rockets were going to lose is now a different kind of rivalry.
LeBron James is still mad about Game 4 foul
Heading into Game 6 in Houston, the narrative has flipped dramatically. What looked like a potential Lakers sweep after jumping to a 3-0 lead is now a high-stakes dogfight.
Advertisement
No team has ever come back from 0-3 to win a playoff series, but the Rockets—young, physical, and riding momentum—have already forced Game 6 and have a real shot to tie it up and push for a Game 7. This showdown has evolved from polite competition into a gritty, physical battle packed with jawing and big-man toughness.
The early misunderstanding set the tone perfectly. After Game 1, a viral clip seemed to show Sengun standing in deference as James walked by. Sengun quickly shut that down:
“I just saw that video today. Everybody was sending it to me. I was just trying to get something out of my pocket, that’s why I got up. No disrespect to LeBron, of course, but I didn’t stand up for him. It was just something I was getting out of my pocket.”
That innocent mix-up has now morphed into genuine on-court heat, proving Sengun’s pre-series claim: in today’s NBA, the old guard doesn’t get automatic bows from the new wave.
Advertisement
This Lakers-Rockets series is delivering exactly what fans crave: veteran pride clashing with youthful swagger, questionable calls, and enough edge to make every possession feel personal.
Game 6 is going to be loud, physical, and must-see. LeBron may still be the king, but Sengun and the Rockets aren’t bowing down. That’s playoff basketball at its finest.
The post “You Don’t Say That”: LeBron James Warns Alperen Sengun in Heated Argument During Lakers-Rockets appeared first on EssentiallySports. Add EssentiallySports as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Trending Articles


