Fan sues LeBron James for ‘deception’ after ‘Second Decision’ tease
A fan who spent hundreds of dollars for tickets to what he thought would be one of LeBron Jamesβ final NBA games is looking to recoup the money in small claims court after it turned out βThe Second Deicisionβ teased by the Lakers superstar had nothing to do with his retirement.
Norwalk resident Andrew Garcia filed a claim Tuesday in Los Angeles County Superior Court that states that James owes him $865.66 because of βfraud, deception, misrepresentation, and any and all basis of legal recovery.β
Garcia told The Times that he spent that amount for two tickets to the Lakersβ game against the Cleveland Cavaliers on March 31, 2026, at Crypto.com Arena , thinking it would be the 40-year-old NBA iconβs final game against the team that drafted him in 2003.
He and other basketball fans were under that impression after James posted Monday on X that he would be announcing βthe decision of all decisionsβ the next day. The post included a video clip teasing βThe Second Decision,β a clear reference to 2010βs βThe Decision,β in which James famously announced he was going to βtake my talents to South Beachβ to play for the Miami Heat.
Garcia said he purchased the tickets within 10 minutes of Jamesβ social media post.
βI was like, βHoly sβ, LeBron is going to retire! Weβve got to get tickets now,ββ the 29-year-old Garcia said. βLike, literally, because if he formally makes this announcement, you know, thereβs gonna be some significant price changes, right?β
Garcia is a huge fan of the Lakers and James, as well as an avid basketball fan in general, so he thought it would be cool to see the NBAβs all-time leading scorer play for the last time against the team with which he started his career and brought its first title in 2016 after his return from Miami.
βMoments like that, I understand the value,β Garcia said. βThere still may be some moderate value [to the tickets], however itβs not the same without him retiring. I remember Kobeβs last year, it was kind of what this would have been, per se, where every ticket was worth a lot. Every game had value. β¦
βI missed out on that. I was a little bit younger at the time. I obviously wasnβt in a position to where I could just buy tickets unfortunately at that age. I believe I was like 18 or 19 at the time. And thatβs one of my biggest regrets as a sports fan. I really wish I could have gotten the Kobeβs last year. So I see this as a potential to kind of make up for what I lost with Kobe.β
But βThe Second Decisionβ ended up having nothing to do with retirement. It was merely a Hennessy ad.
So now Garcia wants his money back.
βThere is no circumstance absent him saying heβs gonna retire that I would have bought tickets that far in advance,β Garcia said. βI mean, I buy tickets, but I donβt buy tickets five monthsβ advance. Iβm the kind of person that buys tickets five hours in advance. It was solely, solely, solely based on that. So thatβs why I was really thinking, βYou know what, this might be grounds for a case.β β
The Times reached out to an attorney said to be working with James related to the claim but did not receive an immediate response.
In light of everything that has happened this week, though, Garcia said heβd still be willing to pay the same amount of money to see James play during his eventual retirement tour.
βOf course,β Garcia said. βI would probably spend more, because life is all about memories and experiences.β