LeBron James' son, Bryce James, committed to the Arizona Wildcats on Wednesday, and congratulatory messages have been trooping in since the announcement. The Class of 2025 prospect shared his news on Instagram by posting an image that features him alongside Wildcats coach Tommy Lloyd and captioning it "100% committed."
Since sharing the post, it has received thousands of likes and comments, predominantly congratulatory messages. BYU signee AJ Dybantsa was also in the comments to congratulate the 17-year-old.
"Congrats brudda," he wrote.
Other athletes, and even Bryce's brother, Bronny, also dropped congratulatory remarks.
“Yessirrrrrr,” Bronny James posted.
“Love it slime🤞🏾,” Jason Crowe Jr. wrote.
"Congrats twin♥️, " Northwestern signeee Jake West commented.
"Congrats family," five-star prospect Koa Peat wrote.
A bunch of other fellow high school hoopers, including NBA veteran Scottie Pippen's son, Justin Pippen; South Carolina signee Eli Ellis and five-star women's basketball prospect Jerzy Robinson (who attends Sierra Canyon School with James) also congratulated him.
The post also attracted reactions and responses from fans, most of which were positive.
"Congratulations Wildcats," one fan wrote.
"He about to turn Arizona up. Lebron James 3.0," another posted.
"Welcome to Arizona bro. Hope everything goes well for you and you get the right treatment you need," another commented.
With Bryce's commitment to Arizona, the Wildcats have secured two Class of 2025 prospects, having already signed four-star Dwayne Aristode.
AJ Dybantsa vs. Bryce James: Who is the better prospect?
AJ Dybantsa is the No. 1-ranked prospect in the nation. It's no wonder why the BYU signee had about 30 college offers before eventually deciding on the Cougars.
Unlike AJ, Bryce James is a three-star shooting guard who is ranked No. 257 in the nation, No. 30 in California and as the No. 47 shooting guard nationally, according to 247Sports. The Sierra Canyon player received only three college offers (from Duquesne, Ohio State and Arizona). The Arizona offer came late.