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LeBron James and Kevin Durant are set to face off in the playoffs for the fourth time, with their latest matchup occurring in the first round of the 2026 NBA playoffs. This meeting may be significant as it could be their last playoff encounter.

| Year | Matchup | Round | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| **2026** | **Lakers (LeBron) vs. Rockets (KD)** |
LeBron James and Kevin Durant have faced each other in the playoffs four times, with Durant winning two NBA Finals and James winning one.
The Lakers will play the Rockets in the first round of the playoffs starting on Saturday, April 17, 2026.
In their 14 postseason games, LeBron averages 31.9 points, 10.3 rebounds, and 9 assists, while Durant averages 31.6 points, 8.1 rebounds, and 4.8 assists.
Yes, there is speculation that this could be the last playoff meeting between LeBron James and Kevin Durant as both players are nearing the end of their careers.

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| **First round** |
| **???** |
| 2018 | Warriors (KD) vs. Cavaliers (LeBron) | NBA Finals | Warriors in 4 |
| 2017 | Warriors (KD) vs. Cavaliers (LeBron) | NBA Finals | Warriors in 5 |
| 2012 | Heat (LeBron) vs. Thunder (KD) | NBA Finals | Heat in 5 |
| Now 37, Durant turned in another high-level season that should be rewarded by him making All-NBA for the 12th time in his career. After playing 60 games, James will have his league record 21-straight consecutive years of making All-NBA snapped -- and yet his performance this season at 41 years old remains as impressive as ever. |
| In the 14 postseason games against each other, James has averaged 31.9 points, 10.3 rebounds and 9 assists. Meanwhile, Durant has posted averages of 31.6 points, 8.1 rebounds and 4.8 assists. In mid-March, KD was asked who was the toughest player he's guarded in his career -- and he landed on James during his Miami Heat days. |
When @DaKidGowie asked KD about the toughest player he’s had to guard:
“Miami Heat Bron would probably be the toughest.” 👀
Two all-time scorers face off tonight as the Rockets host the Lakers at 9:30pm/et on Peacock and NBC Sports Network! pic.twitter.com/tfwTYgb0kT
— NBA (@NBA) March 16, 2026 That version of LeBron beat Durant and the Thunder in the 2012 Finals, winning the championship in five games. Durant spent four more seasons with the Thunder before leaving Oklahoma City for Golden State, where he once again met James in the Finals -- and got his revenge, winning back-to-back championships with the Warriors in 2017 and 2018. Asked LeBron postgame tonight if any version of @KDTrey5 was the toughest player he’s had to guard.
LeBron: “Shit, I mean, every version.”
LeBron on Durant through the years ⬇️
On KD in Golden State: “[He] was super dynamic because you couldn't put multiple bodies in front of… pic.twitter.com/2jiH6O9sMU
— Michael Shapiro (@mshap2) March 17, 2026 That 2018 Finals matchup was the last for James in a Cleveland uniform, and it resulted in KD and the Warriors dispatching him in a sweep without compunction. In an alternate universe, that series might have gone differently if the Cavs had won Game 1 and not wasted an all-time playoff performance from LeBron, who scored 51 points (going 19 for 32 from the floor and 10 of 11 from the line), along with eight rebounds and eight assists. His big night -- and any chance Cleveland had of making the Warriors sweat a little -- was undone when J.R. Smith (in)famously screwed up late in the game when he thought the Cavs were ahead. They were not. That led to the creation of a classic meme and later to James punching a white board in the locker room out of frustration. It's unlikely that anything in this year's Rockets-Lakers clash will get James that worked up. The expectations aren't nearly as high, and James -- like everyone else -- knows the Lakers have a difficult task ahead. Los Angeles won 50 games for the second straight season and had momentum going into the final month of the regular season after posting a 15-2 record in March. Luka Dončić was playing at a top-five MVP level while Austin Reaves looked capable and comfortable as the No. 2 option. Being the third guy was obviously something new for James, but he thrived in the role. So did the Lakers. As Lakers head coach JJ Redick rightly explained, the Lakers were at their best this season when LeBron was third in usage rate, allowing him to do all the other things he's so good at -- rebounding, passing, running the break, dunking on dudes -- while adding scoring as needed. It was all going pretty well for the Lakers. Until it wasn't. In the penultimate week of the season, the Lakers got throttled in a game at OKC, losing by 43 -- their worst defeat in years. To add injury to insult, Dončić suffered a hamstring strain and Reaves hurt his oblique. Both are unavailable for Game 1 on Saturday against Houston, and the chances of them playing at all in the series seem slim. That leaves LeBron right where he's been his entire career: with the weight of his franchise squarely on his shoulders. It figures to be a heavy lift. The Lakers roster was extremely thin even when all three of their top players were healthy and available. Now it's left to James to try to bootstrap an undermanned (and undertalented) squad into the second round against KD and the Rockets. Unlike LeBron, Durant will have plenty of help, including Alperen Sengun, Amen Thompson and Reed Sheppard. Considering L.A.'s staffing issues, it's not surprising that the Rockets are heavy betting favorites to win the series. If KD gets the better of LeBron again and the Lakers are bounced out of the playoffs in the first round for the third straight year, the immediate question becomes what happens to James. He'll be a free agent this offseason after the Lakers declined to give him the new contract he was looking for last summer. Even at 41, he remains one of the best players in the league. He could opt to take a pay cut and stay in L.A. He could sign on with a different team that might offer a better chance at one last ring. Or he could decide it's been real and call it a career. That last option seems unlikely. Tough to envision James retiring without announcing his intentions first and getting the season-long sendoff celebration that he has earned. If he sticks around, maybe we'll get one more LeBron-KD postseason matchup before it's all over. Either way, with eight years passing since the last time they faced each other in the playoffs, at least we got this one.