LeBron James linked up with his Team AlUla crew in Dubrovnik, Croatia this week. The visit is a reminder that his off-season doesn’t look like most people’s.
Team AlUla’s official account documented the meetup with a crown emoji and a caption confirming King James caught up with his team in Dubrovnik. Short and simple. Still, the post drew over 139,000 likes. For a racing team’s account, that’s a strong number. It’s a pretty clear signal of how closely the world tracks LeBron beyond the basketball court.
For anyone still catching up on the E1 Series: it’s an electric powerboat racing championship built around zero-emission competition. The boats are called RaceBirds. They’re fully electric and hydrofoiling, lifting above the water at high speeds. The format has a legitimate sci-fi feel. Think less traditional motorsport, more something you’d see in a Marvel film. The series is growing fast and pulling real investor attention from across pro sports.
Team AlUla is LeBron’s entry in the series. The team carries backing from the Saudi commission promoting the AlUla region. He holds an owner and ambassador role and has been tied to the team from its early days. Showing up in person in Croatia during racing season makes one thing clear: this isn’t a passive sponsorship deal with his name on a logo.
Dubrovnik isn’t a random backdrop. It’s one of Europe’s most recognizable spots on the Adriatic coast. Serious business and high-end lifestyle both operate there. A July visit puts LeBron right in the middle of the racing season. His NBA off-season technically started. His schedule suggests “off” means something different in his world.
This is the same person who built SpringHill Entertainment into a real production company, invested in Liverpool FC, and co-produced “Space Jam: A New Legacy.” Right now he’s also involved in Bronny James’ early NBA career. He’s running parallel operations across entertainment, traditional sports, and electric racing. The Tony Stark comparison keeps coming up for a reason. The guy doesn’t just play the game. He owns pieces of several different ones.
The language from the team’s account is worth noting. It didn’t announce a media event or a brand appearance. It said King James “caught up” with his team. That’s the kind of phrasing you use for a working visit from someone actually plugged into operations. Flying to Croatia to meet your crew isn’t something passive investors do.
Reactions from fans in the comments were enthusiastic but not surprised. The general vibe: LeBron showing up somewhere unexpected during July is just the standard summer move for King James. Nobody writes “quiet off-season” next to his name.
Whether this trip connects to a specific E1 event in the area hasn’t been confirmed. The visit itself communicates clearly enough. LeBron’s investment in Team AlUla is active and ongoing. And apparently it involves some very good scenery.
