Too little, too late. After digging themselves into a 25 point hole the Lakers came all the way back to tie the game in the 4th quarter only to see it ultimately slip away. Once our again our 4th quarter execution looked more frenzied than focused and our defense wasn’t able to get the job done early. All in all the loss to the Knicks guaranteed that the road trip will be one with a losing record and tonight the Lakers are trying to avoid going 1-4 on the 5 game roadie.
- If only we were fixing holes and cracks but it really feels like this team is treading water on a nightly basis. The injuries, new personnel, new offensive system and the new roles for AD and LBJ are all tough orders in the shortened training camp era and for Frank to have seamlessly implemented and integrated all those things off the bat would have been amazing. I’d settle for just one of those things above working and, really, none of them are, yet. Hard to see how it gets better other than from within. Had we changed LeBron and AD’s roles alone, kept most of the roster, that feels like it would have been an easy integration for the core squad from last season to adapt to. However we instead brought in 11 new faces, one a ball dominant guard, so that added a wrinkle to everything in that while AD and LBJ were learning their new roles at their new positions they also have to learn how to get the most out of an entirely new roster. Adding Russ in and of itself wouldn’t have been such a slog but then Frank also added a new offense so not only are Russ, AD and LeBron adjusting to one another, new roles, new teammates they’re also learning a new way to score. Then came the injuries. While not an excuse, it feels like the Lakers chose the most difficult path to get back to title contention they possibly could have.
- That first quarter… The one thing this team does consistently is give up big quarters to, well, just about any team. Sometimes it’s the 3rd, it’s also happened in the 4th, last night happened to be to open the game. Regardless, no matter the opponent, the Lakers have a rep already of giving up 30+ point quarters and they usually come when we can’t throw it in the ocean. I don’t know what to say about this anymore, we seem to lose our focus and execution for a solid 10-15 minutes/game. If this trend continues it will be the defining characteristic to this Laker team as it makes it almost impossible to find a way to win consistently if you’re in the habit of giving up 1 monster quarter/game.
- THT needs to find something that works consistently. We got a donut from THT last night and, if he’s going to be the starter and we’re going to see less of Kent Bazemore who is the better defender, he needs to bring a lot more on both ends. He was totally ineffective and had one of his most unproductive outings to date as he missed every shot he took, didn’t get to the line, and led the team with a -18 +/-. While some of that are the lineups he plays with but, as a starter, he needs to be a lot more consistent.
- Lakers 3 point shooting woes continue. Other than Westbrook (3-6) and AD (1-2) the Lakers struggled mightily from three. It wasn’t like the Knicks shut us down, we just missed shots and a decent number of those came in the final five minutes of the game when any kind of score would have helped but empty possessions guaranteed the loss. I get it, the modern NBA is infatuated with the three point shot, 3 points is worth more than 2, and so on. the name of the game is still who ash the most points on the board, regardless of where they came from. When you have a player like AD and Russ it’s astounding to me we don’t run late-game offense through them more adeptly. Our late-game offense has consisted far too much of the laziest shot in basketball: the early shot clock three. Had we gotten a bucket or two from down low, run something through AD on the block I think we would have generated much higher quality shot attempts. For the Lakers I do not believe the answer lies solely in more, or volume, but in being diligent in ensuring the quality of the three point shot is high. That means doing more than passing the ball once or twice around the horn and jacking it up. That’s lazy basketball, not winning basketball.
- Hey, we’re valuing the ball, though! Take away that first quarter and the Lakers would have had fewer than 10 turnovers last night. You can’t do that, though, and so we still ended up with a very manageable 12. That, beyond anything else, was what helped us claw our back into this game. That and a tighter defensive execution scheme in regards to our zone. Keeping turnovers low with Russ (2nd in the league currently in terms of turnovers/game) and LeBron (averages a round 5/game for his career) is a key to us winning consistently. Happy to see that the team is trying to at least create shots every time down and not coughing it up. Clean up a few more of those and we’re on our way in terms of getting the most out of time with the rock.
The bets we can hope is to come home a .500 team 20 games into the season. The trends are plain for all to see: play down to opponents, give up one monster quarter/game, lack of focus or intensity overall, especially on defense. LeBron coming back or trading for player X might help a little but we’re still a couple weeks away from even being able to trade guys we signed over the summer. Plus, THT has been pretty inconsistent thus far and I have a hard time seeing a team giving up an impact player for a project at his price. Lakers need to find the solution from within and the sooner the better.
LakerTom says
Good stuff, Jamie. Can’t disagree with any of it
1) Treading water is the perfect description of this team’s mental state. Every game it’s something. Is LeBron playing? Is AD playing? When will Nunn play his first game? Same for Ariza. Frankly, I think we’re LeBron and one player from being OK. Maybe LeBron and Reaves. I’m thinking he’s the only guard with the defense and size to start at the two. Until Ariza’s ready, I’m betting Frank sticks with two bigs. If he’s going to lose his job, he’s not going to do it without doing it his way. Can’t blame him.
2. That ‘Fill-in-the-blank’ quarter! Yeah, the funny thing about this game is it was the starters like Russ and Bradley who put us in the hole and then almost saved us. What was disappointing was no carry over from the great fourth quarter against the Pistons. Even bigger mystery, no Russ/AD pick-and-rolls from the left side like won the Detroit game. Puzzling!
3. THT looked terrible. LOL, so bad he could screw up all of my proposed trades. He’s not ready to start and likely won’t next game. He does need to play better for the Lakers to win and for teams to covet him in a trade. I’ll be rooting for him but the last two games have been major disappointments. THT is as good as gone right now for a shot blocking stretch five or bigger 3&D wing. Game’s still too fast for him at 20.
4. Have to agree with you on the Lakers 3-point shooting. You know I’m a big proponent of volume 3-point shooting, which means a player like Buddy or Lonzo who hoist 10 threes per game. Melo is the only player on the Lakers who should have that kind of green light.
As a player and coach, I also lived by the rule that you went to the rim to get a bucket or free throw when you’re not hitting from outside. Only losers settle when the game’s on the line. In this case, I think the Lakers just ran out of gas coming back from 15 down. Another lesseon we can only hope the Lakers learned last night. Don’t get off to a bad start.
5. Turnover advantage. Even a sloppy first quarter by Russ can’t prevent the Lakers from another game with excellent ball security. Glad to see you looking for silver linings too. For some reason, I think this team is getting more adversity and criticism than they deserve. Let’s hope we start a win streak tonight.
Jamie Sweet says
Lakers are tied for giving up the 2nd most PPG along with Charlotte: 113.1. That leaves only Memphis (114.1 ppg) at the bottom. Need to find a way to get it done better on D, nothing else to say really.
LakerTom says
We can’t ‘tread water’ until Dec 15 to trade anybody but THT or Jan 15 to trade him or the Feb 10 trade deadline. We’ll drown by then. That means everything hinges on Nunn and Ariza finally playing and Reaves returning. Those three should replace many of minutes that THT, Bazemore, and Jordan are currently getting.
Until we can make a trade or sign a buyout free agent, this will hopefully become our starting lineup and depth chart:
PG: WESTBROOK, Nunn, Rondo
SG: BRADLEY, Reaves, Monk, Ellington
SF: JAMES, Horton-Tucker, Bazemore
PF: ARIZA, Anthony,
CE: DAVIS, Howard, Jordan
Michael H says
Aloha Jamie, nice post. The Lakers demonstrated why I wasn’t feeling exceedingly optimistic after the Pistons comeback. Our energy is a rollercoaster ride that I really don’t have an explanation for. We got to see the best and worst versions of Russ, his play helped dig that first half hole and he helped dig us out of it in the 2nd half. It’s rare that a teams comes back from 25 down and wins. The comeback takes so much energy that there isn’t much left in crunch time. We have won only 5 first downs quarters this year. That’s just unacceptable. Injuries, new players and a new system is certainly problematic and I except difficulties due to those issues but there is just no excuse for lack of effort. I really don’t know how to solve it.