It’s funny how things can change in life. Sport mirrors life in many ways and so most of the same rules apply. Cheat and there are consequences (well, not for the Houston Astros but for most teams…). Consistently get hurt, you’re injury-prone. Miss the playoffs with three superstars on your team? You’re a bust. And so on. Some of these are fair, others are not and there’s nothing to do but shoulder the load and move forward. That’s life. The narrative is derived from the experience and it’s that exact thing that has changed drastically for the Lakers in a few, short weeks.
- The Anthony Davis narrative. Injury prone, disengaged, unable to take the next step from ‘really good’ to ‘truly great’. All of those are the, to this point, career defining narrative surrounding AD. Last season we heard a lot of the same things from AD that we did this season when it began: “I’m in the best shape I can be.” or “I feel good.” Things like that. Then the games mattered and the player wilted, got hurt and became an after-thought in many ways. Hard to see how a nigh 7′ tall man with a 7’6″ wingspan can be overlooked but that’s what happened. Then this season began and AD sat out a couple games with a sore back, pined to play power forward in an interview, and missed a lot of jump shots. The narrative was confirmed, again. Until Davis made a choice, a choice our own mongoslade gave an excellent TED Talk on, he chose to be a center. He plays in the paint now for almost the entire game. Fewer 15′-20′ step back jumpers and more offensive rebounds. Paint points upon paint points and that’s because few other centers, or big men in general, can account for his size, strength and speed. It’s that last one that has returned in full and is the difference maker in our season. We stopped playing AD in the “easy to guard” spots. Those are the three point line and mid-range jump shot zones. When he is in the paint the paint isn’t clogged, it’s controlled. Are there open runways for LeBron to waltz in and throw down epic dunks? No. There won’t be even if we clone Ray Allen 4 times and sign them all to vet minimum deals. Teams will let someone else beat them before they let LeBron waltz into the paint. AD in the paint negates that issue, he’s the controlling force down low, not the opposing defense.
- The LeBron narrative. The march to claim another #1 spot on an NBA record continues on a nightly basis for LeBron. But he’s too old to lead a team into the playoffs, anymore. He’ll break some records but his title days, at least in the purple and gold, are done. This has been the recent narrative surrounding LeBron since we won the Bubble title. It’s not too hard to see why. He’s missed about a quarter of possible games played as a Laker due to injuries he never suffered anywhere else. He’s ancient by pro sport standards. He’s veered away from the most efficient shots in favor of long threes and at volume. He often looked like he would rather be attending a speech on public decorum than play basketball a lot last season as the losses piled up. We started the season 2-10 and the expectation was that LeBron would demand some kind of change the way he has in so many other places. It didn’t happen. All that happened is The King allowing AD to bloom and Russ to drive the ball into the paint. He’s taking more threes almost by design as it preserves his body for the later part of the season. He still hammers dunks home on the break. He’s still putting up his numbers but with a lot less iso ball, which kills the team momentum. All of these are why we’re winning more but his stats look the same.
- The Russell Westbrook narrative. There isn’t a player in the game more scrutinized. Not even Miles Bridges who was arrested on domestic violence charges has faced the scrutiny, derision and media coverage that Russ and his fit on the Lakers has. The man must be made of cold-forged steel because it does not seem to faze him in the least. Westbrook has sacrificed his game the most out of LeBron, AD and himself. It’s also Russell’s game that has unlocked True Beast mode for AD. When Russ is driving into the paint he’s the best Laker equipped to get AD the ball to finish the play. LeBron doesn’t want to leave his feet, not driving into the paint if it’s full of players from any team. Russ careens wildly towards the rim and is either getting layups or, more often and preferred, finding an open Anthony Davis as the center closes on him. While Russell isn’t an elite finisher anymore you still want to guard against giving him an open layup or dunk. It’s this simple logic the Lakers are exploiting expertly these days. Westbrook is perhaps the best PG the Lakers could have right now because he’s laser-focused on getting AD the kind of looks he used to get for Steven Adams. The Russ or LeBron AD pick and roll has long been an oft-discussed weapon. Now, with AD playing a more traditional role and LeBron as the three point release valve, it’s working.
- The Lakers narrative. Was there a team that navigated more sewage this summer than the Lakers? Maybe the Tom Brady/Giselle saga garnered more coverage…but I doubt it. From January of this year to today one thing has driven the conversation around the Lakers: they have to trade Russell Westbrook to compete. LeBron wanted him gone. He didn’t even talk to or elaborately high-five Russell Westbrook at a Summer League game and the world nearly crapped it’s pants in response. The Lakers would have to tear it all down to appease the King to stay. Russell fired his agent and will demand a trade away so he can be the best Russ he can be on another team. Westbrook would never come off the bench, especially for a rookie coach who hasn’t won squat. We could go on but I think that’s enough. The common assumption (and we know where those lead us) was that Russ wouldn’t start the season as a Laker. Except he did. Then the common assumption was that he would dig in and push back on any attempt to morph his game to better fit in. Except he didn’t. Then there was the assumption that he would never come off the bench to better balance out how the overall roster talent was distributed throughout the game. Even I had it at 20 games before I thought it might happen. Except I was wrong. Russ came off the bench by game 10 and the Lakers really haven’t looked back since. The Lakers still might trade Russ, all those draft picks and anyone else on the roster who is not on a vet minimum deal. They’ve also expertly navigated this early part of this rough season which actually makes a trade less likely as Rob Pelinka has shown himself to be loathe to make mid-season trades. In that it has never happened.
- The game. Oh yeah, we let a huge lead slip away, took our foot off the gas and were in danger of losing the game. We didn’t. Another switch from last season when that was our MO for the entire season. Lakers up 20? You got ’em right where you want ’em! We have coughed up leads a couple times but we’ve also stemmed the bleeding and pulled a couple out. We just need to keep improving that big lead/play hard to the end focus and we’ll be OK. The west, for a litany of reasons, is wide open and the unthinkable is suddenly possible. That the Lakers could actually straight make the playoffs. While it’s still a long shot it’s certainly worth celebrating the way this team has responded to adversity and criticism. As a fan all I ever want is for us to play hard and consistently. I can live with whatever result that begets. I think this team has found something that’s working and now we w3ait for the Association to scout it and adapt. Once that happens (and it will) we get to see what Coach Ham’s chops truly are. How does he adapt to the league when it starts sitting on Russell’s interior passing or leaving one of TB Jr., PatBev or even LW4 wide open to make sure LeBron is covered? That’s the simplest adjustment I see coming and, frankly, it’s easier typed than accomplished. We’ve already seen more in-play cuts from a guy on the perimeter than we saw all last season. While we’ll never be accused of running a motion offense we have added enough motion to it to generate easy buckets. Those kind of things are harder to defend and so, if we can keep it up, should be a foundation for whatever success we build.
Two solid wins against two solid teams. Let’s keep the train rolling! Go Lakers.
Michael H says
Nice post Jamie, I’m slowly beginning to believe this team could be a playoff team. It’s hard to believe but we only have one more loss then the 6th seed Warriors. Part of it is Lonnie’s development into a legit 3rd scoring option. After a slow shooting start his up to 39% from 3 46% since November 1st. He also defends. He should be a priority this off seasons. Then there is Mr Reaves doing what he does and improving. Russ is the leading candidate for 6th man of the year. And a few other guys are stepping up. If we could find a Forward with size on the trade market we could even avoid the play in. But it really is all up to AD. It appears that he has finally bought into playing his best position, center. He is finally healthy and if he stays healthy I really believe this is the AD we get for the rest of the season.
Jamie Sweet says
Thanks man, barely covered the game more like a “where we’re at currently” 5er. Still, heckuva win last night.
Jae Crowder tops my [personal list of gettable 3s who fill the needs of the team.
Michael H says
As much as I like Crowder, I just can’t see the Suns helping the Lakers.
Jamie Sweet says
I think at some point they won’t get the player(s) they thought they might and take an expiring deal on a vet player who can ably backup CP3 should he go down. In almost all trade scenarios we don’t have the best offer, though, and that is a good reason for them to choose a different trade
DJ2KB24 says
Katy Turr and my son love Fishbone. I know them both!
Jamie Sweet says
We’ll I have to say I’m real glad you know you’re son!
Jamie Sweet says
I’ve been a Fishbone fan since 1992, so good!
LakerTom says
Excellent fiver, Jamie. Those Lakers’ storylines continue to dominate. Lakers World spinning around and around.
Jamie Sweet says
They do and will.
Michael H says
Forgot to mention, I love Fisbone! Saw them once on a bill Dave Waking of English Beat and Eak A Mouse. Bring back the checker board Vans!