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LakerTom wrote a new post
After blowing two golden opportunities to steal a win in Denver, the Los Angeles Lakers still remain on course again to win the series in six games by winning their three home games and stealing one game on the road.
As impressive as Jokic, Murray, and the Nuggets were in their two wins over the Lakers, the reality is they needed a superstar performance that’s probably irreplicable in each game to barely hold home court advantage. Michael Malone can be proud of what his Nuggets accomplished in Denver but this series is far from over and what advantage Denver has right now could be gone by Monday night if the Lakers win their two home games.
The Lakers are a perfect 7–0 in this postseason, winning one home play-in game and six home playoff games in rounds 1 and 2. They dominated all six home playoff games, winning by 18.3 points per game with a 98.3 DefRtg. The Nuggets are going to need another transcendent performance from Jokic or Murray to beat the Lakers at home. Far as Lakers are concerned, they’re right on course to win this series in six games just as planned.
Championships in the NBA are won by superstars and it’s hard to imagine the championship-tested LeBron James and Anthony Davis being outplayed by the Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray. They’re have to prove they belong. LeBron James may be old and hurt and Anthony Davis frustratingly inconsistent but there’s no way they’re not going to come out tonight and angrily dominate the Nuggets with the crowd screaming for a massacre.
The Lakers now know they must slow down both Jokic and Murray, which could mean starting both Hachimura and Vanderbilt, who have shown to be the best answers Darvin Ham has to defend the Nuggets’ superstars. They also know they need to dominate the boards and points in the paint, which to me means letting Reaves, Hachimura, and Walker be the outside shooters and having James and Davis dominate the paint and the rim.
The Lakers need to double down on going big and relentlessly punish both Jokic and Murray by targeting them with James and Davis. Put them on the bench with fouls. Wear them out on Defense. Get to the free throw line.
The Lakers know the best way to setup their defense is to get to the line on offense. That means no more ‘hero threes’ from LeBron and Anthony, no more settling for jumpers. Attack the paint and rim relentlessly.The Lakers are still of the course to win the series is six games. Win Game 3 and 4 at home, steal Game 5 on the road, and close it in Game 6 at home. Lakers pull off improbable back-door sweep and roll into the NBA Finals.
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You must not have watched much of the Nuggets. What they’re doing isn’t “transcendent” or (for them) out of the ordinary. Jokic was an “I don’t care about stats” game or two away from averaging a triple-double. He’s been dropping them at home and away. Murray is one of the leading scorers in the playoffs. We have done little to slow either, Murray being only mildly bothered by foul trouble in game 1.
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Pressureis on the Lakers to change the narrative, and I think they can. But its going to have to be a full team effort. Its not just that Jokic and Murray outplaying LBJ and AD its that the Nuggets as a whole are outplaying the Lakers as a whole.
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I believe they can. Problem is they haven’t. Needs to start tonight.
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THANK YOU! YOU’RE GOING TO BE RIGHT!
Wait a minute. Can? That’s not the same as ‘Will.’
It’s so strange that that’s a step you just cannot take.
Hard to be a man with any faith with that approach.
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So tell me when during this year or this playoffs did you see Jokic have a game anywhere near his ‘historic’ Game 1 performance?
And can you show me where Murray ever scored 23 fourth quarter points in his entire playoff career?
Wow, a Lakers fan who still thinks the Lakers are going to lose and Joker and Murray will outplay Bron and AD to win this series.
You’re going to be wrong like you were since the trade deadline. Glass still half empty.
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Lol, game 1 and game 2. They have risen to the challenge, our team has not.
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They had miraculous finishes to barely hold home court. We’re going to crush them twice on our home court.
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Age and wear and tear on older bodies is REAL. Where are our future Stars, cept “Funky Music” and perhaps Rui? Coach of not the year needs to TELL LBJ, stop those 3’s you are not hitting. You are the Coach!
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Soooo…basically, they have to play worse and we have to play better. Brilliant. Got it
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LOL. That’s how it usually works. Series is not over until the visiting team wins or fails to win a game.
We’re still on track to finish the series in six and the only thing that will change that is a loss at home or two more in Denver.
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We’re on track for letting someone else kicking our ass in the 4th, that better change or you’re the one who will change his tune quick as the wind blows lol. Just being real here, dude, Denver has executed their game better than we have. Team needs to be and do better. Across the board.
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One problem is that LeBron isn’t at his best. Used to be all his team had to do was stay close and he’d get them home. That’s not who we have right now. I look at Jimmy Butler last night and realize how far Bron has dropped. The most telling stat is that he’s shooting 34% in the 4th for this entire post-season. His struggles in crunch time are a huge factor in us being down 0-2. Nuggs haven’t had “miraculous” endings; they’ve actually been pedestrian. We just haven’t executed in the clutch.
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And THAT is the real issue. The free throw disparity has kept us in games as much as anything else. I’m hopeful for a win tonight but the whole team has to step up in both ends. Denver as a team has been better. For all of Tom’s “have you seen” hysteria the same could be said for Reaves, Hachimura, and even AD in game 1. Mr. Here Today, Gone Tomorrow was MIA in game 2 but even an elite game from him didn’t get us over the hump. Everyone has to be a factor from here on out and that’s not the Laker M.O. in the playoffs so far.
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I don’t think LeBron to be great. He has only been great once in the playoffs. He just needs to be good. AD is the one that needs to step up. They have no one to guard him. They did nothing special last game, AD got to his spots. He just missed. 4 for 15. He normally shoots over 50%. If he did that last game we win. DLO has to be better as well. He doesn’t need to explode. Give us 15 to 17 like he has done a lot in the playoffs. Both games have been close. We just need to play up to our capabilities.
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LeBron has to be clutch and firing up three straight hero threes is not being clutch. I don’t mind him taking threes when it’s part of the play and off of a drive and dish and wide open but that’s not what those late threes were. James has to be much better and so does AD. They were outplayed in Denver. Can’t happen here.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The bad news is the Los Angeles Lakers lost two close, winnable games on the road to the Denver Nuggets. The good news is the Lakers now have an opportunity to win the next two games in Los Angeles to even the series.
While the Nuggets have a 2–0 lead in the Western Conference Finals over the Lakers, all they have done is to hold home court advantage by winning their two games in Denver. Now it’s the Lakers’ turn with two home games. Unfortunately, losing two games in a row for the first time in two months will likely have the Lakers questioning their series strategies and schemes, especially since they had a legitimate opportunities to win both games.
The reality facing Los Angeles is they lost the first two games of this series because the Nuggets’ underappreciated superstars Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray outplayed Lakers’ superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis. Jokic averaged an unbelievable 28.5/19.0/13.0 in 28.5 minutes per game while shooting 55.3/50.0/85.7% while Murray averaged 34.0/7.5/5.0 in 39.9 minutes per game while shooting 52.3/45.5/92.3% for the 2 Denver wins.
Meanwhile, James averaged 24.0/10.5/9.5 in 40.0 minutes per game while shooting 51.4/0.0/80.0% while Davis averaged 29.0/12.0/3.5 in 41.4 minutes per game while shooting 47.4/50.0/90.9% during the 2 losses in Denver.
For the 2 games, Jokic and Murray combined for 125 points, 53 rebounds, and 36 assists while James and Davis combined for 106 points, 45 rebounds, and 26 assists, a Nuggets’ edge of 19 points, 8 rebounds, and 10 assists.So while the Nuggets only held home court, the Lakers have some serious issues to fix before they can count on winning their two home games as their defense was shredded by the Nuggets while their offense struggled. While the Lakers did have some success with Hachimura guarding Jokic and Vanderbilt defending Murray, the Nuggets have been ignoring Vando in the corner so their defense would be able to play 5-on-4 against the Lakers.
As the Lakers get ready to defend their 7–0 postseason home record at Crypto.Com Arena tomorrow night, here are the four big questions they need to answer if they’re going to be able to hold home court in L.A.
1. How to Stop Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic?
The one good sign for the Lakers from the two close losses in Denver is the defensive scheme involving Rui Hachimura defending Nikola Jokic to allow Anthony Davis to roam the paint and protect the rim definitely works.
No scheme will shut down the two-time MVP but Hachimura being Jokic’s primary defender with Davis roaming to protect the rim was successful in keeping Nikola from having another historic performance like in Game 1. While the Lakers will try to keep Hachimura on Jokic as much as possible, there will be switches they can’t avoid and it’s likely that Davis and James will also spend time defending the Joker and maybe even Mo Bamba.
Ham needs to start Hachimura and play him starter minutes. The Lakers’ best strategy to stop Nikola Jokic is to have Rui Hachimura be his primary defender so Anthony Davis is free to patrol the paint and protect the rim.
2. How to Stop Nuggets’ Jamal Murray?
The Lakers best option to slow down Denver Nuggets’ superstar point guard Jamal Murray, who single-handedly scored 23 points in the fourth quarter to beat the Lakers in Game 2, is likely to have Jarred Vanderbilt guard him.
That means the Lakers have to find a way to start Jarred Vanderbilt so he can mirror Jamal Murray’s minutes. The only way to do that is for Jarred Vanderbilt to replace D’Angelo Russell in the starting lineup for this series. That would mean the Lakers going all-in on defense with a starting lineup of Austin Reaves, Jarred Vanderbilt, LeBron James, Rui Hachimura, and Anthony Davis, which is essentially the Lakers’ version of a ‘Death Lineup.’
The Lakers’ championship hopes and aspirations are based on their ability to play defense. What they learned in Denver is they need to start their best defensive lineup to have their best opportunity to win 2 games in L.A.
3. How to Get LeBron James Going?
Game 2 left no doubt LeBron is not 100%. The fourth quarter was a comedy of errors for James as he fumbled away fastbreak dunks, had no lift when down hill in paint, and settled for hero threes instead of attacking the rim.
There’s little the Lakers can do about James’ foot injury that will likely require surgery this offseason but they can limit James minutes so he’s not totally gassed in the fourth quarter and settling for long hero 3-pointers. Frankly, it’s doubtful that going 0–10 from three in the two games in Denver is going to dissuade LeBron James from letting it fly from deep. With Rui and Reaves spacing the floor, the Lakers need to play LeBron in the post.
James may not have the explosiveness, lift, or 3-point shooting to carry the Lakers by himself but playing him closer to the basket where he can take advantage of his superior strength, power, and experience would be smart.
4. How to Get Anthony Davis Going?
Just when you think Anthony Davis has taken the torch from LeBron James, he has a game like Game 2 in Denver where he posts 18/14/4 but shot a poor 4–15 from the field and ended up with a -10 plus/minus for Game 2.
And just like that, the Los Angeles Lakers find themselves down 0–2 to the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Finals with the newly crowned face of the franchise laying an egg in the biggest playoff game of his career. Anthony Davis needs to attack faster, quicker, and more aggressively on offense. Since he’s guarded by Nikola Jokic, the Lakers need him to attack Jokic and get him in foul trouble so he can’t average 42.2 minutes per game.
The Lakers cannot win with Anthony Davis scoring 18 points. They need him to score in the 30’s and get Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets in foul trouble. Davis needs a monster bounce-back 35/20/5 Game 2 to help Lakers win.
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Lakers must win both Game 3 and Game 4 in Los Angeles or this series is for all intents and purposes over. That’s two MUST WIN home games for a team that is now 7-0 at home in the postseason. Lakers can do that.
However, there is no way they can do that unless LeBron James and Anthony Davis play better than they did in Denver and better than their counterparts on the Nuggets Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray.
Lakers need to go all in on best and biggest defensive team, which is Reaves, Vanderbilt, James, Hachimura, and Davis. Defensively, Rui and Anthony on Nikola and Vando on Murray.
Offensively, James needs to play more in the post and Davis needs to attack Jokic and get him in foul trouble. Vando needs to get aggressive when he gets the ball near the rim and not be Ben Simmons. Attack the basket and get to the line.
Lakers can still win this series in 65 games. Sweep the LA games, Steal Game 5 in Denver. Close out in Game 6 in LA.
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Have LeBron , AD, & the Lakers Hit Their Ceiling?
Four Big Questions Lakers Must Answer:
1. How to Stop Nuggets’ Nikola Jokic?
2. How to Stop Nuggets’ Jamal Murray?
3. How to Get LeBron James Going?
4. How to Get Anthony Davis Going?https://t.co/tmdPh8Bq3E— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 20, 2023
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Joker 28, LBJ 38. Jamal 26, AD 31. Why isn’t “Ice Water” giving us Jamal numbers?
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The luck of the draw has finally caught up with us. Memphis was injured, Brooks went brain-dead, and who knows what da hell Ja was doing off the court. GSW held that thing together with duct tape all season and you could tell from their comments after that they knew it wasn’t in the cards. Draymon doomed their season before it even started.
But Denver is a different story. Healthy, cohesive, hungry, and with 2 guys who can match (or even exceed) the output of our superstars. Honestly, I feel like we over-achieved just to keep the final scores close. Only thing we’re doing better than them is getting to the free throw ilne…that ain’t enough.
I’m sick of hearing about our fatigue…the other team is playing the same schedule.
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There’s no question the Nuggets are a much better and tougher team to beat than the flawed Grizzlies and Warriors. While the odds are clearly getting longer and longer, all the Lakers have to do is hold serve on their home court and they can tie the series.
While Bron’s injury and AD’s inconsistency killed us in the first two games, the Nuggets also shot the ball insanely in both games. First, Nikola, then Jamal. Pair that with LeBron and AD having off games and we’re where we are.
I think Lakers need to go defense and big with Reaves, Vando, LeBron, Rui, and Davis. That’s their best defensive team against both Jokic and Murray. Bring Dlo off the bench for this game. Lakers need to dominate both home games to get series back where it should be. It’s either than of Cancun.
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That would mean the Lakers going all-in on defense with a starting lineup of Austin Reaves, Jarred Vanderbilt, LeBron James, Rui Hachimura, and Anthony Davis, which is essentially the Lakers’ version of a ‘Death Lineup.’https://t.co/tmdPh8Bq3E
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 20, 2023
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LakerTom wrote a new post
After finishing with just 8 points and a team-worst plus/minus of -25 in Game 1 of the West Finals, mercurial Lakers’ point Guard D’Angelo Russell found himself back on the court later that night trying to find his stroke.
A big part of the Lakers late season finish and first two round wins, Russell struggled mightily in Game 1 and the Nuggets’ coaches and players publicly boasted how they shut him down and made him unplayable in this series. It’s easy to understand why the Nuggets would like the Lakers to not play Russell, who along with Reaves has been one of the four core starters who were behind the team’s late season finish and early playoff heroics.
On the other hand, you would think that teams facing the Lakers would stop poking the bear. It’s stupid to give the Lakers bulletin board material or make comments to wake up and motivate D’Angelo Russell for Game 2. Darvin Ham and the Lakers are not going to bench D’Angelo Russell. They need his playmaking and shooting. What they’re going to do is figure out ways to get him going because he’s a critical component to their winning.
The critics and doubters always point to Russell as the Lakers’ weakest defender but they don’t realize it’s his offensive prowess and his elite shooting and playmaking that make D’Angelo valuable, not his defense. D’Angelo Russell averaged 18.6/3.4/5.6 in 32.8 mpg for regular season while shooting 49.4/42.6/72.2% with a +/- of +8.9. In the playoffs, he’s averaging 15.1/3.0/4.8 in 31.1 mpg while shooting 44.0/33.3/77.3% with a +/- of +2.3.
One of the strengths of the Lakers post trade deadline is the army of guards who are outstanding at using pick-and-rolls to get into the paint and put their defenders in jail for easy floaters or lobs to the rim for easy dunks. The combination of LeBron James, Austin Reaves, D’Angelo Russell, and Dennis Schroder being able to get where they want in the paint has now transformed the Lakers half-court offense into a clutch playoff weapon.
The Lakers and D’Angelo Russell desperately need the him to deliver a monster game tonight to show why the team should re-sign him to a new contract and why he’s the right fit as the team’s point guard of the future.
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Russell was always the wild card and inconsistency was always his biggest negative. So far, he has been much more consistent as a Laker in the closing run to the regular season and in the first two rounds of the playoffs. As a Laker, he’s really never had two bad games in a row so I expect he will have a big bounce back game tonight. Every edge counts. Lakers need Russell to win it all.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Rookie head coach Darvin Ham has been on a hot streak since the Lakers remade their roster at the trade deadline where every single roster move he’s made has worked out beautifully. He’s now 8 games away from a chip.
As a rookie coach, Darvin Ham has done an impressive job creating winning starting lineups and rotations as the Lakers dominated down the stretch in the regular season and throughout the first two playoff rounds. While making roster decisions, Ham has maintained an open mind both to Rob Pelinka and the Lakers’ front office and his own coaching staff. His rosters moves so far have been perfect mix of evolving and adjusting.
With the underdog Lakers opening the Western Conference Finals against Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets tomorrow night in Denver, L.A. Ham has yet another opportunity to make an impactful change in his starting lineup. While Jarred Vanderbilt started 11 of the Lakers’ 12 playoff games, Darvin Ham turned to Dennis Schroder in Game 6 of the Warriors series because Vanderbilt’s lack of shooting gravity allowed Golden State to play 5-on-4.
With the Lakers needing to go big to match up with the Nuggets’ front court of 6′ 11″ Jokic, 6′ 8″ Gordon, and 6′ 10″ Porter, the time’s now come for Ham to replace Jarred Vanderbilt in the starting lineup with Rui Hachimura.
The Vanderbilt Problem
As impactful as Vanderbilt has been at times during the first two rounds of the playoffs, there have also been matchups where his skills have not been critical and his lack of shooting gravity has derailed the Lakers offense.
While Jarred Vanderbilt could probably do a good job defending Michael Porter, Jr., his lack of threat as a shooter is going to allow the Nuggets to ignore him completely and play 5-on-4 when the Lakers are on offense. Right now, Jarred is averaging 5.3 points, 3.7 rebounds, 0.9 assists, 0.8 steals, and 1.0 blocks in 17.2 mpg while shooting 40.7/25.0/66.7% for the playoffs. His playoffs plus/minus is +0.3 and playoff net rating is -0.7.
Should the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Denver Nuggets and get to the NBA Finals, it’s possible that Vanderbilt might be a better fit against the Boston Celtics with their two big wing scorers than bigger and slower Hachimura. Ham seems to have no problem with not having a permanent fifth starter, opting to deploy a strategy that uses that last starting spot in these playoffs to better matchup with whatever team the Lakers are playing against.
The Lakers saw in Game 6 vs. Warriors how their offense was dramatically more efficient with five players who can stretch the floor and cannot be left unguarded in the corner. The Lakers cannot start Vando against Denver.
The Hachimura Solution
Rui Hachimura has been one of the Lakers most impactful bench players. He’s become a staple in the Lakers’ rotation. He’s fifth on the team in points and rebounds per game and first in field goal and 3-point shot percentage.
But the time’s now come for Darvin to replace Vanderbilt in the starting lineup with Hachimura, who has the defensive size and length to bother Porter, Jr. and offensive shot making skills to make him work hard on D. Starting Hachimura should dramatically improve the Lakers’ offensive efficiency as Rui is probably the team’s most consistent long-range and midrange shooter, hitting 57.0% from the field and 53.3% from three.
Rui does not have Vando’s quick feet and lateral mobility and is not as good a perimeter defender but he’s a little bigger and longer than Jarred and more physical in the paint. And he’s another world entirely offensively.
Rui is averaging 11.2 points, 3.6 rebounds, and 0.6 assists in 21.2 mpg while shooting 57.0/53.3/66.7% with +1.3 plus/minus and +1.8 net rating. The Lakers’ five top scorers are James, Davis, Russell, Reaves, and Hachimura.Starting Hachimura dramatically upgrades the Lakers’ starting lineup because it now gives superstars James and Davis three other starters averaging double digits and capable of dropping 20 points in any game.
The Joker Defense
The Denver Nuggets will be by far the toughest opponent the Lakers have yet faced in these playoffs. They not only boast two-time MVP Nikola Jokic but also roll out a lineup with five players who can shoot the three ball.
The big question for the Lakers is how will the defend Nikola? The media consensus is the Lakers cannot allow Jokic to both be a big time scorer and playmaker. They have to take one of those away from the Denver Nuggets. Strategically, Ham and the Lakers’ #1 defense is based on Anthony Davis being free to roam and play free safety, something he won’t be able to do if he has to defend Nikola Jokic. So why not have Hachimura defend Joker?
The best solution might be to let Anthony Davis guard Aaron Gordon, the lowest volume and percentage 3-point shooter of the Denver starters. That will allow him to roam and help Hachimura defend the rim against Jokic. This game was always going to be a battle between the Lakers’ #1 playoff defense and the Nuggets’ #1 playoff offense. Having Rui Hachimura guard Nikola Jokic could be the key to the Lakers defense winning the series.
Hachimura has the size and length to be the primary defender on Nikola Jokic to free Anthony Davis to be free to roam and protect the Lakers’ paint and rim and the 3-point and midrange shooting game to boost the offense.
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Rui has been waiting two rounds of the playoffs to start and the Denver series will be his coming out party. I love the idea of Rui guarding Joker with AD roaming and helping.
Looking for Darvin Ham to make another impactful roster move to start this series, which is starting Rui Hachimura and having him be the primary defender against Nikola Jokic.
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The Vanderbilt Problem
The Lakers saw in Game 6 vs. Warriors how their offense was dramatically more efficient with five players who can stretch the floor and cannot be left unguarded in the corner. The Lakers cannot start Vando against Denver.https://t.co/MnJSIb19rV pic.twitter.com/RskSNjUaAP
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 16, 2023
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The Hachimura Solution
Starting Hachimura dramatically upgrades the Lakers’ starting lineup because it now gives superstars James and Davis three other starters averaging double digits and capable of dropping 20 points in any game.https://t.co/MnJSIb19rV pic.twitter.com/sQyiK6QBzP
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 16, 2023
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The Joker Defense
Hachimura has the size and length to be the primary defender on Nikola Jokic to free Anthony Davis to be free to roam and protect the Lakers’ paint and rim and the 3-point and midrange shooting game to boost the offense.https://t.co/MnJSIb19rV pic.twitter.com/fDJJk2McaU
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 16, 2023
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I agree Tom, this is a better match up for Rui than the Warriors were. Rui does have the strength to absorb the Contact from the Joker. I would worry though about LeBron with his sore foot having to chase Porter Jr. They run him a lot through screens to open up 3’s. I think it might be wise to switch up coverages throughout the game to keep the Joker off balance.
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I think this could work part of the time; I think that sometimes you might want to have Tristen Thompson on Joker as well when AD sits. Want to have a big body on him at all times, whether Rui, Thompson or AD. Mix it up and give him different looks. Also make him work on offense & defense. Jovic will probably guard AD, make him regret it, which will make him less effective on offense. I also think it is even more important to not give Jamaal Murray any stationary shooting looks when they try to pick and roll with Jovic.
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Thanks for joining Lakerholics, Brian. Enjoyed talking with you on Twitter. Can’t wait for tonight’s game. Huge task to win a third straight Game 1 so we might have to wait until Game 2. Want to see what Ham and his staff decide to do tonight.
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Thompson was an interesting addition. I still remember him doing a pretty good job defending Jokic. Don’t know if he still has anything left in the tank but I suspect he was signed because of his experience defending Nikola.
I’m eager to see what Darvin does to defend Joker. I don’t think Vando is big enough but Rue may be, even though the stats say they’re the same height and weight. To me, Rui is much bigger and longer and more physical.
Anyway, I’m still hoping for Darvin to start Rui tonight. Russell, Reaves, James, Hachimura, and Davis should be team’s starting lineup going forward.
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While Rui’s wingspan is only an inch more than Vando’s, Rui out weighs him by 20 pounds which is important when banging with Joker. Rui is built like a linebacker.
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“Rui is built like a linebacker.”
Michael, you are absolutely right. Love your description.
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Vando will be important in the finals if LA makes it there.
They won't make it there if the Denver defense can pull out a trump card whenever they want and leave Vando alone to disrupt elsewhere as we saw GS do.
— Cranjis McBasketball (@Tim_NBA) May 16, 2023
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I didn’t like the D-Lo Dennis starting choice at all. Too small, too many guys looking to make a pass rather than take a shot and no rebounding from the guard spot. Reaves at the 3 is too willowy, as well.
Start these guys instead and have LBJ start off defending Jokic:
D-Lo, Reaves, LW4, LBJ, AD.
I’m not convinced Rui can guard Jokic consistently and stay out of foul trouble. We can’t let Denver get into the bonus early because of some game-setting early foul calls. That look should be deployed to mix the coverage, not as the default go-to IMO. Michael Malone and Nikola Jokic are too good, and have seen this tactic already as the coach has eluded to for this to be what works consistently. We’re going to need to go full Borg and adapt as the situation demands. That starting 5, with LBJ taking Jokic in the half court sets, can cover Denver’s three point Others and take away a part of Jokic’s game.
With LW4 you get decent defense and a slasher that can finish above the rim whereas Dennis and D-Lo do not get up to finish in the paint. The float, flip and scurry. We need to be more forceful out of the gate. Faster, longer and jumping for the rebound.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers may have found the formula for optimizing LeBron James at this point in his career by surrounding him with an army of smart, young, talented, team-first players who could be his best supporting cast ever.
The Lakers making the conference finals stunned the basketball world and left the late-to-the-party pundits and need-to-see-it-to-believe-it doubters eating their false words but not realizing they haven’t seen anything yet. What Lakers’ critics and haters don’t see is Pelinka not only put together a roster than could help LeBron James win a ring at 38. He’s also assembled an army of young talent that perfectly complements today’s LeBron James.
The new-look roster Rob created was not a short-term cobbled-together shot to win LeBron one last championship at 38. It was a masterclass move to build a roster that could end James time as a Laker with a dynasty.
In what should be the twilight of his career, LeBron James is still a top-10 player capable of carrying his team to a championship, especially when surrounded on the Lakers by the best supporting cast ever in his career.The Los Angeles Lakers surround superstar LeBron James with 7 players, who can be broken down into four tiers, starting with the Second Superstar, the Starting Guards, the Starting Forwards, and the Backup Guards.
1. The Second Superstar
Heading that army of talent surrounding LeBron is 30-year old superstar Anthony Davis, who‘s finally taken the torch from James as the team’s most valuable player and reclaimed his standing as the league’s best defender.
Finally healthy and arguably playing even better than during the Lakers’ 2020 Bubble Championship run, Davis is #1 in the playoffs in defensive and total rebounds and blocked shots while anchoring the Lakers #1 defense. Davis is averaging 21.2/14.1/2.7 in 36.9 mpg shooting 53.0/27.3/83.8% with +7.5 plus/minus. Meanwhile, LeBron has been able to coast, averaging 23.4/10.0/5.3 in 37.4 mpg shooting 49.1/26.3/76.2% with +1.7 plus/minus.
While LeBron James is likely just a top-10 rather than top-5 NBA superstar, the new rim-and-paint focused Anthony Davis is healthy, engaged, and dominating as the best center and defensive player in the entire league.
2. The Starting Guards
After trading Westbrook and Beverley, the Lakers’ new starting backcourt has been 27-year old D’Angelo Russell and 25-year old Austin Reaves, a pair of young, do-everything combo guards who can shoot, pass, and defend.
The Russell and Reaves duo has not only given the Lakers two young lead guards who have size, length, and talent to score at all three levels, rebound at both ends of the court, and make plays for themselves and teammates. In the playoffs, Russell is averaging 15.7/3.3/5.0 in 31.6 mpg shooting 44.5/34.7/77.3% with +4.6 plus/minus while Austin Reaves is averaging 15.4/4.8/4.3 in 35.1 mpg shooting 43.4/38.7/85/7% with +6.8 plus/minus.
Two superstars and two legitimate stars almost guarantees the Los Angeles Lakers will have at least four players with double digit points every game. The Lakers hope Russell and Reaves will be their backcourt of the future.
3. The Starting Forwards
By trading for pair of 6′ 8″ power forwards in 24-year old Jarred Vanderbilt and 25-year old Rui Hachimura, the Los Angeles Lakers were able to finally fill their long-time need for taller defenders to guard bigger wing scorers.
Vanderbilt and Hachimura have given the Lakers a pair of ‘starting’ quality forwards with totally different skill sets. Vanderbilt is an legitimate elite wing defender while Hachimura has great potential as a 2-way 3&D wing. Vanderbilt is averaging 5.3/3.7/0.9 in 17.2 mpg shooting 40.7/25.0/66.7% with -0.3 plus/minus as a starter while Hachimura is averaging 11.3/3.6/0.6 in 21.2 mpg shooting 57.0/53.3/8.3% with +1.3 plus/minus off the bench.
Heading into Denver, there’s a possibility Darvin Ham may once again make a change to the starting lineup. Going big and playing Hachimura instead of Schroder would make great sense against the Denver Nuggets.
4. The Backup Guards
One of the Lakers’ greatest strengths in the playoffs so far has been the depth and versatility of their bench, especially their backcourt where a duo of ‘starting’ quality backup guards have empowered the team’s bench.
Steady contributions from Dennis Schroder and the re-emergence of Lonnie Walker after losing his starting job due to injury have given the Lakers consistent defensive chops and offensive firepower off the bench. Schroder is averaging 7.5/1.7/2.9 in 24.3 mpg shooting 41.1/30.8/84.6% with +4.5 plus/minus while Walker is averaging 6.8/0.9/0.9 in 13.4 mpg shooting 52.3/39.1/75.0% with +1.0 plus/minus. Walker was Memphis Game 4 hero.
The Lakers’ backcourt depth and diversity due to Dennis Schroder and Lonnie Walker IV was a big factor in their beating the second seed Grizzlies and defending champion Warriors in the first two rounds of the playoffs.
The Los Angeles Lakers remain slight underdogs to the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Finals, which start tomorrow night in Denver. L.A. will be looking to finish this road series in six games like rounds 1 and 2.
That means the Lakers must somehow steal one of the first two games in Denver. They flew to Denver last night to get a jump on getting acclimated to the altitude. The Nuggets are surely the best team the Lakers have faced. The Nuggets not only have 2-time MVP Nikola Jokic but also boast a lethal offensive team that shoots 3’s at 37.9%, 2nd best among all playoff teams. This series will undoubtedly come down to Anthony Davis vs. Nikola Jokic.
Should the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Denver Nuggets, they would then likely meet the Boston Celtics in what could be the greatest Finals in NBA history as both franchises are currently tied with 17 championships each. The Lakers have already pulled off the best comeback in NBA history, going from winning a Play-In game to taking down the favored #2 Grizzlies and defending champ Warriors is six games and making the conference finals.
Should the Los Angeles Lakers stretch their string of playoff series wins on the road to four and beat their rival Boston Celtics for the franchise’s 18th NBA championship, LeBron would likely consider this his best roster ever.
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It’s hard to compare 20 years of LeBron James’ supporting casts since the King’s career has spanned multiple generations of stars.
For sure, this supporting cast is one of the deepest, youngest, and most diverse rosters LeBron has ever had.
Should they win #18, I think that would make James the GOAT and this supporting cast the best LeBron has ever had in his 20 years in the NBA.
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Nice post Tom, this is certainly a quality group and several guys are young enough that they will certainly become even better players. But as far as LeBrons best supporting group, I have to give that to the Heat. 4 hall of famer’s along with some seasoned vets off the bench like Battier, Juan Howard and Mike Miller. That was quite a team. Personally I’m excited by the age of this group. They will provide a quality core beyond LeBron.
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Thanks, Michael. It’s so hard to compare teams from different eras. Those Heat teams were great no doubt.
For me, if this team can come through and win four road series to take #18 over the Celtics, they would be the best Lakers roster ever in my mind.
The story itself is the stuff of legends.
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Thanks, Dean. We’ll have to wait and see how this roster does the rest of these playoffs but coming back from 2-10 start, winning play-in, then winning four straight road playoff series including beating Celtics in Finals for #18 has to be considered one of the greatest finishes in NBA history. I might consider them the best Lakers team ever too. No bigger challenge than winning it all after the way we started. Total dream come true type of stuff that never ever happens.
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1. Second Superstar
Heading that army of talent surrounding LeBron is 30-year old Anthony Davis, who‘s finally taken torch from James and reclaimed standing as league’s best defender.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/y4rcXbCEoW
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
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2. The Starting Guards
After trading Westbrook and Beverley, the Lakers’ new starting backcourt has been 27-year old D’Angelo Russell and 25-year old Austin Reaves, a pair of young, do-everything combo guards who can shoot, pass, and defend.
https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/kBBX2R55i2
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
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3. The Starting Forwards
By trading for pair of 6′ 8″ power forwards in 24-year old Jarred Vanderbilt and 25-year old Rui Hachimura, the Los Angeles Lakers were able to finally fill their long-time need for taller defenders to guard bigger wing scorers.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/vO3SnAYnif
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
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4. The Backup Guards
One of the Lakers’ greatest strengths in the playoffs so far has been the depth and versatility of their bench, especially their backcourt where a duo of ‘starting’ quality backup guards have empowered the team’s bench.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/sVry37dbuY
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
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I’m astonished at how many Lakers fans are ready to throw in the towel and count the Lakers out after seeing Jokic and Murray both have the kind of transcendent performances that neither is likely to see again in this series.
Meanwhile, I refuse to think the Lakers will have another first half like Game 1 or that James and Davis will have another double-dud game like they did in Game 2. And despite all of the above, the Lakers almost won both games. Stop worrying, Lakerholics. Lakers going to pull off back-door sweep.