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LakerTom wrote a new post
Sometimes a picture’s clearly worth a thousand words. That smug smile on LeBron James’ face says it all as he eyes what could grow and develop into the deepest and most diverse supporting cast in his 20-year NBA career.
Slowly but surely, the rest of the basketball world is suddenly realizing the extreme roster makeover Rob Pelinka engineered at the trade deadline just might have transformed the Los Angeles Lakers into a championship team. Davis taking the torch from James, the emergence of Reaves, Schroder, and Walker, and trades for Hachimura, Russell, Vanderbilt, Beasley, and Bamba have morphed the Lakers from lottery team to legitimate title contender.
Even scarier for the rest of the NBA are the reports that the Lakers are so confident they have the key components to another championship that their plan from the start is to re-sign everybody for whom they traded. Watching how quickly this team has come together and how well they are playing has given the Lakers ownership and front office a sense of trust and confidence to invest heavily in the franchise’s next dynasty.
What makes this surrounding cast maybe the best LeBron James has ever had starts with Anthony Davis elevating his game and taking the torch from LeBron James as the team’s alpha superstar and its future franchise face.
With Davis ascending and an elite backcourt that includes Russell, Reaves, Schroder, and Walker, and front court with Vanderbilt and Hachimura, the Lakers no longer have to rely on LeBron for scoring and playmaking.
The Lakers have 7 players who could score 20 points on any given night in Davis, James, Russell, Reaves, Schroder, Hachimura, and Walker plus 3 players James trusts to run the offense in Russell, Reaves, and Schroder. That has freed LeBron for a role he’s never had the luxury to fill before, which is as the team’s ‘wild card’ that Lakers’ head coach Darvin Ham can play when he needs more scoring, playmaking, rebounding, or defense.
One of the things paramount in the Lakers’ decision to undergo an extreme makeover at the trade deadline was to finally surround LeBron James with a roster that could free him from primary scoring and playmaking duties. LeBron’s always been a genius managing his team’s playoff runs and not having to primary scoring or playmaking duties has freed him to focus specifically on defense, where he’s become the Director of Defense.
The Lakers still believe LeBron James will be able to play at a high level for several more seasons and the major moves at the trade deadline were designed to smooth his transition into as the Lakers ‘wild card’ superstar.
The Lakers have been playing ‘must win’ games for almost 3 months as they struggled to overcome a 2–10 start and fought their way to the play-in tournament and then to a 3–1 lead in the second round over the Warriors.
While the Lakers’ makeover was inspired, it was their revitalized defense powered by Anthony Davis protecting the rim like Bill Russell and Jarred Vanderbilt shutting down shooters like Michael Cooper that dominated. The ascension of Davis and addition of Vanderbilt were game changers. The Lakers’ 105.3 defensive rating, 47.7 rebounds per game, 7.5 blocks per game, and 14.8 stocks per game are all ranked #1 among playoff teams.
Lakers coach Darvin Ham has narrowed his playoff rotation to 8 players, including an elite starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, James, Vanderbilt, and Davis backed by a new 3-player bench of Schroder, Hachimura, and Walker. The return of Lonnie Walker IV was the latest savvy move by the Lakers’ rookie head coach, who’s been pushing all the right buttons. Walker not only saved the Lakers in Game 4 but gives them another difference maker.
The Lakers’ starting lineup has posted a +10 net rating and the team is the #1 ranked defense in the playoffs. Every one of the 8 Lakers players in Ham’s rotation has posted a positive net rating so far in these playoffs.
Unlike the other NBA teams left in the playoffs, the Los Angeles Lakers are an unfinished product that has only been together as a team since the trade deadline and desperately needs time to get better every game and series.
Darvin Ham and his staff deserve high praise for the job they did during a difficult and tumultuous regular season and for seamlessly changing direction saving the season and fighting their way into these playoffs. Darvin Ham may have started the season as a rookie NBA head coach but he’s learned on the fly how to build winning lineups and rotations and to make important offensive and defensive adjustments in the playoffs.
After dispatching the tough Memphis Grizzlies in 6 games, the Lakers now have the champion Golden State Warriors in a 3–1 hole in their critical second round series Game 5 scheduled tomorrow night in San Francisco. While the Warriors have the shooting to come back from a 3–1 hole, the Lakers continue to grow, develop, and get better as the series progresses. The true test will be whether L.A. can eliminate Golden State in Game 5.
Closing out the current NBA champion Golden State Warriors in a 5-game Gentleman’s Sweep is not going to be easy and should be an excellent test of just how far the new-look Los Angeles Lakers have come this season.
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Closing out the current NBA champion Golden State Warriors in a 5-game Gentleman’s Sweep is not going to be easy and should be an excellent test of just how far the new-look Los Angeles Lakers have come this season.https://t.co/W4G4tloTHG
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 10, 2023
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LakerTom wrote a new post
He may be a rookie head coach but the Los Angeles Lakers’ Darvin Ham not only outcoached the Golden State Warriors’ Steve Kerr but also forced them into a ‘must win’ Game 4 on Monday night at Crypto.com Arena.
If the Lakers win Game 4 Monday night, it would be the equivalent of a stake in the heart of the Warriors’ dynasty as they know as well as any team in the NBA just how difficult it is to come back from down 1–3 in a series. Since coming back from 1–3 is near impossible, the Warriors will come out even more desperate and determined to win than they did in Game 2. Win Game 4 and they would be at home for 2 of the 3 games left in the series.
There was some concern during the regular season about the age and lack of experience of Ham’s staff, which did not include a proven former NBA head coach and included multiple development oriented assistant coaches. While Darvin was resistant to making changes in the regular season, he and his staff have not hesitated to make major adjustments in the playoffs. His moves to put Vando on Steph and have Davis high drop won Game 1.
While the Warriors prevailed as expected in Game 2 as they iced the Lakers pick-and-roll game and shot lights out from deep, Darvin Ham and his staff made five genius adjustments that led to the Lakers 127–97 Game 3 victory.
1. Davis Guarding Jamychal Green
The move by Darvin Ham to have Anthony Davis guard JaMychal Green rather than Draymond Green was a key factor in freeing up AD to dominate the Warriors’ offense from the rim to the 3-point line as L.A. won Game 3.
Guarding JaMychal instead of Draymond allowed Anthony to extend his defensive range from the rim to the 3-point line without having to deal with guarding Draymond and stopping his elite playmaking and rebounding. Davis is unique among NBA centers in that he has the size, length, and athleticism to challenge shooters at the 3-point line and still recover quick enough to challenge shooter at the rim and block or alter their shots.
Taking Anthony Davis off of Draymond Green and putting him on JaMychal Green was a genius move by Darvin Ham that unleashed AD to defend the entire Warriors team and led to the Lakers taking a commanding 3–1 lead.
2. Vanderbilt Guarding Draymond Green
The other change in defensive assignments that ignited the Lakers’ defense was Darvin Ham’s decision to take Vanderbilt off Curry and instead put him on Draymond Green in an effort to stifle the Curry/Green pick-and-roll.
Vanderbilt not only has the defensive chops to guard Draymond but he can then simply switch whenever Green tries to set a pick for Steph Curry. By the end of the game, the Dubs had stopped running that play entirely. Having Vando guard Draymond killed the Curry/Green pick-and-roll. Steph finished Game 3 with 23 points on 9–21 shooting, 4 rebounds, and just 3 assists in 32 minutes. Draymond had just 2 point, 2 boards, and 4 assists.
Darvin Ham’s adjustment to have Jarred Vanderbilt guard Draymond Green not only resulted in shutting down Green offensively but also eliminating the Curry/Green pick-and-roll from the Warriors’ offensive repertoire.
3. Davis Returning to High-Drop
The Warriors made 21 threes and shot 40% from deep in Game 1, forcing the Lakers to abandon their high-drop pick-and-roll coverage for low drop traps, which was a disaster as Golden State made 21 threes and shot 50%.
After continuing to play low drop coverage in the first quarter and falling behind by 7 points, the Lakers suddenly returned to the high drop coverage where AD would extend enough to challenge 3-point shooters but not trap. Unlike in Game 1 where the Warriors demolished the Lakers’ high drop, this time Davis and the Lakers figured it out and were able not only to stifle the Warriors pick-and-roll attacks but also their lethal 3-point shooting.
Anthony Davis is the perfect defensive center to play high drop coverage against opposing pick-and-rolls. Golden State may have to go back to playing big because th Warriors’ small ball is not going to beat the Lakers.
4. Walker Replacing Brown, Jr.
Darvin Ham’s move to give Lonnie Walker IV an opportunity to replace Troy Brown, Jr. in the rotation for Game 3 paid off big as as Lonnie scored 12 points on 2–4 from deep and 4 rebounds and 2 steals in 24 minutes.
Walker had been starting early in the year before losing his role to injuries and then finding a completely remade roster when he was ready to return. He stayed ready, played well in Game 2, and answered when the bell rang. Walker gave the Lakers a 3-point scoring to keep up with the Dubs. Unlike Games 1 and 2 when they were outscored from deep, the Lakers hit 15 of 31 from deep for 48.4% against the Warriors’ 13 for 44 for 29.5% in Game 3.
Walker’s addition to the rotation was a genius move by Ham and a tribute to Lonnie’s hard work and staying ready for opportunity. He adds needed 3-point gravity to the Lakers’ backcourt for the rest of the playoffs.
5. Getting James Ball At Elbow
The last genius move by Darvin Ham in Game 3 was moving LeBron James to the post to close the game and make sure the Lakers’ offense didn’t stall like Game 2. Moving James to the elbow freed his scoring and playmaking.
Getting the ball to James at the elbow rather than outside the 3-point line changes the nature of the Lakers offensive game. At the elbow, LeBron is just one quick dribble or pass from an easy dunk or wide-open three. Strategically, it was as if Darvin Ham wanted Steve Kerr to know before Game 4 that if the Warriors continue to play small, they can expect the Lakers to play LeBron more and more at the elbow and in the low post.
Like all of the Game 3 adjustments the Lakers made, getting LeBron the ball below the free throw line could be the weapon that forces the Warriors to go back to two bigs for Monday night’s big showdown at Crypto.com.
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Agree 100%. Darvin has been making some great adjustments in both series and he hasn’t over-adjusted once, which is another common error. The Grizz never figured out Vando on Ja, not really. We stuck with it. The Warriors figured out Curry on Steph after one game. We changed it up. Sounds simple but it’s anything but.
Having the right players has helped him a lot. I love how he went to the mat for Russell Westbrook, it’s what a coach needs and should do. Once it was obvious it wasn’t working or gonna work, off the bench or starting, a trade was (finally) made. Still had praise for the dude.
Solid job so far, curious to see what wrinkles Steve comes up with, though.
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Lakers’ Darwin Ham May Be A Rookie But These 5 Adjustments Were Genius
1. Davis Guarding Jamychal Green
2. Vanderbilt Guarding Draymond Green
3. Davis Returning to High-Drop
4. Walker Replacing Brown, Jr.
5. Getting James Ball At Elbowhttps://t.co/SPOpWfAiK0— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 8, 2023
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Coach Ham has done great job in the playoffs. This will be the 8th time we have played the Warriors this year. I doubt if either coach has an adjustment left that would surprise the other. Moving forward it will about execution and playing with force. Considering the Warriors have played together for years and we are still learning each other, the Warriors may have a leg up on execution. But they can’t play with the same force that we can. I think that is where we will win the game.
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It will be interesting seeing what adjustments the Warriors make and whether Ham changes anything from Game 3. My guess is Ham will stand pat with same defensive assignments and wait to see what Kerr does, which is the big question.
I think Michael is correct that the two teams have seen what each other have and who wins will come down to execution. The Warriors know this is a ‘must win’ game for them and the Lakers know the last thing they want is to lose home court and be stuck in a 2-2 series with 2 of the 3 remaining games in SF. Both teams should come out equally desperate and determined.
Revert back to Looney or go all-in on small ball with Poole. Those seem to be the two adjustments analysts are predicting Kerr might turn to. For the Lakers, I think we will see the Lakers move LeBron into the high and low post and look to pound the Warriors like they did in Game 3. It will be Bully Ball vs. Small Ball.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
After waiting and wondering when and what Anthony Davis taking the torch from LeBron James would look like, the Lakers and their fans are finally getting a chance to see the James to Davis transition in real time.
And what a transition it’s been. The ‘New’ Anthony Davis has not only taken the torch from LeBron James as the Lakers’ lead superstar on offense and defense but is also on a mission to prove he’s the best player in the world. Anthony Davis was unstoppable at both ends of the court Tuesday night, dominating the paint and glass, scoring 30 points and dishing 5 assists on offense and blocking 4 shots and shutting down the Warriors on defense.
Surrounded by a trusted and talented roster that includes Davis, Reaves, Russell, Vanderbilt, Schroder, and Hachimura, the ‘New’ LeBron James no longer has to dominate the ball or be the leading scorer and playmaker. Instead he can focus on doing what the Lakers need to win, be it scoring, rebounding, playmaking, or defense. Tuesday night, he delivered 22 points, 11 rebounds, 4 assists, and 3 blocks, while orchestrating the defense.
AD finally taking the torch from LeBron could not have come at a better time for the Los Angeles Lakers, who’ve not only recovered from a dismal 2–10 start but are also now just 3 wins away from the conference finals. Anthony Davis is finally healthy and ready to take over as the Lakers alpha superstar at both ends of the court and the roster is talented and deep enough that LeBron James is now free to be their ‘do-anything’ superstar.
And that’s what makes the Lakers so scary: a ‘New’ Anthony Davis who’s playing like the best player in the world and a ‘New’ LeBron James who’s free to do and become whatever Los Angeles needs to win every game.
The ‘New’ Anthony Davis
What makes the ‘New’ Anthony Davis so scary is his transformation this season from an oft injured jumpshot-loving power forward to a bully-ball low-post juggernaut on offense and rim-protecting shot blocker on defense.
While he may never play 82 regular season games, Anthony Davis has now played in 20 straight Lakers games and is on a mission to lead the Lakers to their 18th NBA championship and prove he is the best player on the planet. For the Lakers, Anthony Davis taking the torch from LeBron James could not have come at a better time as the King has lost some explosiveness and lift most likely due to a combination of age and his lingering foot injury.
What makes the Lakers so scary is not Anthony Davis finally being healthy and playing at the championship level he played in the bubble. What makes the Lakers so scary is this is a totally ‘New and Improved’ Anthony Davis. This is an Anthony Davis who reminds you of Shaquille O’Neal on offense and Bill Russell on defense, a freakish blend of talent and athleticism who’s unleashed his true inner self as a throwback low-post two-way monster.
Anthony Davis’ domination of the Golden State Warriors has changed the dynamics of the Lakers and Warriors second round series and how the entire basketball world is now viewing the new-look Los Angeles Lakers. The Warriors will most likely look to go small tonight to try and salvage a win in Game 2 in San Francisco while the Lakers will look to get greedy and steal a second straight win to take a commanding 2–0 lead in the series.
Make no mistake. The Lakers truly believe they can take a stranglehold on the Warriors and punch their ticket to the Western Conference finals by stealing Game 2 tonight. The key to doing that is the ‘New’ Anthony Davis.
The ‘New’ LeBron James
What makes the ‘New’ LeBron James so scary is the Lakers no longer need him to be their leading scorer and playmaker. Instead, he’s now free to do whatever the team needs him to do to win. He’s like the Lakers’ wild card.
Whether it’s Father Time finally catching up or the lingering foot injury that’s hurt his lift and explosiveness, the timing is right for Anthony Davis to take over as Batman and LeBron James to take on the role of Robin. While injuries derailed Lakers’ hopes AD would take the torch from LeBron right after the bubble championship, the long awaited transition is finally happening and actually bolstering the Lakers’ championship chances.
Anthony Davis’ dramatic transformation into the best player in the world, Rob Pelinka’s masterful trade deadline roster makeover, and young Austin Reaves’ emergence have freed up and unleashed the New’ LeBron James. The Lakers now have six players in Davis, Russell, Reaves, Vanderbilt, Schroder, and Hachimura who can get 20 points any given night and three in Russell, Reaves, and Schroder who can run the offense as lead guard.
Imagine what a luxury it is for Lakers’ rookie head Darvin Ham to have LeBron James as his ‘utility’ superstar to provide whatever he needs on any given night, whether it be scoring, rebounding, playmaking, or defending. We saw in Game 1 how James’ basketball IQ and defensive savvy impacted the game as King was like a middle linebacker on defense calling out what the Warriors were trying to do and directing his defenders where to go.The ‘New’ LeBron James is the Lakers’ wild card, a joker Darvin Ham can deploy or unleash in an infinite number of ways to fill a critical need or take advantage of a unique opportunity to turn defeat into victory.
17 Comments-
What makes the ‘New’ Anthony Davis so scary is his transformation this season from an oft injured jumpshot-loving power forward to a bully-ball low-post juggernaut on offense and rim-protecting shot blocker on defense.https://t.co/q90dw288b6 pic.twitter.com/zItKD1XyUX
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 4, 2023
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This is an Anthony Davis who reminds you of Shaquille O’Neal on offense and Bill Russell on defense, a freakish blend of talent and athleticism who’s unleashed his true inner self as a throwback low-post two-way monster.https://t.co/q90dw288b6 pic.twitter.com/1gAzRgpN3u
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 4, 2023
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What makes the ‘New’ LeBron James so scary is the Lakers no longer need him to be their leading scorer and playmaker. Instead, he’s now free to do whatever the team needs him to do to win. He’s like the Lakers’ wild card.https://t.co/q90dw288b6 pic.twitter.com/SVbr2LVQsO
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 4, 2023
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At 38 LBJ is what he should have been even last year. But he had little choice then, now he does.
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LeBron still has 3 or 4 years of being a top flight Robin left in his career if he wants it. Unlike Kobe, I think James loves the game so much he would still enjoy that role, especially if it was producing more and more rings.
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The ‘New’ LeBron James is the Lakers’ wild card, a joker Darvin Ham can deploy or unleash in an infinite number of ways to fill a critical need or take advantage of a unique opportunity to turn defeat into victory.https://t.co/q90dw288b6 pic.twitter.com/NWTIr5l5J9
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 4, 2023
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While LBJ hasn’t been great, he has been good. The DLO, Austin, Dennis combination is delivering what the Lakers hoped Westbrook would. Players that can run the show so LBJ doesn’t always have too.
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I just love the versatility that the Lakers suddenly have with LeBron not having to be counted upon to be the leading scorer or playmaker. It’s like having three or four different stars in reserve to do whatever you need. If DLO, Austin, and Dennis can continue to play like they have, LeBron becomes an incredible wild card for LAL.
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We’d never have gotten 3 blocks and his middle linebacker calling out of every Warriors play and directing everybody where to go and what to do. That’s why the ‘New’ LeBron James is going to be something to watch. His defense was best in the playoffs in years.
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Touched on this in my 5er. The James Gang is a more complete organism than a LeBron James-led team. Where it used to feel like if The King didn’t score 30+ (efficiently), dish 8-10 dimes and grab 1/4-1/3 of the rebounds you were in jeopardy of losing a playoff game.
Now? With the James Gang in tow he is still leading the team, he’s just not dominating the ball. It’s making the Lakers harder to guard, especially in the half court, and it’s saving him (a little) for when we might need a turn-back-the-clock game from him. It’s a more complete team.
The Lakers look like they’re rolling pretty hard right now. If I were to nitpick it would be for Wenyan to play well enough to get AD 4-5 minutes of game-time rest in the second half. Maybe to see Troy Brown’s 12 minutes go to Malik to see if he can get hot or LW4 so he can attack the rim and maybe pick up a foul or two but honestly those could work against as much as for us.
Might be just as well to leave things as-is, although I do worry about the workload with fewer days between games from here on out. If LeBron scores 20-25, Davis scores 30+ in the manner he has been doing (inside, pressuring the defense and piling up team fouls), D-Lo can score 15-20 and one other player can score 15-20 we’re hard to beat.
If the Warriors shut down Reaves, Vando, Rui and Dennis and they all struggle this will be a different game 2 and we may need some of The King to get us another Chase Center win. Even if we don’t get it, we’re still in the driver’s seat until someone beats us at Crypto.
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I hope mongo has been enjoying these games where AD is (finally) playing like a lot of us have wanted him to for years.
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Thanks for reading and commenting, Jamie. Agree 100% with everything in your comment. I expect the Warriors to come out shooting lights out tonight with 4 shooters and Draymond starting.
If the games get out of control early, I think we’ll see Ham pull James and Davis and be satisfied to get out of dodge with stealing home court. If the Lakers hang tough and the game remains winnable, I think we’ll see LeBron and AD play 40 mpg but not the entire second half.
I feel the same way as you do about Brown’s minutes. I still hope those minutes can eventually go to Mamba. That’s what makes the most sense. He’s the one player who can and should be Davis’ backup.
I just want the Lakers to come out and play well, make the necessary adjustments, and be greedy. We shook up the Dubs on Tuesday but there are lots we could do tonight to really take command of this series and playoffs. Don’t settle. Lakers need to go for the juglar tonight.
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Mo is too slow to hang with Draymond and Looney would kill him on the glass. Also that ankle might still be bothering him as he was listed as out n the first game if i remember. This series is a great reason why I wish we had kept Thomas Bryant, even if he wasn’t sunshine and puppy dogs about his role. He would be getting Wenyan’s minutes right now and provide the same hustle but with more in the back pocket to bang with Looney and Green and much better offense.
It is what it is, though. In the end the best thing about Mo will likely be his money coming off the cap this summer when we release him. I’d sure like Malik to make his option this summer a worthy discussion and a hard decision but that just hasn’t happened, yet.
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I do agree Mo is not a great fit against Green or Looney but were only talking about 8 minutes per game. Gabriel hustles and is not a rim protector but it far superior to anything Thomas ‘no defense’ Bryant would have given us.
I’d love to trade Beasley and Bamba but I think we’re going to have to be satisfied with bringing back Reaves, Russell, Hachimura, and Schroder, which is probably going to cost us over $75M in taxes.
I think we use #17 pick to get a great young shot blocker to backup AD and act as future insurance. I’d love to draft Derek Lively or Adem Bona with that pick.
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Mo definitely would be killed on defense against a small team. He just can’t switch on the perimeter. And in the last Grizzlies game Aldama drove past him for 3 layups and he isn’t exactly a speed demon. What is great about AD is he can’t be played off the floor by a small ball team. Mo can be. LeBron and Rui are bigger than anyone other than Looney. I do not think we will play AD 44 minutes again today since we already have a game in our pocket. I think we just need to make a few more 3’s. While are not a great 3 point shooting team we are not this bad. We shot 33% as a team this year and that was with LeBron and Westbrook taking a large amount of 3’s. DLO can make them and Austin too. We just make a few more.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The headlines will say the Lakers and Warriors second round matchup is about LeBron James and Steph Curry but the truth is Los Angeles cannot win this series unless Anthony Davis takes the torch from LeBron James.
While 38-year old LeBron James and 35-year old Steph Curry are the perfect storyline, what’s likely to determine who wins this series is whether the Warriors are able to prevent 30-year old Anthony Davis from dominating. After two disappointing injury plagued seasons, Anthony Davis has finally gotten back to the superstar level he was when L.A. won the championship in the bubble and now appears ready to take the torch from LeBron James.
Frankly, it’s a shame this series is a second round matchup and not the conference finals as there are so many great storylines besides LeBron and Steph, including Davis vs. Green and D’Angelo Russell vs. his old team. Frankly, the NBA has to be elated at how these playoffs have turned out. The parity is rampant, the games terrific, the stars super, the matchups elite. The last 8 teams standing amazingly includes teams from all 8 seeds.
What makes this matchup exciting is both the Lakers and Warriors are finally healthy and playing their best basketball of the season with deep. versatile rosters that each featuring a pair of Hall of Fame superstars.
The Warriors opened as slight favorites despite the Lakers winning the season series 3–1, including the last three games. Most analysts favor the Warriors because of Steph Curry and their championship pedigree.Anthony Davis and the Lakers must come out with the same ‘Game 7’ approach versus the Warriors they used in Game 6 against the Grizzlies. Their goal tonight is to steal Game 1 from an exhausted Warriors team.
Whether they can steal home court from the Warriors will depend on how dominant Anthony Davis is at both ends of the court in the next 2 games. To beat the Warriors, the Lakers need AD to take the torch from LeBron.Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers must dominate the paint on both ends to pull off a surprise upset of the Golden State Warriors tonight on their way to winning the series in 6 games like they did to Memphis.
Anthony Davis on Defense
In the Los Angeles Lakers’ 40-point close-out thrashing of the Memphis Grizzlies Friday night, Anthony Davis showed current DPOY Jaren Jackson, Jr. and the rest of the NBA who’s really the league’s best defensive player.
Davis’ defense in the Memphis series was a master class in how to shut down the other team’s defense by taking away anything in the paint or at the rim and turning it into fast break points and points off turnovers. Against the Grizzlies, Anthony Davis averaged 10.5 rebounds, 2.0 blocks, and 1.3 steals. He also posted a stellar individual defensive rating of 100.4, which is the lowest of centers who played at least 20 minutes per game.
As a team, the Lakers’ 102.8 playoff defensive rating for the Grizzlies series makes them the second best defensive team in the playoffs. The Warriors posted a 109.3 5th ranked defensive rating for their first round series.
The Lakers 38.3 defensive rebounds and 9.2 blocks per game were 1st in the playoffs and their 7.0 steals in a game were 7th best. The Lakers averaged 16.2 stocks per game in the first round, which is also ranked 1st in NBA.Davis and the Lakers will look to physically dominate the Warriors in the paint on defense. Davis and James will defend non-shooters Looney and Green so they can both roam around and play free safeties on defense. Vanderbilt, Russell, and Reaves will guard Curry, Thompson, and Wiggins. The Lakers may switch everything to keep Warriors’ shooters in front of them with Davis expanding his drop coverage and hedging and trapping.
Despite criticism for being injury prone, Anthony Davis has established that, when healthy, he is clearly the best defensive center in the league. No other center can defend all five positions at all three levels like he can.
Anthony Davis on Offense
Anthony Davis transforming himself from a jump-shot loving power forward to a full-time low post monster is going to have a dramatic impact on the Los Angeles Lakers’ offense against the Warriors and other teams.
Davis dominating opposing centers in the paint generates big advantages for the Lakers in points in the paint and made free throws, which is part of their formula for winning despite losing the 3-point shooting differential. The new-look Lakers offensive goal is to have Davis touch the ball on every possession. For his part, Anthony has looked to attack immediately when he gets the ball, which has made it harder for teams to double team him.
The trade for D’Angelo Russell and the emergence of Austin Reaves have made Anthony Davis’ transformation possible, giving the Lakers’ two point guards who can score and set up teammates for easy buckets in the paint. Russell and Reaves both have crafty handles and offensive games that are perfect fits for optimizing Anthony Davis strengths are a big man whether bounce passes off of pick-and-rolls or dunked lobs off drive-and-dishes.
With Russell’s and Reaves’ emergence and Davis’ ascension, James no longer has to be the team’s leading scorer or playmaker. Now he can focus on whatever the team needs to win, be it scoring, playmaking, or defense.
These changes make the Los Angeles Lakers’ offense a more dangerous as they now have four players who are all elite at attacking the paint in Davis, James, Russell, and Reaves as well as make plays for their teammates.For the Los Angeles Lakers to succeed, Anthony Davis needs to take the torch from LeBron James and become the consistent go-to scorer his team can count on to be dominant in the paint and from the free throw line.
9 Comments-
Anthony Davis and the Los Angeles Lakers must dominate the paint on both ends to pull off a surprise upset of the Golden State Warriors tonight on their way to winning the series in 6 games like they did to Memphis.https://t.co/gYZgjWzyKh
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 2, 2023
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In the Los Angeles Lakers’ 40-point close-out thrashing of the Memphis Grizzlies Friday night, Anthony Davis showed current DPOY Jaren Jackson, Jr. and the rest of the NBA who’s really the league’s best defensive player.https://t.co/gYZgjWzyKh pic.twitter.com/nzkFhQfOlH
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 2, 2023
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Anthony Davis transforming himself from a jump-shot loving power forward to a full-time low post monster is going to have a dramatic impact on the Los Angeles Lakers’ offense against the Warriors and other teams.https://t.co/gYZgjWzyKh pic.twitter.com/lIXz7qoAad
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 2, 2023
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I’d rather LeBron and AD shut down the rebounding games of Looney and Green rather than spring for a couple of steals. Win the rebounding battle and you give yourself a great shot at winning the series. This isn’t a light’s out shooting Warriors team, they rely on second chance points in the half court and overwhelming you with attempts at the goal. If AD and LBJ can keep the two best rebounders on GS in check that’s what will swing the series.
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Hi, Jamie. Since you brought up the rebounding battle, which I agree with, don’t you think this would be the series where we are going to need Tristan Thompson? Or maybe Mo Bamba?
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Time to keep the rotations narrow so you have better quality players on the court all the time. That’s also how we build chemistry and continuity as we advance in the playoffs. We still are a very new team at this point.
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Looney and Green aren’t going to overpower Anthony and LeBron on the boards like they did Sabonis. The bigger concern is that missed thress often create long rebounds. Besides our bigs dominating the glass at both ends, we need our guards to win those 50/50 long rebounds.
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We need to win these five differentials:
1. Rebounding
2. Points in the paint
3. Made free Throws
4. Fast Break Points
5. Points Off Turnover
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The 40-point whipping the Los Angeles Lakers dropped to close out the Memphis Grizzlies Friday night was a warning to the rest of the NBA that their new roster could be even better than the bubble champs’ roster.
It’s obviously premature to compare the current Lakers squad, which just posted its first series win in the 2023 playoffs, with the 2020 roster that went 16–5 on the way to the team’s 17th NBA championship in the bubble. But the similarities almost scream to be compared as both teams boasted healthy and available superstars in James and Davis, peaked right at the start of the playoffs, and totally dominated their first round opponents.
The challenge for the new-look Lakers, who’ve only had a couple of months together, is to grow and get better every series and develop the chemistry, and continuity needed to legitimately compete for an NBA championship. They understood when they madeover the roster at the trade deadline that it was likely to be next season before the team had enough time together to compete but the changes have been so good they’ve raised expectations.
While the new-look Lakers still have a long way to go, let’s look at how the two rosters compare when it comes to the superstars, starting lineups, and roster depth and what roster upgrades the Lakers still need to make.
Comparing Superstars
NBA championships are about superstars and the big question is how do LeBron James and Anthony Davis compare to the version of themselves that won the 2020 championship in the bubble two and a half years ago?
LeBron James at 38-years old has definitely lost some athleticism since October 2020 but as we saw from Friday night’s big win, he can still take his game to another level, although not as frequently or as often as before. Back in the bubble, James was a top-5 player. Today, he’s probably slipped to a top-10 player and his role has changed because the Lakers no longer need him to post 30/20/10 every game. They’ve diversified their offense.
Anthony Davis healthy at 30-years old has evolved into a more effective and impactful version of the player he was in the bubble. He’s traded his power forward position and love of jump shot to play center in the paint. And like LeBron, Davis does not have to score 30 points and pull down 20 rebounds per game for the Lakers to win. The difference is he’s become the best overall rebounder, rim protector, and defensive anchor in the league.
While Father Time has slowed James down, Davis has become even more dominant in the paint. As long as they are healthy, LeBron James and Anthony Davis are still the premier superstar duo in the entire NBA.
2023 Superstars = 2020 Superstars
–2023 James < 2020 James.
-2023 Davis > 2020 Davis.
Comparing Starting Lineups
There’s a good argument the Lakers’ current starting lineup of D’Angelo Russell, Austin Reaves, LeBron James, Jarred Vanderbilt, and Anthony Davis could be better than that of the 2020 bubble championship team.
The first round starters for the Lakers’ 2020 championship team were Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Danny Green, LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and JaVale Mcgee. They had 134.4 OffRtg, 102.3 DefRtg, and 32.0 NetRtg. The current Lakers roster has only been together for two months compared to a full year for the 2020 roster but still posted a 113.2 OffRtg, 94.0 DefRtg, and 19.2 NetRtg, which should get better as they move on.
The major difference between the current Lakers’ starting lineup and the 2020 bubble lineup is D’Angelo Russell and Austin Reaves, combo guard who dramatically expand the team’s playmaking and 3-point shooting.
The Lakers other non-superstar starter is Jarred Vanderbilt, who starts at power forward and whose role is the team’s best perimeter defender who guards the opponent’s top scorer. Against Memphis, that was Ja Morant.While 2023 James and Davis may be close to their 2020 versions, Russell, Reaves, and Vanderbilt are a more complementary trio of players to start alongside the Lakers’ superstars than Caldwell-Pope, Green, and McGee.
2023 Starters >>> 2020 Starters
–2023 Russell > 2020 Caldwell-Pope
-2023 Reaves > 2020 Green
-2023 James < 2020 James
-2023 Vanderbilt > 20 Morris
-2023 Davis > 2020 Davis
Comparing Roster Depth
While the current Lakers starters are a better starting lineup than the 2020 title starters, the bubble championship bench was deeper and stronger than the current Lakers bench, which has struggled some in the playoffs.
The Lakers essentially played a 10-man rotation in the first round of the 2020 bubble championship with team’s main backups being Rajon Rondo, Alex Caruso, Talen Horton-Tucker, Kyle Kuzma, and Dwight Howard.
The Lakers’ current backups include Dennis Schroder, Malik Beasley, Troy Brown, Jr., Rui Hachimura, and Wenyen Gabriel, although Ham narrowed the rotation to 8 players by taking Beasley and Brown out of the rotation.The Lakers’ bubble reserves averaged 39.3 points per game, spread over all five backups. The Lakers’ current reserves are averaging 39.7 points per game with Schroder and Hachimura producing most of the points.
In head-to-head comparisons, Rondo, Caruso, and Howard are probably better backups than Schroder, Beasley, and Gabriel. Similarly, Hachimura and Brown, Jr. are likely better backups than Kuzma and Horton-Tucker.While both lineups have their strengths, the 2020 bubble championship reserves are probably slightly better than the Lakers’ current reserves, although there’s still a chance other reserves could surprise everybody.
2023 Back-Ups < 2020 Back-Ups
-2023 Schroder < 2020 Rondo
-2023 Beasley < 2020 Caruso
-2023 Troy Brown, Jr. > 2023 Horton-Tucker
-2023 Hachimura > 2020 Kuzma
-2023 Gabriel < 2020 Howard.
And The Winner Is…
As promising as the new-look Lakers 2023 roster has been, they’ll have to win an NBA championship before there can be any conversation whether they are better than the purple-and-gold’s 2020 bubble championship team.
If this version of the Lakers can somehow grow enough on the fly to win the franchise’s league leading 18th NBA championship, they would have to at the least be considered to be the equal of the 2020 bubble champs.
It’s more likely the Lakers will have to wait until next season when they add a legitimate 3&D wing starter and quality backup rim protector before they actually have a roster that’s better than the 2020 championship team.With the Warriors beating the Kings in Sacramento this afternoon, the Lakers’ current roster will now have to go through the current NBA champions to win the title this season, a challenging gauntlet at best.
In the Lakers favor is 4 days off and a history of matching up pretty well with the Dubs this year, having won the last three of the four games between the two teams this season, although the personnel has varied.In the end, what’s not to love about 38-year old LeBron James again having to go through 35-year old Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors to lead his Los Angeles Lakers to their league leading 18th NBA championship.
9 Comments-
Could Current Lakers Roster Be Better Than the Bubble Championship Team?
Comparing Superstars
NBA championships are about superstars. How do James and Davis compare to the version of themselves that won the 2020 title in bubble 2 1/2 half years ago?
https://t.co/4jTAvQmj1Z pic.twitter.com/vyeTJcr0zY
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 30, 2023
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Could Current Lakers Roster Be Better Than the Bubble Championship Team?
Comparing Starting Lineups
Good argument Lakers’ current starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, James, Vanderbilt, and Davis could be better than that of 2020 bubble champs team.https://t.co/4jTAvQmj1Z pic.twitter.com/T4siggOpfD
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 30, 2023
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Could Current Lakers Roster Be Better Than the Bubble Championship Team?
Comparing Roster Depth
While current Lakers starters are better than 2020 starters, bubble champs' bench was deeper & stronger than current bench, which has struggled in playoffs.https://t.co/4jTAvQmj1Z pic.twitter.com/TpP8kWhkp8
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 30, 2023
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Could Current Lakers Roster Be Better Than the Bubble Championship Team?
And The Winner Is…
As good as new-look Lakers 2023 roster has been, they need championship before there can be conversation as better than 2020 bubble championship team.https://t.co/4jTAvQmj1Z pic.twitter.com/m5ivRIUUOF
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 30, 2023
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In the end, what’s not to love about 38-year old LeBron James again having to go through 35-year old Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors to lead his Los Angeles Lakers to their league leading 18th NBA championship.https://t.co/4jTAvQmj1Z
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 30, 2023
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Thanks, Buba. Warriors are going to be a monster challenge to overcome but I think Lakers are primed and ready for them. Think we have a chance to steal Game 1 if we can shoot well.
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Thanks for reading another in our “Way Too Early But We’re Writing About It Anyhow” series of Laker articles. I think you wrote this same article like two months ago and came to a slightly different conclusion based solely on Malik and Mo’s ability to hit the threes and glowingly proclaimed that this roster was WAY better than the 2020 one.
Anyhow, it still doesn’t matter. We beat an injured, beat up and self-inflicted beat down Grizzlies team and face an NBA dynasty in the next round. Without Stephen Adams this was not a good test for the Lakers and they beat a team just about everyone outside of Tennessee thought they should beat.
Luckily the Kings weren’t a good test for this version of the Warriors, either. Inexperience, youth and fractured finger on De’Aaron Fox’s shooting hand gave the Warriors a huge lift that set the stage for Steph’s historic shooting. Sabonis should have been taking those open 20 footers for weeks and started in game 7. Bad coaching there on Mike Brown.
Now, throw it all out and start at 0. Lakers need to win at least one in Chase Center, might as well make it game 1. Personally I think the upcoming series hinges on pace and rebounding. Take care of the ball, get out when we can, and don’t let Looney become the second-coming of Dennis Rodman and we have a really good shot at moving on.
In terms of comparing anything to The Bubble…frankly it’s just plain silly. There was zero travel which means everyone got right to treatment, film and next game prep. Very little actual media, just Zoom. Environment was like NBA Summer Camp with the fishing, card games, Jimmy’s tasty (and likely over-priced) coffee, and so on. That ain’t ever happening again.
Guys who did well in The Bubble have shown they can either bring it to the big lights or they can’t. Brooks, who was lethal in the quiet of the Bubble, wilted under big lights and real pressure of home crowds out in the real world. The Steph’s and Lebron’s have that mental edge few possess. AD hasn’t been close to Bubble AD except for small stretches in the regular season, as just one example. His defense, though, has been elite in both environments and that’s what the Lakers need.
In some ways, if you combine Michael’s post down yonder and this one it really accurately surmises where the Lakers at and what we’re all hoping for. We’re hoping for a guy or two to play beyond their value (thus likely pricing them off the team this summer), we’re hoping an unheralded player, like Caruso before them, can rise to the challenge and deliver quality minutes on both ends.
The Bubble is a one and done thing, it has to be considered that. No asterisk, just the reality of not flying across country (and you can hear LeBron himself touch on that in his last post-gamer when asked about both potential teams they could face before it was decided: he only mentioned the travel). I’m glad we won it, but it was never a barometer for future success and should not be taken as such now. What these Lakers are doing will be more impressive both because of LeBron’s age, AD’s internally created inconsistencies, and the general inexperience in the playoffs this current roster has.
That’s how I’m looking at it, anyhow. This was a team that stood at 2-10, seemed destined for a lottery pick that would then be sent packing to NOLA, and has turned itself around both inside and out. Quickly. How complete and utterly they continue that journey is what will define them. Not the past.
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I have the Lakers showing their growth from round 1 to round 2 by beating the NBA champions in their home arena to move into the Western Conference Finals against the Denver Nuggets.
With Celtics losing tonight, Lakers should finally open as the new favorites to win the NBA championship. Could there be a Lakers vs. Heat rematch in the Finals. Only way for LA to get home court.
Everything breaking in the Lakers favor as they get better every game and series. Going to take a real surprise for any of the teams who are left to derail this Lakers juggernaut.