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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Los Angeles Lakers are expected to trade Patrick Beverley, Kendrick Nunn, and Damian Jones plus one of their two available first round draft picks to upgrade their roster sometime in the next two to four weeks.
Beverley, Nunn, and Jones have all had disappointing seasons so far for the Lakers. Together, they’re averaging 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assists per game combined. Their only value is their expiring contracts.
While Nunn and Jones are no longer in the Lakers’ rotation, Patrick Beverley remains a starter despite what the advanced stats and eye test are saying. The Lakers are hoping he’ll suddenly start hitting his shots.How successful the Lakers are in trading Beverley’s and Nunn’s expiring contracts will depend heavily on whether or not L.A. is willing to offer prospective trading partners a protected or unprotected first round pick.
Frankly, unless the Lakers are willing to give up an unprotected pick, it’s doubtful they would be able to to make a trade that would have a major impact. If they want an impact trade, the pick has to be unprotected.The next issue the Lakers have to address is making sure what they get back in any trade justifies giving up an unprotected pick? They need to trade for players who are keepers who fit the Lakers’ long-term plans.
Los Angeles needs to trade for players who are going to help them win for more than just this season. Trading for a player on an expiring contract can only work if the Lakers are certain they can re-sign and keep the player.Strategically, the Lakers’ goals in trading is to get back size, shooting, and defense in players who’re better fits that Beverley and Nunn. The Lakers need to trade surplus small guards and for bigger guards or wings or bigs.
Ideally, the Lakers want to upgrade their roster and create another open roster spot so expect a 3 for 2 trade. Also expect the two players coming back to include a more costly impact player and a cheaper young prospect.The goal behind making a non-Westbrook trade now is to give the current roster a needed boost in size, shooting, and defense and buy more time to consider whether or not to trade Russell Westbrook or go for the cap space.
The Lakers are still hoping that the Chicago Bulls or Toronto Raptors will continue to struggle and ultimately decide to become sellers or other opportunities will arise as the February 9th trade deadline approaches.In the meantime, the Lakers need to pick up their winning pace and climb up the Western Conference standings. Here are five non-Westbrook trades the Lakers could pull off with one unprotected first round draft pick.
1. Bojan Bogdanovic and Saddiq Bey Trade
Bojan Bogdanovic, SF, 33 years old, 6′ 7″ 226 lbs
21.1/3.6/2.4 on 14.0/6.0/5.1 shots for 49.9%/42.5%/89.5%Saddiq Bey, SF, 23 years old, 6′ 8″ 215 lbs
14.4/4.1/1.6 on 11.4/5.4/4.1 shots for 40.3%/30.1%/85.7%Adds 35.5 points, 7.7 rebound, and 4.0 assists
Subtracts 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assistsPG: Reaves, Westbrook, Schröder
SG: Walker IV, Christie, Open
SF: BOGDANOVIC, BEY, Brown, Jr
PF: James, Gabriel, Toscano-Anderson
CE: Davis, Bryant, Open
2. Kelly Oubre, Jr. and P.J. Washington Trade
Kelly Oubre, Jr., SG, 27 years old, 6′ 6″ 203 lbs
20.9/5.4/1.2 on 18.2/7.6/4.1 shots for 42.7%/32.1%/71.4%P.J. Washington, PF, 24 years old, 6′ 7″ 230 lbs
15.0/4.7/2.4 on 13.7/5.6/2.5 shots for 41.1%/31.8%/78.3%Adds 35.9 points, 10.1 rebounds, and 3.6 assists
Subtracts 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assistsPG: Reaves, Westbrook, Schröder
SG: Walker IV, Christie, Open
SF: OUBRE, JR, Brown, Jr, Open
PF: James, WASHINGTON, Toscano-Anderson
CE: Davis, Bryant, Gabriel
3. Josh Richardson and Jakob Poeltl Trade
Josh Richardson, SG, 29 years old, 6′ 6″ 200 lbs
10.7/2.4/2.9 on 9.0/5.0/1.6 shots for 41.3%/36.8%/85.3%Jakob Poeltl, CE, 27 years old, 7′ 1″ 260 lbs
12.9/9.9/3.5 on 8.9/0.0/2.8 shots for 64.0%/0.0%/51.8%Adds 23.6 points, 12.3 rebounds, 6.1 assists
Subtracts 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assistsPG: Reaves, Westbrook, Schröder
SG: RICHARDSON, Walker IV, Christie,
SF: Brown, Jr, Toscano-Anderson, Open
PF: James, Gabriel, Open
CE: Davis, POELTL, Bryant
4. Kelly Olynyk and Jarred Vanderbilt Trade
Kelly Olynyk, CE, 31 years old, 6′ 11″ 240 lbs
13.0/5.1/3.3 on 8.2/3.5/3.3 shots for 53.4%/43.9%/84.2%Jarred Vanderbilt, PF, 23 years old, 6′ 9″ 214 lbs
8.6/8.2/2.8 on 6.0/1.0/1.6 shots for 59.2%/40.0%/67.4%Adds 21.6 points, 13.3 rebounds, and 6.1 assists
Subtracts 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assistsPG: Reaves, Westbrook, Schröder
SG: Walker IV, Christie, Open
SF: Brown, Jr, Toscano-Anderson
PF: James, VANDERBILT, Gabriel
CE: Davis, OLYNYK, Bryant
5. Gary Trent, Jr. and Otto Porter, Jr. Trade
Gary Trent, Jr., SG, 23 years old, 6′ 5″ 209 lbs
16.9/2.0/1.4 on 13.8/6.8/3.6 shots for 43.0%/33.5%/77.8%Otto Porter, Jr., SF, 29 years old, 6′ 8″ 198lbs
5.5/2.4/1.0 on 3.8/2.1/1.0 shots for 50.0%/35.3%/100.0%Adds 22.4 points, 4.4 rebounds, and 2.4 assists
Subtracts 12.7 points, 7.8 rebounds, and 3.8 assistsPG: Reaves, Westbrook, Schröder
SG: TRENT, JR, Walker IV, Christie,
SF: Brown, Jr, Toscano-Anderson
PF: James, PORTER, JR, Gabriel
CE: Davis, Bryant, Open-
LakerTom1 year, 11 months ago
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Whether a byproduct of front office dysfunction or a carefully crafted trade position, the Los Angeles Lakers have let it be known that they are unlikely to trade Russell Westbrook or both of their two available first round picks.
With Westbrook playing better off the bench, the Lakers are apparently now prepared to keep him and allow his $47 million contract to expire, which theoretically could generate up to $35 million in cap space for L.A.
The Lakers are still willing to trade Patrick Beverley, Kendrick Nunn, Damian Jones, and Juan Toscano-Anderson, all of whom have not played as well as expected. Together their combined salaries total $22.4 million.The Lakers’ latest grand plan is for the team to start playing up to potential. Since the 2–10 start, they’ve gone 9–6 and are 12th in the West at 11–16. Make free throws and they would have gone 11–4 and would now be 13–14.
Starting tonight against the Denver Nuggets, the Lakers need to come out and start putting everything together. They have a formula to win despite their lack of shooting by dominating free throws and points in the paint.Besides Darwin Ham continuing to fine tune his starting and closing lineups, the Lakers will also be looking to get more help via a Beverley, Nunn, filler, and pick trade sometime over the next two to four weeks.
Once that trade is made, look for the Lakers to make one final review of the Westbrook trade situation as they approach the February 9 Trade Deadline to see if there were any newer and better opportunities to trade Russ.What’s next for the Lakers? Here are five steps they need to take in order between now and the February 9 Trade Deadline to keep their hopes of legitimately competing for the 2022–23 NBA championship alive and well.
1. Bench Beverley and Schroder
Patrick Beverley and Dennis Schroder played together for 123 minutes in 8 games this season with an offensive rating of 105.8, defensive rating of 113.7, and net rating of -7.9. Paired up, they’ve been outscored by 63 points.
The time has come for Darvin Ham to remove both Beverley and Schroder from the starting lineup. Their inability to effectively shoot or defend the three combined with their lack of size is a bad fit to open or close games.
The Lakers are entering a critical phase in a final push to save the season. It’s time for Darvin Ham to bench Patrick Beverley and Dennis Schroder and start his best five players not named Russ to give the Lakers a shot.
2. Start Reaves and Brown, Jr.
Darvin Ham needs to start Austin Reaves and Troy Brown, Jr. alongside LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Lonnie Walker IV. That would give the Lakers a starting lineup with better size, outside shooting, and defense.
The five-man lineup of Reaves, Walker, Brown, James, and Davis has surprisingly only played a total of 4 minutes in 3 games this season, posting a 157.1 offensive rating, 70.0 defensive rating, and +87.1 net rating.
The Lakers have struggled all season with slow starts to games and second halves and much of that is the mix of payers Ham has started and closed games. Everybody on this lineup has size, can shoot, and can defend.Until the Lakers trade to get some help, it’s up to Darvin Ham to make adjustments to have the Lakers playing better. Replacing Beverley and Schroder with Reaves and Brown, Jr. is a move Ham needs to make now.
3. Bench Russ to Close Games
The next step in season-long transformation of Russell Westbrook from superstar to 6MOY is his removal from many if not all closing situations. Even if he’s playing well, Russ is simply too dangerous to close games.
Used like Ham has been using him, Russ is the ultimate minutes eater and stat producer. He constantly makes great plays few in the league can make. He’s especially valuable in the middle of games and during long seasons.
But coming down the stretch of games or in the playoffs, Russ’ horrible shot selection, tendency to turn the ball over, and inability to shoot become too chaotic and dangerous to tolerate as part of the standard closing team.Darvin Ham has to look at the matchups, how Westbrook has been playing, where we are in the game, and limit his participation to close games and focus his effort at the middle of halves when Russ can dominate.
4. Trade Beverley and Nunn
The Lakers only have player contracts to make two trades: a Beverley and Nunn trade for a player or players earning around $20 million per year and a Westbrook trade for player or player earning around $47 million per year.
The expectation is the Lakers will make the smaller Beverly and Nunn trade in the next two to four weeks. The trade will likely include one of their draft picks and would help even if it were the only trade they make. Lakers’ targets include Bojan Bogdanovic, O.G. Anunoby, Kyle Kuzma, Eric Gordon, Jae Crowder, Cam Reddish, DeMar DeRozan and Evan Fournier. Issue will be teams demanding unprotected pick and Lakers resisting.
The goal of doing the small trade would be to give the Lakers some help so they can stay in contention while waiting to deadline to see if any new trade opportunities arise or terms on possible deals get more favorable.
5. Trade or Keep Westbrook
The Lakers are still hoping a team like the Chicago Bulls or the Toronto Raptors decides to rebuild and become sellers and move valuable players who no longer fit their new timeline. That’s when they hope to move Russ.
But once the team approaches the February 9 trade deadline, the Lakers will have to make a decision to trade or keep Russell Westbrook. How the team is doing will obviously have a major impact on the Laker’ decision.
Trading Westbrook is really the Lakers only way to upgrade the roster so if they’re still in contention, they may trade Russ and maybe save a pick. If not, they may decide to keep him and let his $47 million contract expire.By February 9th, the price teams may be demanding to take Russ in trade will likely decrease to just one rather than two picks. The chances then increase dramatically that the Lakers will ultimate trade Westbrook.
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What’s Next for Los Angeles Lakers?
Five Steps To Keep the Season Alive1. Bench Beverley and Schroder
2. Start Reaves and Brown, Jr.
3. Bench Russ to Close Games
4. Trade Beverley and Nunn
5. Trade or Keep Westbrookhttps://t.co/pbND2taeCe— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 16, 2022
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers trade expiring contracts and unprotected first round picks to the Detroit Pistons for Bojan Bogdanovic, Saddiq Bey, and Nerlens Noel and to the Utah Jazz for Mike Conley, Jordan Clarkson, and Kelly Olynyk.
The two Lakers’ trades transforms the Lakers’ roster, sending out seven players on expiring contracts and bringing back six rotation players, all of whom will still be under contract and eligible to be traded next summer.
With over $85 million in tradeable contract and their 2023 first round pick, the Lakers should be well positioned to pull off a major blockbuster trade next summer should a superstar become available who to replace LeBron.The Lakers’ trade goals are to find a starting small forward who can get his own shot and shoot the three, a starting point guard who takes care of the ball and shoots the three, and size, depth, and shooting for the bench.
Most importantly, the Lakers needed to commit to tradeable players on two or three year reasonable deals so they will have the necessary trading chips if a unique opportunity comes up to add a superstar to replace LeBron.Building a roster that can compete a championship this season while also positioning the Lakers for an $85 million portfolio of tradeable contracts that would let them to make even more aggressive moves down the road.
1. The Pistons Trade
The centerpiece of the Pistons trade is small forward Bojan Bogdanovic, who would become the Lakers’ starting small forward and third scoring option, and backup center Nerlens Noel and backup wing Saddiq Bey.
Bogdanovic gives the Lakers a third elite scorer and 3-point shooter who averages over 20 points per game while shooting well over 40% from deep. Bojan’s size and shooting is exactly what the Lakers need at small forward.
Nerlens Noel gives the Lakers the shot blocking rim protector that they desperately need when Davis is on the bench. Last year with the Knicks, Nerlens averaged 1.2 blocks and 1.2 steals in just 22 minutes per game.Finally, Saddiq Bey gives the Lakers a promising young 3&D wing who is the perfect backup for Bogdanovic. Bey is a 23-year old, 6′ 7″, 215 lb small forward who has a great stroke and can defend his position with verve.
2. The Jazz Trade
The centerpiece of the Jazz trade is veteran point guard Mike Conley, who would become the Lakers starting point guard. Mike is a career 38.2% 3-point shooter who’s averaging 38.9% this season on 5.0 threes per game.
Conley’s real strength is his ability to run an efficient offense, something that’s been greatly missed on the Lakers this season. Conley averages 7.8 assists per game and only 1.5 turnovers per game or 5.2 A/TO ratio.
While Mike is 35-years old, his game is still strong and the Jazz struggled when he was out with injury. The Lakers have been trying to find a floor general to take the load off LeBron for three years. Conley’s the answer.Add in Jordan Clarkson to replace Russell Westbrook as the Lakers’ 6th man and Kelly Olynyk to be the backup for LeBron James at power forward and Anthony Davis at center when the team needs more outside shooting.
3. The New Roster
The Lakers had 14 active players before these two trades. They swap six players and a pick for three players from the Pistons and one player and a pick for three players from the Jazz. That leaves them with 13 players.
The addition of Conley and Bogdanovic transforms the Lakers’ starting lineup by giving them an elite point guard to run the offense in Conley and an elite wing scorer to supplement James and Davis in Bogdanovic.
The addition of four legitimate rotation players in Clarkson, Bey, Olynyk, and Noel represents a needed major upgrade in talent and size for the Lakers’ bench. Los Angeles should have a great bench going forward.The Lakers new roster has a dynamically improved starting lineup and much deeper, bigger, and more talented set of backups off the bench. The Lakers could have the best 10-man rotation in the league after these trades.
4. Next Summer Salary Cap
One of the goals of the Lakers’ front office for next summer is to build a portfolio of tradeable contracts, which means trading for players who have two or three years left on their contracts rather than expiring contracts.
The Lakers will have over $85 million in the six tradeable contracts that they acquired via the Pistons and Jazz trades. Conley’s only guaranteed $14.3 million and Olynyk only $3.0 million of their salaries for 2023–24.
The Lakers will also get either their 2023 first round draft pick or the New Orleans Pelicans 2023 first round draft pick as they have a pick swap as part of the original deal when the Lakers traded Pelicans for Anthony Davis.Unlike the last two offseasons when they did not have legitimate rotation players on tradeable contracts, the Lakers will head into next summer with their deepest roster in three years and a portfolio of tradeable contracts.
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Lakers/Pistons Trade
LA gets:
-Bogdanovic
-Noel
-BeyDet gets:
-Beverley
-Jones
-Nunn
-Bryant
-Brown
-Toscano-Anderson
-2927 UNP FRPLakers/Jazz Trade
LA gets:
-Conley
-Clarkson
-OlynykUtah gets:
-Westbrook
-2029 UNP FRPhttps://t.co/rxKU4TWYAe pic.twitter.com/2nvUCUJW1l— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 13, 2022
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LakerTom wrote a new post
If the Lakers want to compete for a championship this season without sacrificing their future with Anthony Davis after LeBron James retires, Rob Pelinka will need to transform the team with an extreme makeover.
The reason the Lakers need an extreme makeover is they need more than two or three new players to fix the roster to win now and win next summer. If L.A. wants to hedge their bets, they need to keep one of their two picks.
Finding a way to upgrade the current roster to championship caliber by using just one of their two available first round picks would enable the Lakers to have two tradeable first round picks on Draft Day next summer.While the Lakers need to trade for players who can help them win now, they also need to shift their focus from older players on expiring contracts and focus instead on younger players on tradeable two or three year deals.
To position themselves for a possible blockbuster trade next summer for the team’s next superstar, the Lakers need to build a solid portfolio of valuable rotation players on tradeable contracts on one or two year deals.Right now, the Lakers need a starting point guard and small forward who can score and shoot the three. Lonnie Walker IV is the only non-superstar starter who should remain. The Lakers need two new and better starters.
Besides Austin Reaves, the Lakers need an entirely new set of backups. They need a rim protector when AD is not on the floor, an instant offense 6th man to replace Russ, and backups for LeBron and small forward.Fortunately for Rob, the Lakers have an opportunity with the Pistons and Hornets to trade Westbrook, six other players, one first, and two seconds for six new legitimate rotation players to transform Lakers into contender.
The trade will dramatically improve the starting lineup by adding two 20-points per game scorers who shoot over 40% from deep and revamp the bench by adding four new backups to upgrade size, shooting, and defense.Let’s look at the proposed trades and why they make sense for the Lakers as well as the Pistons and Hornets. And let’s review what the trade does for the Lakers’ chances to win this season and heading into next season.
The Lakers and Pistons Trade
The Detroit Pistons have been looking to trade Bojan Bogdanovic, Alex Burks, Nerlens Noel, and Saddiq Bey. Bogdanovic would be starting small forward for the Lakers while Burks, Noel, and Bey would come off bench.
The trade saves the Lakers $7.5 million in salary this season, which can be used in the Hornets trade to take back more than they send out while keeping annual salaries neutral so there will be no additional luxury taxes.
Just as importantly, all four of the players being traded for have two or three years left on their contracts, meaning they will not only help the Lakers win this season but will be available as trading chips next summer.For the rising Lakers, this trade is a huge win that allows them to keep one of their two first round picks. For the tanking Pistons, this trade allows them to grab one of the most valuable draft picks to come onto the market.
The Lakers and Hornets Trade
Charlotte has been looking to trade multiple players including Terry Rozier and P. J. Washington. A poor start to the season, the Miles Bridges setback, and early injuries to LaMelo Ball have derailed the Hornets’ season.
The trade raises Lakers’ annual salaries by $4.3 million but is offset by the $7.5 million saved in the Pistons’ trade, leaving a net savings of $3.2 million for the Lakers, which should save them some luxury taxes next season.
While P.J. Washington is on an expiring contract, the Lakers will receive his Bird rights and will be able to go over the cap to sign him if warranted. Rozier has 3 years left on his contract but could be a key chip next summer.For the Lakers, the trade finally nets them an elite point guard who can score and shoot the three and a backup four. For the Hornets, they dump the $85 million and 3.5 years left on Terry Rozier’s original 4-year contract.
The Lakers Roster After Trades
The Lakers went into the trades with 14 active players. They sent out 7 players and brought back 6, leaving them with just 13 active players and creating another open roster spot for future trade or buyout market.
The improvement in scoring and 3-point shooting from Rozier and Bogdanovic should dramatically upgrade the Lakers’ starting lineup. Rozier is a career 37.2% shot and Bogdanovic a career 39.4% shot from deep.
In addition to creating space for James and Davis with their 3-point shooting, Rozier and Bogdanovic will take some of the ‘must score’ pressure off LeBron and AD as they both average 20-points per gameThe Lakers’ bench will get four new players: Burks will replace Russ as the team’s 6th man, Noel will protect the rim when AD’s out, and Bey and Washington will backup Bogdanovic and James at the three and four.
The Lakers Position Next Summer
Besides transforming their roster into a contender, the Lakers’ goal was to trade for a portfolio of quality rotation players on tradeable contracts who could be filler in a blockbuster two-pick trade for the team’s next superstar.
That is exactly what the Pistons’ and Hornets’ trades did for the Lakers. Besides their 2029 first round draft pick, the Lakers will also be able to trade whatever pick they end up with on draft day in a 2-pick deal.
Because they traded for players not on expiring contracts, the Lakers will be far better positioned this summer to pull of a blockbuster trade with two tradeable first round picks and five tradeable contracts worth $67,931,804.Besides extremely making over their roster to compete for a title, the Lakers also smartly positioned themselves to have a portfolio of first round picks and tradeable contracts to make a blockbuster trade next summer.
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Lakers, Pistons, Hornets Trades:
Lakers get:
-Burks
-Bogdanovic
-Noel
-BeyPistons get:
-Westbrook
-Jones
-2027 UNP FRP
…Lakers get:
-Rozier
-WashingtonHornets get:
-Beverley
-Nunn
-Schröder
-Christie
-Toscano-Anderson
-2023 SRP
-2025 SRPhttps://t.co/rgvTdC2JPP pic.twitter.com/qFFczoq21i— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 11, 2022
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This is not a championship team, regardless of even the most far-flung, out of left field, Gasol-esque trades.
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I think it’s perfectly reasonable to say the trade would not work for the other teams but to complain that the trade does not make the Lakers a legitimate contender seems silly. This is a major upgrade of the Lakers roster.
We add two 20 ppg 41% 3-point shooters to the starting lineup and 4 new legitimate rotation players to the bench to give them size, shooting, and defense. That’s a squad that might be favorites to win the championship.
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Those percentages, historically, fall off a cliff once a guy goes from a green light option to a distant 3rd behind two high usage, ball dominant stars. Forget to mention the time it’ll take to get a guy integrated into a new system. Not for nothing, but every time it’s been tried, it’s flamed out pretty remarkably. This goes beyond the absurd leap of faith that a fading star in year 20 is going to magically find another gear come the post season.
Sometimes I’m all for changing just for change’s sake. That’s usually when it’s so bad that anything will look like an improvement. When it’s just shuffling deck chairs on the titanic, why sacrifice the future? This team, with or without those trades, is a team struggling to get into the play-in. These are not pieces that take what’s currently a lottery team into contention. I don’t see any potential trades that’ll do that. Sadly, when you screw up the cap so bad, there’s nothing that will.
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Trades won’t fix the philosophical issues that plague this team. A trade might help or it might not, there is no guarantee it will be better or worse on the other side. Trades very rarely work out as well as the one for Pau did. Mostly the same issues remain since we’re not trading LeBron or AD in most of these. If I’m being honest I could see a path where trading LBJ is what actually makes the team better but that will never happen so no reason to engage the hypothesis.
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I would invite you to go back and look at the bevy of “+40%, volume 3 point shooters” we have added to the LeBron/AD combo and how that has fared. This is not plug and play. They will get fewer shots, fewer minutes and not be featured. Especially if they don’t play defense.
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I’ve never bought the fairy tale that shooters come to LA to miss. Every year we see guys who shoot better than expected and worse than expected, but usually within a given range. Guys who fall in this category include the KCPs and Greens.
But there are also the Monks and Walkers, who surprise and shoot better than their history. I attribute many of the shooters we expected to be good failed because they could not play defense or contribute in other areas. In other words, bad choices that the coach did not want to play.
I think if we trade for a proven shooter like Buddy Hield or Steph Curry or Bogdan Bogdanovic, or Terry Rozier, they will still be able to make shots even though its at Crypto.com arena. We have never really had an elite volume 3-point shooter. Add Rozier and Bogdanovic and we will have 2.
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So you don’t think Reggie Bullock, Danny Green Wayne Ellington and a few more I’m forgetting are elite? You trumpeted them as such prior to this post is why I ask. Monk was in a contract year, got paid, now 35% from three. Is it cause he’s not properly used in SacTown or that he’s not in a contract year? Who knows, all I know is this: none of the guys that are proposed in trades will be used here the way they are currently. Buddy will fall into “shoots but no D” slot and will sit in crunch time. Likely play 20, maybe fewer MPG on our team. For two seasons or cough up a pick to trade him. How is that a good trade? The same goes for Rozier. Of all the “elite” three guys out there Crowder should top everyone’s list except he’s old.
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Fairy tale? From Glen Rice, Vlad Rad, and yes even KFC and Danny Green, and countless other end-of-roster castoffs that had a 40ish 3pt percentage on some bottom dweller, damn near all of them were fairly limp come the bright lights of LA. Sure they’d have a game here or there, but for the most part they were frequent subjects of ire during their typical brief LA tenures. The typical description was something to the effect of “this dude used to kill us, why is he such trash as a Laker?”
Walker IV and Monk, also, were there from camp. Decent rotation guys, but not instilling fear from behind the arc for anyone. That’s the likely ceiling for Bogie and Rozier once their usage is cut in half or more. Trying to integrate them later in a season may not have worked out the same.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Now that the MVP version of Anthony Davis has taken the torch from LeBron James as the superstar face of the Los Angeles Lakers, Rob Pelinka no longer has an excuse for not going all-in to upgrade this roster to win.
With rookie head coach Darvin Ham choreographing Russell Westbrook’s successful move to the bench and Anthony Davis’ sudden emergence as the franchise’s lead superstar, the Lakers have miraculously saved their season.
All that remains now is for Pelinka to pull off two big moves to upgrade the Lakers roster with more size and shooting: trading Beverley, Nunn, and a pick for 3&D wing and trading Westbrook and a pick for multiple shooters.Since no trading partner has a package that fills all the Lakers’ needs, Los Angeles should split their two available first round picks, assigning one pick to the Beverley and Nunn trade and the other to the Westbrook trade. Splitting the picks is a key negotiating strategy as the Lakers need to let teams know there is no deal where they’re going to give up both picks to any single trading partner. The new max is just one unprotected pick.
So let’s take a look at the different options available to the Lakers with respect to the smaller Beverley, Nunn, and pick trade or the bigger Westbrook and pick trade to see what Pelinka’s best moves could be.
The Smaller Beverley, Nunn, and Pick Trade?
Patrick Beverley and Kendrick Nunn have been disappointing this season. The Lakers need to package their combined $18.2 million in expiring contracts with a first round pick in a trade for a starting small forward.
With Anthony Davis playing like the MVP, the Lakers need to get serious about fixing their starting lineup and rotation. If Anthony Davis is really going to play nothing but center, the Lakers must focus on small forward.
For the last three years, we’ve watched Pelinka overload the Lakers with small guards while ignoring the team’s need for bigger 3&D wings to defend the bigger wing scorers who consistently punish our undersized guards.Getting serious means finding a legitimate starting small forward who can stretch the floor with his 3-point shooting on offense and have the size and length to guard the bigger wing scorers who consistently hurt the Lakers.
That means targeting proven starter quality small forwards like Bojan Bogdanovic, Jae Crowder, O.G. Anunoby, Harrison Barnes, or Kelly Oubre, Jr. rather than lower salary targets like Cam Reddish and Saddiq Bey.Offensively, Bojan Bogdanovic is the best candidate. He’s shooting 44.1% from deep on 5.8 attempts per game. More importantly, Bojan would give the Lakers a high powered scoring wing who can get his own shot any time.
Defensively, O.G. Anunoby would the the top prospect. While he’s a 36.9% career 3-point shooter, Anunoby’s biggest appeal is his elite defensive skills. Anunoby would give the Lakers a desperately needed 3&D wing stopper.Bottom line, the Lakers should trade Patrick Beverley, Kendrick Nunn, Damon Jones, and a protected 2029 first round pick to the Pistons for Bojan Bogdanovic, who would become the Lakers starting small forward.
The Bigger Russell Westbrook and Pick Trade?
While Westbrook has been playing better off the bench, the only way the Lakers can trade for needed multiple rotation players with size who can shoot is by packaging his $47 million contract with a first round pick.
Assuming the Lakers trade Beverley, Nunn, and a pick for Bogdanovic, who would start at the three along with Walker at the two, James at the four, and Davis at the five, their next move is to trade Westbrook for greater depth.
Specifically, they need a starting point guard who can shoot threes and quality reserves to backup Bogdanovic at the three, James at the four, and Davis at the five. That should be the goal of the Westbrook and pick trade.Several trades could bring back a package of players to solve the Lakers’ size and shooting woes. The package that jumps out is the Jazz foursome of Mike Conley, Jordan Clarkson, Kelly Olynyk, and Jarred Vanderbilt.
Conley would give the Lakers a proven starting point guard averaging 20.7 ppg shooting 38.6% on 4.9 apg. Clarkson would give them a legit 6MOY candidate to replace Russ averaging 19.7 ppg shooting 35.0% on 7.7 apg.Besides guards, this trade gives the Lakers center Kelly Olynyk, who’s averaging 13.0 ppg and shooting 46.6% on 3.4 apg, and power forward Jarred Vanderbilt, who’s averaging 8.6 ppg shooting 46.2% on 1.1 apg.
Olynyk’s not the rim protector the Lakers need but he is big and mobile, can stretch the floor with his elite shooting stroke, and Vanderbilt is an excellent defender who has been having a break out season from deep.Trading Russell Westbrook and an unprotected 2027 first round draft pick for Mike Conley, Jordan Clarkson, Kelly Olynyk, and Jarred Vanderbilt would transform the Lakers’ into a legitimate championship contenders.
What Would Lakers Post-Trades Roster Look Like?
The beauty of the Lakers two big moves is they swap four players for five players, giving up Westbrook, Beverley, Nunn, Jones, and two first round picks for Bogdanovic, Conley, Clarkson, Olynyk, and Vanderbilt.
In the process, they Lakers replaced four players who were poor outside shooters with five players who are good 3-point shooters, including a starting point guard and small forward and a trio of backup forwards.
A review of the above Lakers’ depth chart shows that the Lakers added two quality starters in Mike Conley and Bojan Bogdanovic and three primary backups in Jordan Clarkson, Kelly Olynyk, and Jarred Vanderbilt.The Lakers not only upgraded the size and shooting of their starting lineup but also added major quality depth to their bench. They basically added five brand new rotation players to what is now a great 10-man rotation.
That’s exactly the kind of serious trades Rob Pelinka needs to pull off to upgrade the size and shooting of the Lakers’ roster and give them the kind of starting lineup and rotation that can win an NBA championship.Basically, the Lakers were able to replace 1/3 of their 15-man roster. They added a starting point guard and small forward who can shoot and a backup shooting guard, power forward, and stretch center who can shoot.
All five of the Lakers’ new players are plus 3-point shooters and three of them are front court players who give the team desperately needed size, rebounding, scoring, and positional defense as well as 3-point shooting.The two trades the Los Angeles Lakers pulled off with their two first round draft picks enabled them to completely makeover their starting lineup and basic rotation to fix their issues with size, shooting, and playmaking.
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Two Big Moves the Lakers Must Make Now That Anthony Davis Has Arrived
Move 1:
Lakers Get:
-Bogdanovic 44.1%Pistons Get:
-Beverley
-Nunn
-Jones
-2029 Top-5 Pro FRPMove 2:
Lakers Get:
-Conley 38.6%
-Clarkson 35.0%
-Olynyk 46.6%
-Vanderbilt 46.2%https://t.co/AdjJxhwjs5— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 8, 2022
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What Would Lakers Post-Trades Roster Look Like?
The beauty of Lakers two big moves is they swap 4 players for 5 five players, giving up Westbrook, Beverley, Nunn, Jones, and two first round picks for Bogdanovic, Conley, Clarkson, Olynyk, and Vanderbilt.https://t.co/AdjJxhwjs5 pic.twitter.com/lMZ2jKOYIX
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 8, 2022
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Aloha Tom, there is no indication that the Jazz are looking to dump players. Everything coming out of Utah is that they are looking to make deals to elevate the team. Trading for Russ doesn’t accomplish that. The best Russ deal I have seen proposed is with the Pistons though. Bogdanovic, Alec Burks and Noel and a pick for Russ. We know what Bogdanovic brings but Burks would also be a great addition. He is 6’ 6” and can play the 1. 2 and 3. He played the point for most of last year with the Knicks. He also shoots 38% from 3. What makes it even better is both Burks and anole have team options and could be cut for cap space this summer. Noel doesn’t bring much to the table these days and hardly gets on the court so they could cut him and look for one more trade.
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I still think when it comes down to final decision, Danny wants the unprotected Lakers pick. In the end, I believe he will rebuild because his strength is drafting players, not trading for them. I believe he understands the cost of a team that’s not good enough to win but not bad enough to get a high draft pick. In the end, the Jazz will be wiling to move everybody.
I do like Bogdanovic and think he should be a priority. We desperately need guys who can get their shot any time. He and Clarkson are key to that. I also like Burks for the same reason and could see the Russ trade being done with the Pistons if the Jazz deal were not available. I do think there are good deals to be made but am worried that Pelinka still wants an All-Star, which likely means trading with the Bulls for DeRozan or the Heat for Butler. To me, that would be a major mistake that doesn’t help our shooting woes.
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Tom, narratives change through out the year and it changed with the Jazz when a core of 24 year olds began to perform at a high level. Every single thing coming out of Utah, contradicts your option. They have switched to finding players to add to their young core. By the way if you didn’t see one of several articles. Danny and the owner love Clarkson and unless there is an offer they can’t refuse he is staying.
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I read the same reports, Michael, but much of that could easily be just posturing. Ainge wants to raise the price for Markkanen and Clarkson. I still believe in the end, the Jazz will be sellers and not buyers. Like you say, narratives change throughout the year, especially as we approach the trade deadline.
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Michael, if the Lakers were to take the Pistons Russ deal to get Bojan, Burks, and Noel, who would you target with the Bev/Nunn deal?
Could the Lakers swap Beverley for Olynyk or Nunn for Reddish? I think the Lakers still need to move both of them. Who would you target?
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Can’t trade Pat to the Jazz for a year. I would turn my attention to Obre.
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That’s why I have the Russ trade with the Jazz. I do like Oubre and he would probably be my next option too.
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I took your suggestions and came up with this alternative pair of trades to put together a championship contending roster:
What Would Lakers Post-Trades Roster Look Like?
The beauty of Lakers two big moves is they swap 4 players for 5 five players, giving up Westbrook, Beverley, Nunn, Jones, and ONE first round picks for Bogdanovic, Burks, Bey, Noel, and Rozier. pic.twitter.com/Op9Is0d74V
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) December 8, 2022
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