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LakerTom wrote a new post
For a team that needs practices and superstars who need a chance to rest and recover, the All-Star break is Lakers’ last chance to make adjustments for the 24-game stretch run that starts vs. the Clippers February 25th.
If the Lakers have any hopes of transforming what has been a dismal season into a miraculous comeback in the playoffs, then they need to consider major strategic moves to transform the team over the remaining 24 games. The good news is there are major moves on and off the court the Lakers can make to become a much better team. The bad news is there isn’t much time to act and the Lakers have never been an organization to react with urgency.
Here are five strategic moves the Lakers should consider during the All-Star break to optimize their chances of winning 18 of their 24 remaining games to hopefully finish 46–37, which would give them a good shot at the #6 seed.
1. Consider Firing Frank Vogel and Making Phil Handy Interim Coach
Timing is everything when it comes to changing coaches. The last thing the Lakers need to start this offseason is a lengthy coaching search that delays and derails the team’s plans to rebuild their roster to championship level.
There’s no scenario where Frank Vogel is anything but a lame duck coach when it comes to the Lakers. That’s why the smart move by the Lakers is to fire Vogel after Wednesday’s game and make Phil Handy the interim coach. Promoting Handy would give the Lakers the opportunity to test drive him for the rest of the season and open the door for the Lakers to rethink what’s important and how best to utilize the players they have on the roster to win.
The Lakers as a team need to use the rest of this season to decide exactly what kind of team they want to build, specifically whether they want to chase a third superstar like Dame this summer or better starters and bench. The Lakers also need their next head coach to share a vision of basketball that embraces analytics and the importance of 3-point shooting and versatility when building a roster or constructing lineups and rotations.
Changing coaches now will enable the Lakers to use the rest of the season and the performance under Handy to be in the best position to resolve the coaching issue by end of season so they can focus on upgrading their roster.
2. Experiment with Starting Lineups Built Around LeBron and AD
After trading for Westbrook, the Lakers learned building winning lineups around three ball dominant superstars is not easy. Going forward, they need to experiment with starting lineups built around LeBron and AD.
The Lakers have struggled all season long to build lineups with all three superstars. The problem has been it was impossible to fit the elite 3-point shooting and perimeter defense the team needed in just two other starters. Building starting and closing lineups around just superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis becomes much easier because there are now three starters from which to get the needed shooting and defense.
For example, a Lakers’ starting lineup of Malik Monk, Austin Reaves, LeBron James, Stanley Johnson, and Anthony Davis would be able to shoot the three and play solid defense. That’s a lineup the Lakers should test. Logistically, the Lakers could also tailor their starting and closing lineups based on the matchups against different opponents. They could even have big lineups with Howard starting at the five against certain NBA teams.
Strategically, the Lakers need to experiment with lineups built around James and Davis and without Westbrook so the team will not start every game by spotting the other team with an early double digit lead.
3. Experiment with Russell Westbrook off the Bench as Sixth Man
The flip side of experimenting with two superstar starting lineups is the Lakers will get an opportunity to have Russ be their 6th man catalyst coming off the bench with Melo to wreak havoc against team’s second units.
Not unexpectedly, Russ’ numbers when playing without LeBron and AD are positive whereas his numbers with James and/or Davis have been negative. What’s great about Westbrook as a 6th man role is it allows Russ be Russ. Westbrook surrounded by shooters torching other teams’ second units could be a big part of the Lakers matchup strategy the rest of the year. Imagine Russell with elite 3-point shooters like Melo, Monk, and Ellington.
Nor am I saying Russell Westbrook never starts or closes a game. What I’m saying is the Lakers’ major problem all season long, partly due to injuries and Covid and partly due to poorly conceived and ineffective lineups. This is why the Lakers may need to change head coaches for change to work. Frank Vogel is likely not the best choice as coach to experiment with two superstar lineups without Russ and single superstar lineups with Russ.
The Lakers need to find the optimum situation where Westbrook can have the biggest impact for the Lakers. Part of that solution may be lineups with Russ as the lone superstar surrounded by multiple elite 3-point shooters.
4. Ramp Up Playing Time and Responsibilities for Young Players
After standing pat at the trade deadline, the Lakers need to ramp up the playing time and role responsibilities of talented high-performing young players like Talen Horton-Tucker, Malik Monk, and Austin Reaves.
If the Lakers are going to have any chance of surprising teams and winning in the playoffs, they will need to count on even bigger contributions from this trio of young players, which means giving them more minutes and roles. While the Lakers will seek to bolster their roster with more size and defense from the buyout market, they should give Malik Monk and Austin Reaves starter and closer minutes to accelerate their development.
Beside Monk, Reaves, and Horton-Tucker, the Lakers should also give more minutes to Stanley Johnson in certain matchups and hopefully to Kendrick Nunn when he recovers from his lingering knee injury and is ready to play. Making sure the team’s younger players get minutes and roles to grow and become better is a strategic goal for the rest of the regular season. The Lakers need young players to grow their value as players and trading chips.
Ramping up the playing time and roles for Monk, Reaves, Horton-Tucker, Johnson, and Nunn is one way the Lakers can become a better team over the last 24 games of the regular season and peak heading into the playoffs.
5. Offer Starting Roles to Recruit Players from Buyout Market
With the Lakers not improving themselves at the trade deadline, there will be pressure on Rob Pelinka to find upgrades via the buyout market, which could prove difficult as the Lakers are no longer among the favorites to win.
The one big advantage the Lakers may have over other NBA teams is they are able to offer a point guard like Goran Dragic or shooting guard like Gary Harris guaranteed starting roles the rest of the regular season and playoffs. Buyout free agents who will be looking for ways to impress teams and land a big new contracts could feel playing with LeBron James and Anthony Davis and starting for the Los Angeles Lakers was gold for their brand.
We know the Lakers successfully used this same exact strategy last season to entice Andre Drummond to sign with the Lakers after being bought out. Unfortunately, they’ll need to be careful not to make that mistake this time. Landing Dragic and/or Harris as starters would certainly be a long shot since both are rumored to be leaning towards the Mavs and Nuggets but an opportunity to showcase their game on the Lakers could be irresistible.
The Lakers should be aggressive in promising top buyout candidates like Goran Dragic and Gary Harris guaranteed starting roles and minutes to entice them to sign with the Lakers as free agents for the rest of the season.
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#1 – Not a Lakers move, doubt it happens, and no telling if Phil has what it takes to be a lead man.
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What Lakers don’t want is to be stuck searching for a new head coach at the start of the summer while everybody else is making trades and signing free agents. That’s why they need to start the process now to be done by end of the season. Otherwise, we’ll be screwed this summer.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
As usual, there was no lack of culprits to blame for the Lakers’ 117–115 loss last night to the Warriors. While LeBron and AD had subpar games and the Lakers missed 11 free throws, the major culprit for the loss was Frank Vogel.
Between his wacky lineups and senseless favoring of veterans like DeAndre Jordan or Avery Bradley, Frank Vogel has obviously lost this Lakers team. The players aren’t listening to him and the time’s finally come to make a change. Vogel may not be the only reason the Lakers have struggled but it’s hard to envision a scenario where he suddenly turns this team around. Frank is already a lame duck coach. The Lakers just need to make it official.
Why should the Lakers make the change now instead of waiting until this summer? Because they need to stop the bleeding now and start winning. Otherwise, they risk losing the chance to re-sign Malik Monk this summer. More importantly, next season is the last season LeBron James is under contract with the Lakers. The last thing the Lakers want is for LeBron James to suddenly start thinking about taking his talent to some other NBA team.
The other reason for the Lakers making the change now rather than later is it will give them an opportunity to test drive Phil Handy as the head coach of the future. In many ways, Phil could be the perfect coach for the L.A. Lakers. He’s a respected former player who’s greatest strength has been his ability to connect with NBA players whether superstars like Kobe Bryant, LeBron James, or Kawhi Leonard or young guns like Austin Reaves or Malik Monk.
Of all the Lakers coaches, Phil Handy has the best understanding of the power of offense. Most of Handy’s player development success has been expanding players’ offensive repertoires with new moves and counters. Handy’s approach has always been showing players what to do visually by working with them one-on-one on the court, actually teaching them by showing them exactly what to do. That approach resonates with players.
Phil Handy is going to be part of the next wave of new NBA coaches. He was a finalist for the Washington Wizards head coaching gig last season and has been one of the most highly sought after assistant coaches in the NBA. Firing Frank Vogel and promoting Phil Handy to Interim Head Coach could be the only potential game-changing move left for the Lakers’ front office to deploy to try and get the attention of this frustrating, disappointing roster.
Wasting the last 25 games left in this season by allowing Vogel to continue to replicate the same mistakes that have plagued the team all season would be senseless. Time for Lakers to fire Frank Vogel and give Phil Handy a shot.
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Net rating for Frank’s starting lineup last night was -15.0. They played a total of 9 minutes. No other lineup played more than 5 minutes. Seven other lineups played a total of 21 minutes and posted excellent positive net ratings. The Lakers once again were down 16 points early in the game due to Vogel’s fascination with wacky starting lineups.
Lakers can’t waste these final 25 games by letting Frank continue to lose this team. LeBron and AD have had enough, You could see it in their eyes last night as they lost the game once again.
All five Lakers starters other than Russell Westbrook had negative net ratings. Once again, Frank’s starting lineup put the Lakers in a hole that cost them dearly to climb out of. Time to fire Frank and give Phil Handy a test drive as Lakers head coach. I think he could be this Lakers’ team’s version of Pat Riley.
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Combined salary for LeBron James and Anthony Davis: $76, 541, 904.00
If that ain’t motivation to show up and give effort for 48 the coach won’t matter.
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AD no-showed in the 4th and LeBron went 1-10. Bradley wasn’t the problem dude.
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Because he’s on the floor when the game matters against the best guys. Lol.
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All it’ll take for you to flip is one good game from Avery and then you’ll be all like “I owe Bradley an apology, I booted him out the line up 674 times last week but he was great” when what you SHOULD be doing is respecting the man’s tenacity and grit for taking on the hardest assignments. Is it Bradley’s fault there isn’t a center to funnel his man to? No. Is it Bradley’s fault LeBron has been half-assing his defense all season? No. This is what comes of depleting the team. You know what would be funny? If Phil did take over and stuck with Bradley. My bet is you would be all like GENIUS move!!!! Lol. Tom nobody is happy where the Lakers are right now. Let’s just leave it at that. It won’t be fixed until the summer, at best. Might take trading AD to really restock the team. Hope it doesn’t come to that.
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Won’t happen. Honestly, not sure it would be a good “audition” for Phil. Tough to come into a mess like this and do anything positive. Plus, I don’t think Frank has lost the players this season anymore than any season in the past.
Agree though that he has some wacky ideas when it comes to line ups. Need to stop playing Trevor, especially in games where Dwight can go. Stop the small ball experiment as it leads to us getting killed on the boards. We had a hefty rebounding edge at the half, lost it when we played James at center too much. That doesn’t work well, either.
A lot of what we’re doing in these games feels like it would work better in a 7 game series dictated by match ups. Time for our superstars to admit that they can’t do everything, need someone who’s willing to box out and fight for boards, and allow AD and LBJ to be the elite weak side/help defenders that they are. or at least that they could be, not sure either is motivated enough.
Swap Bradley with Monk, give Reaves Trevor’s minutes so he can fast track his learning process, ditch small ball unless you can figure out how to rebound using it, and above all remind AD he gets paid a crap ton of cash to show in all of the games for the entire game. No more loafing.
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You’re probably right but I’m not predicting what I think is going to happen. I’m arguing for what SHOULD happen. It’s so easy to always say that’s not going to happen as your counter to my article. Same ole, same ole. SMH.
We’ve all complained about Vogel’s lineups and we all know he is not going to relent. Bradley will still start despite the eye test and analytics confirming he is not the solution. Same with Trevor. Those are things that are not going to change with Frank.
There is clearly a scenario where the Lakers continue to swirl around the drain same as always with the same crappy starting lineups leaving us in a double digit hole.
Time for the Lakers to think outside of the box. Frank is a lame duck. Fire him now and give Handy a shot.
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Reality. Deal with it or don’t, your choice. Your glass went from full to empty at the drop of a hat. Mine? Been tooting the same things since the summer, you go from full optimist to full destructo. Glass is chock full of what I THINK will happen, not dreamweaving.
Frank coaches an elite defense with the right players, that’s a proven fact. Did it without AD and LBJ for much of last season. His offense leaves something to be desired, yes. His rotations aren’t the best but at least he’s consistent in that he favors vets. On any team with James your offense will revolve around him. James sucked down the stretch last night, result? Loss.
You went from “three super stars is the way!” to “three superstars doesn’t work!” faster than a Kardashian changes outfits. Flip flopping on that one cracks me up.
L.M.A.O. indeed…
The real thing is I don’t think you set Handy up for success putting him in this position. You just look like you’re throwing pasta at the wall and hoping something sticks. That’s not intelligent, that’s desperate. If they were going to fire Frank you should have done so a lot earlier.
I am of the opinion that we can still find a way to compete better this season, as is. I’ve been saying, thinking and SHOULDing that all season long. Steady as she goes, my man. Not pasta flinging or flip flopping on things that haven’t worked out as expected. Three superstars could work IF you spend on a team to surround them. We did not.
Still, for my part, I prefer a better team to a slogan or notion. We had a better team the last 2 seasons. We don’t anymore, it’s gone and it’s not coming back. It has to be rebuilt and that should be done with care, consideration and planning. Knee jerk reactions aren’t saving jack.
I get being frustrated with the squad, they’ve underwhelmed all season long. But just because I’ve been steady and consistent in my opinions about what works, what doesn’t and the issues I’ve had building the team don’t get all ruffled about it.
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1st law of coaching: The new one is always better than the guy who just got fired:))
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LakerTom wrote a new post
After striking out at the trade deadline, the Lakers should aggressively pursue Orlando shooting guard Gary Harris if he gets bought out. The key to getting him to sign with the Lakers could be a promise he would be a starter.
Harris is a 27-year old, 6′ 5,” 210 lbs veteran shooting guard who averaged 11.7 points, 2.2 rebounds, and 1.9 assists in 29.5 minutes per game and will likely be one of the highly sought players in this season’s buyout market. Used to playing off the ball and reliably good on defense, Gary shot 44.4% from the field, 38.8% on 4.9 threes per game, and a sterling 84.4% from the line. He would immediately be the best two-way guard on the Lakers’ roster.
The competition to sign Gary Harris if he’s bought out will be intense and the Lakers are not the post-season favorite they were the previous two seasons when they signed buyout players Markieff Morris and Andre Drummond. Offering Gary a chance to start for the Los Angeles Lakers and compete for an NBA championship alongside superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis could be intoxicating for a young player heading into free agency.
For a young player like Gary, a chance to start and play for the big market Los Angeles Lakers could be the best brand marketing move he could make to raise his value as a player. No other team can the visibility the Lakers can. Harris would be a great fit on the Lakers both short and long-term. He could even earn a rotation role and a new contract with the Lakers. Even though this is his ninth season in the league, he’s still only just 27-years old.
The Lakers should prioritize looking for buyout players who could be viable starters alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis and then using the opportunity to start as their primary pitch to get them to sign with Lakers.
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The idea of promising starting minutes to lure a highly sought buyout player was first brought up yesterday in an Anthony Irwin tweet for Goran Dragic.
Lakers could bring Russ off the bench as 6th man and start Dragic and Harris and a third starter. Just need a true small forward on the buyout market.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
For the second straight year, the Lakers failed to make a move at the trade deadline, declining opportunities to improve the current roster and saving their 2027 first round pick to package with Russ for a third star this summer.
In a move designed to transform the failed Westbrook experiment into a home run opportunity, the Lakers are willing to write off the rest of this season to position themselves to trade for Damian Lillard this offseason. Best case scenario, the Lakers could package Russ’ $47.1 million expiring contract, Nunn’s $5.0 million expiring contract, Horton-Tucker’s $10.3 million contract, and unprotected 2027 and 2029 first round draft picks.
Leave it to the Los Angeles Lakers to try to turn a failed Westbrook experiment into a home run opportunity to trade for a legitimate third superstar who’s a more complementary fit with superstars LeBron James and Anthony Davis. Not only are there no longer any untradeable contracts but there’s also an amazing transformation that happens whenever a significant player contract becomes an expiring contract.
That’s the game the Lakers are now playing and LeBron James and Anthony Davis both agreed to as Rob Pelinka turned down possible trade after possible trade because he would not give up their 2027 first round pick. Having the ability for two possibly unprotected post-LeBron James’ draft picks will give the Lakers the capability to trade Westbrook in a package that will bring back a third superstar who really fits LeBron and AD.
How the Lakers finish the season continues to be paramount. In many ways Los Angeles is still betting the house they can make the Russ experiment work and even rehabilitate Horton-Tucker’s and Nunn’s value as players. Knowing LeBron and AD had to be supportive of the decision, we can expect the Lakers to come together as a team and recommit to finishing the season strong and competing for a championship. Could that possibly work?
To start with, I don’t see any scenario for the rest of the season where the Lakers start winning without Russell Westbrook and Talen Horton-Tucker playing way better and Kendrick Nunn actually getting back on the court. Without question, I don’t see that happening with Frank Vogel as head coach. Coaches often have a shelf life with players and I think Frank no longer inspires and motivates this team. With 26 games remaining, the time may have come for the Lakers to fire Frank Vogel and promote Phil Handy.
The Lakers showed last night against the Blazers that Russell Westbrook was not their only problem. It’s also clear to everybody that Frank Vogel is not going to coaching Lakers next season. Lame duck coach is not answer. Lakers need to pull the plug on Frank and make Handy the Interim Coach for the rest of the season. That’s a move that would give the Lakers a chance to turn around the rest of this season so they’ll be in good stead this summer.
Lakers cannot leave Frank Vogel in charge of the franchise’s destiny the next 26 games. Time to change coaches and give this team its best chance to salvage what has become a nightmare season for the Lakers and their fans.
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Not trading that 2020 RING! Perhaps with pressure off Westy he’ll show up and prove us all wrong. Perhpas tell Vogel and Pelinka, thanks but ya gotta go?
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If the Lakers can somehow pull themselves together or if the front office gets some cajones and fires Frank Vogel, then maybe LeBron, AD, Russ, THT, and Nunn can get us out of the fix that their play has put us in. For this plan to turn Russ into Dame, this team is going to need to redeem itself, starting with Saturday’s game against the Warriors. No excuses. Every game counts.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers must trade Russell Westbrook to the Rockets before tomorrow’s trade deadline or risk suffering a devastating season where fans are booing, players are quitting, and the storied franchise is inundated with dysfunction.
Last night’s embarrassing and humiliating loss to the champion Milwaukee Bucks was hopefully the last straw as the once proud Los Angeles Lakers were crushed by Giannis Antetokounmpo, Kris Middleton, and a superior roster. LeBron James admitted in the post-game press conference the Lakers were not at the same level as the Bucks and sources confirmed the Lakers as a team no longer think they can win with Russell Westbrook as their third star.
Fortunately, it’s become obvious Russell Westbrook is a bad fit with LeBron James and Anthony Davis. The Lakers needed a third star whom they could rely upon to complement their two superstars with shooting and defense. The Lakers third star has turned out to be 24-year old Malik Monk, whom the Lakers signed to a 1-year veteran’s minimum contract but who has not become the third star they had hoped Russell Westbrook would become.
The big question, of course, is whether the Lakers will address the Russell Westbrook situation at the trade deadline or wait until summer to resolve it. Before last night’s game, the thought was the Lakers were likely to wait. Watching Los Angeles rally without Russ in the fourth quarter to turn a 30-point rout into a 10-point game, however, may have added pressure for Rob Pelinka to pull the plug on the Westbrook experiment now rather than wait.
So let’s look at some of the reasons why it makes sense for the Lakers to trade Russ now rather than waiting for this summer when his $47 million player option for next season will become a more attractive expiring contract.
1. Trading Russ now is only way Lakers win championship this season
The undeniable truth of this version of the Los Angeles Lakers has always been that they are legitimate championship contenders as long as they have a healthy and rested LeBron James and Anthony Davis playing at their peaks.
Unfortunately, every truth has its limit and the Lakers have now come to the conclusion that they cannot win a championship with Russell Westbrook as the third star. The question is when should the Lakers cut the cord with Russ? There’s a contingent in the Lakers’ front office that is willing to write off the rest of this season in the belief that they will be in a better position to resolve the Westbrook conundrum more favorably this summer than at the deadline.
Standing pat for the rest of this season should be a non-starter for anybody in the Lakers’ front office, not with 37-year old LeBron James championship window getting smaller each year and he and Anthony Davis playing great. Knowing they can’t win with Russ, the Lakers must then make the immediate moves to trade Russ to the Rockets, even if it costs them their 2027 first round
The only way the Lakers have a chance to win their 18th NBA championship this season is by ending the Russell Westbrook experiment right now and giving LeBron and AD a longshot opportunity to win another championship.
2. Not trading Russ now could ultimately lead to Lakers losing Monk
As we approach tomorrow’s trade deadline, the Lakers are in a tough situation with too many roster holes to fill and too few trading chips to fix everything. Trading Russ right now would put the Lakers in better position this summer.
The one blazing bright light in the darkness right now is the rise of Malik Monk, who’s been everything the Lakers had hoped for when trading for Russell Westbrook but from a 24-year old on a veteran’s minimum contract. Monk is immensely grateful for the Lakers signing him last summer when other teams had little interest and has not only fought his way into the starting lineup but also established himself as the team’s 3rd best player.
While Monk has become the third star the Lakers wanted, they don’t have his Bird or Early Bird rights and will be limited to offering him the $6.2 million taxpayer mid level exception this summer, which may be less than his value. There will likely be teams offering Monk the full non-taxpayer $10.1 million mid level exception. The Lakers will probably be able to keep Monk if they have a successful run the rest of the season and Monk may be willing to stay.
The worst outcome for the Lakers would be Westbrook staying and the Lakers continuing to be a losing team. The Lakers need to continue winning to ensure Malik Monk will wants to re-sign this summer rather than testing free agency.
3. Not trading Russ now could ultimately lead to LeBron leaving Lakers
The last thing the Lakers want is for LeBron James to ever consider leaving. Watching James’ body language last night, especially when Russ came over to console him and Anthony on the bench late in the game, was concerning.
If the Lakers stand pat at the trade deadline, they’ll have essentially wasted two of LeBron’s remaining few seasons without winning a championship. That could possibly mean that next season might be LeBron’s last as an L.A. Laker. Listening to LeBron say there was no way for the Lakers to get to the level of the current champion Milwaukee Bucks is not the kind of statements that give ownership any confidence LeBron is going to re-sign with the Los Angeles.
The Laker didn’t sign LeBron James nor did James sign with the Lakers just to win one championship. Nor is LeBron blameless as it was dinner at his house with Russ and Anthony that set the stage for the Lakers trading for Westbrook. LeBron and the Lakers expect James to finish his career in purple and gold, even if that means L.A. will ultimately have to draft Bronny James in the 2024 NBA draft. Keeping Russ could allow his dysfunction to derail the season.
The problem with keeping Russell Westbrook the rest of this season is the team is likely to continue to struggle to win, there’s going to be problems between Vogel and Westbrook, angry fans are going to boo and blame Russ. The truth is trading for Russ was a major mistake and the Lakers need to rectify the situation as soon as possible. They cannot afford for Westbrook, if kept for the rest of the season, to become a cancer that infects LeBron James.
The Lakers are at what could be a major franchise inflection point that could derail their relationship with LeBron and Klutch Sports at a point. Keeping Russell Westbrook for the rest of this season could be risking LeBron James.
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Lakers Must Trade Westbrook Now!
1. Trading Russ now is only way Lakers win championship this season
2. Not trading Russ now could ultimately lead to Lakers losing Monk
3. Not trading Russ now could ultimately lead to LeBron leaving Lakershttps://t.co/2nbNW1JLrc
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 9, 2022
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I feel like that should, and probably will barring an incredible gelling process, happen over the summer. Mid-season deals are harder to pull off the bigger the deal. Since we’re essentially limited to trading with Houston right now and that’s a rip off of a trade it shouldn’t happen now. You never want to sell low and the optics of Houston buying out Russ and for him to, if the rumors are true, turns around and joins Washington Rob will look like a real joke of a GM. Of course, if you ask me, he hit that benchmark this summer when Caruso walked for nothing. Not even a trade exception which could have come in handy right about now.
Everyone has made their beds. Jeannie, Rob, Frank, LeBron and so on. Best that they lay in them now and maybe learn something from this fiasco of a debacle. But a bad trade, which is definitely the deal on the table for John Wall, is just doubling down on dumb. No thanks.
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I completely agree with you, Jamie. At this point, whoever the cap fits let them wear it and call the season a colossal failure.
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I predict Lakers won’t do 1, 2 or 3 even though they should but will do 4 and 5. Problem is 2, 3, 4, and 5 all depend on having a coach who isn’t biased when it comes to certain players.