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LakerTom wrote a new post
While the Los Angele Lakers may have to rely on going small with LeBron James at the five to survive the six weeks until Anthony Davis returns, there’s a compelling case for keeping the King at the five even after AD returns.
With Davis likely out until February, the Lakers are poised to commit to starting LeBron James at center until AD returns. They’ve already moved DeAndre Jordan out of the rotation and Dwight Howard should be next. Unless the Lakers make a sudden surprise move to add another center, you can expect a heavy dose of small ball with LeBron James starting at the five. That’s the only way the Lakers are going to survive until AD gets back.
So far this season, LeBron at the five has been one of the Lakers’ best lineups, posting an impressive 13.5 offensive rating (2nd best in NBA) and 106.0 defensive rating (5th best in NBA) for a +7.5 net rating (3rd best in NBA). Considering most of those stats were compiled with Jordan or Howard as a second big, the LeBron at the five metrics going forward with Anthony Davis playing his preferred power forward position should be even better.
Because of his low center of gravity, physical strength, and veteran savvy, James is a better on-ball low-post defender than Anthony Davis, who excels as an off-the-ball help shot blocker who can roam like a football free safety. Throw in James’ unrivaled playmaking and bully ball invulnerability and you start to see how having him play the five and AD the four could be the better long-term solution rather than him at the four and Davis at the five.
Playing LeBron instead of AD at the five changes everything. The Lakers get bigger, badder, and better with LeBron at center. Frank gets his two bigs, AD gets his preferred power forward, and LeBron becomes a small ball five.
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LakerTom2 years, 10 months ago
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What an amazing night for LeBron, for the first time in his career, starting at center. And no Jordan or Howard. Made the game close but I’m loving seeing LeBron as the Borg whom other teams just cannot handle in the paint.
Watching Russ using pick-and-rolls from LeBron tonight only further cemented my belief LeBron should play the five all the time going forward. Irony of all ironies is it could end up being his best position. He impacts the game so many ways that AD doesn’t at the five. Add AD in as the off ball shot blocker and stretch four and the Lakers are a different team. Russ’ passes to LeBron cutting for those last two killer layups were elite. Quick like only Russ can do.
Going to be fun watching this grow. Great games from LeBron and Russ and Melo and Monk. We need to get Reaves and Ariza back and then AD. We will be totally different team with LeBron at the five as the team’s new weapon.
Imagine when we roll our a LeBron at 5, Ariza at 6, AD at 3, Reaves at 2, and Russ at 1 small ball lineup heading into the playoffs. That could be some serious transformational basketball.
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I have to admit, I didn’t know what to expect when I saw the starting lineup. But man, that lineup worked, even if it is just one game. James pick and roll with Russ was exceptional. Tom you are very right, if you add in AD as the off ball shot blocker while James play the 5 this team will be tough to handle.
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Thanks, Buba.
If we don’t trade for Turner or Wood, then I’m 100% behind LeBron at the five and AD at the four. It solves the problem of Frank wanting two bigs and AD wanting to play the three.
Wonder if that was Frank’s or Fiz’s decision to start LeBron at the five? I loved that we didn’t resort to playing Jordan or Howard. Big question is will we have the will tonight to start LeBron against Steven Adams? Lakers should start LeBron and play Adams off the floor.
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Certainly a useful weapon, one that won’t be deployed against the likes of Embiid, Jokic, and KAT. Against teams with pretty much no center it makes sense. I’ll be surprised if LeBron jumps center tonight against Steven Adams, for instance. Probably start Dwight and got to LBJ when Adams sits.
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I agree with when it comes to Embiid or Jokic or Kat but the Lakers simply need to play a center like Adams off the floor. No need to screw the spacing by starting Dwight although he should play when LeBron is on the bench. Can’t play Melo at the five.
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It was interesting to watch but gotta keep in mind that this was against HOU and it was a tie game with 3 minutes left. Still anxious to see how it looks against actual playoff competition and good coaching..
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It was a tie game because we were missing AD, Ariza, and Reaves. Replace Bradley, Collison, and THT and this game would have been a rout.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Since wining the championship in the bubble, the Los Angeles Lakers have had an identity problem. They’ve sacrificed their league leading defense in an unsuccessful attempt to upgrade the roster on the offensive side.
Defense was the Lakers’ calling card when they won the championship fifteen months ago but roster imbalances, untimely injuries, and losses from H&S Protocols dropped them from 1st to 12th in defensive rating. Meanwhile, despite major offseason offensive upgrades made to their roster, the Lakers’ offensive rating dropped from 24th last season to 27th this season and their net rating from 8th last season to 23rd this season.
The Lakers’ defense will improve considerably once Anthony Davis and Kendrick Nunn return from injuries and Trevor Ariza, Austin Reaves, Kent Bazemore, and Rajon Rondo return from Health and Safety protocols. However, even then, the Lakers defense will lack a shut-down perimeter defender to slow down opposing point guards, an elite shot blocker and rim protector to control the paint, and a bigger 3&D wing to guard top scorers.
The big question facing the Lakers as the 2021–22 NBA season approaches the February 10th trade deadline, is what kind of team do they want to be? The offensive upgrades have not paid off while the defense has declined. The question is whether the Lakers should double down on becoming a more balanced team on both ends or return to and re-embrace the strong defensive roots that won helped them win their last championship.
The answer to the Lakers’ dilemma seems obvious. The Lakers won an NBA championship fifteen months ago by focusing on defense. Here is how the Lakers could return to their defensive roots and win another championship.
1. Trade for Elite Perimeter Defender and Elite Rim Protector
To return as the NBA’s top defensive team, the Los Angeles Lakers need to pull off mega trades for an elite perimeter defender like Sixers’ point guard Ben Simmons and an elite rim protector like Pacers’ center Myles Turner.
There is no question Ben Simmons is one of the Lakers’ primary midseason trade targets with Lakers VP of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka and Klutch Sports President Rich Paul looking to swap Westbrook for Simmons. Klutch has put the league on notice that any team wanting to trade for Ben will have to beat the Lakers offer of Russell Westbrook. While Daryl Morey is reluctant to trade Simmons for Westbrook, he’s unlikely get a better offer.
The Sixers will resist as long as they can but will ultimately agree to trade Simmons and Niang straight up for Westbrook as it will be the best option to allow Philadelphia to salvage their season and compete for a championship. Meanwhile, Simmons will bring his All-NBA defense to the Lakers to give them the elite defender with the defensive size and skillset to shut down the opposing point guards who have turned Westbrook into a turnstile.
Myles Turner, who led the league in blocks last season and is second this season, is the other defensive difference-maker the Lakers need to trade for. Turner is the elite rim protector and stretch five center the Lakers need. Importantly, Turner will allow coach Frank Vogel to play his preferred two bigs, let Anthony Davis play his preferred power forward position, and let LeBron James play his preferred small forward position going forward.
While Turner can’t defend all five positions like James, Davis, and Simmons, he does give the Lakers their first modern center who is capable of both shooting the three and protecting the rim since they signed LeBron James. Trading for Myles Turner will likely cost the Lakers their best two trading chips: 21-year old shooting guard and future star Talen Horton-Tucker and 26-year old shooting guard and versatile backcourt player Kendrick Nunn.
The net effect of bringing in an elite perimeter defender like Simmons and elite rim protector like Turner would be to transform the Lakers into a defensive juggernaut with the size and versatility to win a championship.
2. Trade for Elite 3&D Wing and Young Athletic Backup Center
The Lakers need a bigger (6′ 6″ to 6′ 10″) 3&D wing who can shoot the three and defend the bigger wing scorers in the league and a younger backup center to reduce the wear-and-tear from LeBron and AD playing the five.
Georges Niang is a 28-year old, 6′ 7″, 230 lb, 6-year veteran small forward whom the Sixers would include in a Russ for Ben trade to match salaries. Georges only earns $3.3 million per year but is a perfect fit for the Lakers. This season, he is averaging 10.4/2.5/1.5 per game on 44.1/38.0/87.1% shooting splits and has the third best net rating on the Sixers behind Danny Green and Joel Embiid. Last year, he had 3rd best net rating on Utah Jazz.
Niang gives the Lakers the quality bigger 3&D wing they desperately need to backup LeBron James at small forward, especially since LeBron will also be playing minutes at the five. Niang is also a 40% career 3-point shooter. Georges will be the bonus from the Westbrook/Simmons trade in that he will give the Lakers the legitimate 3&D wing to guard big time scoring wings like Kawhi Leonard, DeMar DeRozan, Paul George, and Kevin Durant.
Damian Jones is a player the Lakers regret losing. He was another victim of the Andre Drummond disaster and the Lakers’ unsuccessful strategy of pairing LeBron and AD with rotating rent-a-centers the last three years. Jones will give the Lakers the ability play big when Turner is not in the game and provide insurance against foul trouble or injury without having to rely on 35-year old Dwight Howard. Jones gives the Lakers center deprth.
The Lakers need to get better defensively if they want to win their 18th NBA championship. Young veterans like Niang and Jones and young stars like Simmons and Turner are exactly what how the Lakers rebuild their defense.
3. Lakers Will Become Bigger, Younger, and Better Defensively
Imagine a lineup with three top-ten lock down defenders like LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Ben Simmons, three All-NBA individual defenders who are capable of defending all five positions at all three levels of the court.
Then imagine adding one of the league’s top young shot blockers and stretch centers in Myles Turner plus a 6′ 7″ legitimate 3-point shooting wing defender in Georges Niang and an athletic young center in Damian Jones. Adding four plus defenders like Simmons, Turner, Niang, and Jones to James, Davis, Ariza, Reaves, Bradley, and Johnson will change the direction of the Lakers roster to be defense first. Here’s the roster with new players:
PG: SIMMONS, Reaves, Rondo
SG: Monk, Bradley, Ellington
SF: James, NIANG, Johnson
PF: Davis, Anthony, Ariza
CE: TURNER, JONES, HowardThe Lakers replaced Westbrook and THT in the starting lineup with Simmons and Turner, massive upgrades defensively. They also replaced two of the five primary backups with new players who are plus defenders. The result is a balanced 15-man Lakers’ roster where two of the three players at each of the five positions are plus defenders. It’s a winning blueprint for transforming the Lakers into a championship defensive juggernaut.
All the angst and uncertainties about building a starting lineup that can both score and defend will become moot because the various pieces of the puzzle will finally fit. Let’s hope the Lakers will do something like this.
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While the Lakers need a lot of help to fix their roster and don’t have a lot of trading chips, there are several paths to rebuilding the roster without Russell Westbrook that are extremely attractive and could improve the Lakers’ championship hopes.
The idea of pulling off mega trades for Ben Simmons and Myles Turner may be a pipe dream but it’s the kind of bold out-of-the-box thinking that the Lakers need to salvage this season. The idea is building a bigger and younger defensive juggernaut.
Adding four plus defenders in Simmons, Turner, Niang, and Jones would transform the Lakers’ roster defensively, dramatically upgrading two of the players on the starting lineup and two of the primary backups. That’s what you need to do to become an elite defensive team. It’s almost impossible to change players into good defenders. You need to start with the right players.
Part of the Lakers decision to make major moves before the trade deadline is a recognition that the Westbrook trade did not turn out like they hoped it would for multiple reasons. The problem is the Lakers cannot risk wasting one of LeBron James few remaining seasons by waiting until summer to make changes. It’s obvious this team is not ready to compete for a championship and needs new blood to be able to do that.
Swapping Russ, THT, Nunn, and Jordan to land Simmons, Turner, Niang, and Jones is a major upgrade at both ends but catapults the Lakers into an entirely new level of defensive dominance. Having two great shot blockers, three All-Pro defenders who can guard all five positions anywhere on the court, and more size and physicality to compete playing big or small will transform Lakers into a championship juggernaut.
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Myles Turner is the key to the Lakers rebuilding themselves as a defensive juggernaut. He is the one player the Lakers need to get no matter what. He would solve the identity problems that have plagued the Lakers since the bubble. He would restore them to the top of the league when it came to defense. He and AD would put a lid on the basket and backup our perimeter defenders with the best rim protection in the league.
Most importantly, it would end the wishy-washy rent-a-center disaster that has undermined the last two seasons. Frank could play his preferred two bigs, AD could play his preferrred four, and LeBron his preferred three. And suddenly, the Lakers problems with not enough size of defense are solved.
Don’t also discount the Klutch Sports ability to get Ben to the Lakers. Top off a Turner trade with a Westbrook for Simmons trade and the Lakers will once again be the dominant defensive team in the NBA and the odds on favorite to win their 18th NBA championship.
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Just not seeing what we can offer as being better so unless Indy is determined to move him west I think another team ends up with Myles, unfortunately. Lotta factors working against the Lakers in terms of in-season trades. Would love to see Turner on the team tho
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Unless the Lakers trade Westbrook, the Lakers major trade assets and THT’s $9.5M and Nunn’s $5.0M contracts. However, there are other ways to sweeten the deal for the Pacers if the Lakers really wanted Myles Turner. For example, they could include their 2027 first round pick and include another low priced but very valuable player like Malik Monk, whom they will likely not be able to bring back next season since they don’t have his Bird rights.
Frankly, I would be willing to give Indy a package of THT, Nunn, Monk, and the 2027 first round pick for Myles Turner. I think he is the key to resolving all of the Lakers internal and identity problems. And he’s only 26. We would then be able to play big with Myles or small with AD at the 5. We could stagger Myles and AD so we always had an elite rim protector on the floor. Start Reaves at the 2 and you have a great defensive and offensive starting lineup with everybody on the same page as what we’re trying to do.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
When you’re the Los Angeles Lakers, life comes at you fast. Little more than 14 months after winning their 17th title, the purple and gold find themselves facing three monumental franchise-defining personnel decisions.
The 16–16 Lakers are now 32 games into the 2021–22 NBA season with four players out due to H&S protocols and three more due to injury, including superstar center Anthony Davis, who’s slated to miss 20 to 30 games. Suddenly, in addition to trying to tread water until Nunn and now Davis get healthy, the Lakers find themselves having to rethink the role and viability of their superstar big three and their grand plan for the future.
This season is starting to eerily resemble the Lakers’ last season when injuries to LeBron James and Anthony Davis undermined the team’s quest to repeat and ended in a whimper via a first round exit courtesy of the Phoenix Suns. Just 14 months after winning their 18th NBA championship, the Lakers thought they were on the verge of a dynasty but now find themselves faced with three explosive personnel decisions that could determine their future.
Should the Lakers trade or keep Russell Westbrook? Can they count on Anthony Davis to be durable or impactful enough to take the baton from LeBron? And how long can LeBron James continue to play at this level?
1. Should the Lakers Trade or Keep Russell Westbrook?
Despite Westbrook playing well and being what they hoped for when they traded for him, the Lakers are already exploring whether he might be the missing piece in a trade to improve their roster and championship hopes.
Once the trade door is opened, it’s hard to close. The Lakers also have not seen how their team would look with a healthy Trevor Ariza and Kendrick Nunn. Unfortunately, Anthony Davis’ injury may now make that moot. Packaging Westbrook with budding young talent like Horton-Tucker and Nunn could give the Lakers the trading chips to bring back players with the size and defense at the wing and in the front court to fix their roster.
What it will come down to is whether the Lakers will be able to trade THT and Nunn for the bigger 3&D wing player (Jerami Grant) or modern stretch five center (Myles Turner) to let Davis to play his preferred power forward? That would be the ideal solution but the Lakers will probably have to expand the trade to include Russ, multiple players on both sides, and even another team. Their championship hopes will depend on what Pelinka is able to do.
Finding a trading partner to take on the final year of Russ’ contract would probably be a doable option this summer. Finding a team to take on two years and $91 million midseason will be more challenging but possible.
2. Can the Lakers Count on AD to Take the Baton from LeBron?
After a scintillating performance and winning a championship in the bubble, 28-year old Anthony Davis was projected by everybody to be on the verge of replacing LeBron James as the best player on the planet and the Lakers.
Unfortunately, major injuries have not only derailed Davis ascension to the crown but also raised concerns whether Anthony has the alpha mentality and physical durability to take the baton from LeBron and lead the Lakers. Injuries to LeBron and AD were probably a big part of the reason why the Lakers ultimately chose to trade for a third superstar in Russell Westbrook. A third superstar is the best insurance of losing a superstar to injury.
Right now, the Lakers are both worried about Davis being injury prone and concerned whether he will be capable of being the team’s alpha player. For whatever reason, AD has clearly not been the same player since the bubble. While the Lakers still consider Anthony Davis to be untouchable, they’re also having second thoughts about whether Davis’ struggles could be related to playing so many minutes at the five when he prefers playing the four.
The Los Angeles Lakers aren’t concerned Anthony Davis won’t be able to take the baton from LeBron James. They’re just trying to decide whether AD’s future as a Laker is playing small ball center or playing power forward.
3. How Long Can LeBron Continue to Play at an Elite Level?
How long can LeBron James continue to be the King and a top-five player on the planet and how best to optimize his championship window will be key factors in any moves the Lakers make before the trade deadline.
Rob Pelinka has already confirmed the Lakers traded for Russell Westbrook to reduce the workload on LeBron James. Sources also confirmed the Lakers are interested in trading Westbrook for Sixers’ point guard Ben Simmons. Rich Paul, the agent for James, Davis, and Simmons, just confirmed to Shams Charania that the two players the Lakers are targeting for this midseason trades are in fact the Sixers’ Ben Simmons and the Pistons’ Jerami Grant.
What Klutch Sports’ president Rich Paul did was announce to the basketball world that the any NBA team that wants to trade for Ben Simmons will have to come up with a better offer than Lakers superstar Russell Westbrook. Trading Westbrook for Simmons would be a genius move if Pelinka can pull it off. Because of the Lakers’ relationship with Klutch and Ben’s relationship with LeBron and AD, L.A. may be the only team who could trade for Russ.
The Lakers believe LeBron James can play until he is 40-years old. He will turn 37 on December 30th and will be 38 when his contract expires in June 2023. The Lakers will likely sign LeBron to a final extension this summer.
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I thought the news from Rich Paul via Shams Charania about the Lakers focus on trades for Ben Simmons and Jerami Grant was important news, especially since Rich is Ben’s agent.
Looks like what the Lakers want is Westbrook for Simmons, which could be the best deal Philly can get considering how low Simmons’ trade value has become. The Lakers, with their relationship with Klutch and LeBron and AD’s relationship with Ben, might be the only team willing to make a fair offer for Ben. Rich is telling everybody they need a better offer than Westbrook if they want to trade for Simmons. The kicker in my mind is for the Lakers to include THT. That suddenly changes everything.
1. Should the Lakers Trade or Keep Russell Westbrook?
Keep him if possible but trade him if needed.2. Can the Lakers Count on AD to Take the Baton from LeBron?
Yes, they still believe in AD but may want to trade for starting center.3. How Long Can LeBron Continue to Play at an Elite Level?
Until he’s over 40. Will likely sign a 3-year extension this summer.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Once the door to a Russell Westbrook trade has been opened, it’s hard to close, especially with LeBron turning 37 end of this month. While Russ has been playing well, the Lakers would be negligent not to look at all options.
The question with Russ has never been about his talent but his fit on a Lakers team that needs to surround LeBron and AD with shooters. As expected, Russ has slowly and surely started to find his way and play well. The Lakers’ problem is they don’t have the trading chips to fix their current roster imbalance and acquire impactful talent with the size and defensive chops they need to become legitimate championship contenders.
The Lakers’ problems are two-fold. First, their only tradable assets who are not minimum salary or superstar players are Talen Horton-Tucker ($10 million for 3 years) and Kendrick Nunn ($5 million per year for 2 years). Second, their only other possible trading chip, since they’re not going to trade LeBron or AD, is Russell Westbrook, whose $91 million contract over the next two years makes finding willing trading partners a challenge.
The solution is to package 32-year old Russell Westbrook with 21-year old Talen Horton-Tucker, who’s shown the potential to become a dynamic two-way star, and Kendrick Nunn, another rising young star to sweeten the deal. Packaging Russ with THT and Nunn opens the door from both a talent and financial standpoint for the Lakers to make the kind of major upgrades to their starting lineup and rotations they could not have otherwise made.
Here are three blockbuster trades built around Russell Westbrook and THT that solve the Lakers’ roster imbalance and make them bigger and better defensively and offensively and a legitimate championship contender.
1. Indiana Pacers: Myles Turner, Caris LeVert, and T.J. Warren
Myles Turner, Center: 12.9/7.4/1.0 on 51.3/36.4/74.7%
Caris LeVert, Shooting Guard: 16.3/2.7/3.3 on 44.0/29.8/80.4%
T.J. Warren, Small Forward: 19.8/4.2/1.5 on 53.6/40.3/81.9% (2019)This trade tops the list of potential Lakers trades because it’s the perfect solution for what is a growing concern about Anthony Davis’ physical and mental ability to play center without more front court size and defense.
While the Pacers are rebuilding, they’re not going to completely tear it down so they need a combination of impact talent to help them compete at a higher level plus young players or picks to insure future growth. Russell Westbrook gives the Pacers the on-court catalyst to help ignite a fire and transform them into playoff team in the East with Talen Horton-Tucker and Kendrick Nunn filling in the roster as proven young talent with upside.
Myles Turner starting at center is the key for the Lakers as it allows Frank Vogel to play his preferred two-big lineups, Anthony Davis his preferred power forward, and LeBron James his preferred small forward position. The Lakers could also leave the trade open like the Wizards did with Westbrook and look to upgrade Warren and LeVert for a starting point guard. The key is acquiring Turner so AD only has to play the five part-time.
The Lakers could play LeBron at the one with Reaves at the two, Warren at the three, Davis at the four, and Turner at the Five. That’s a big lineup that can play small with five out sets or go big and play bully ball in the paint.
PG: LEBRON JAMES, Rajon Rondo, Isaiah Thomas
SG: AUSTIN REAVES, Malik Monk, Wayne Ellington
SF: T.J.WARREN, Caris LeVert, Kent Bazemore
PF: ANTHONY DAVIS, Carmelo Anthony, Trevor Ariza
CE: MYLES TURNER, Dwight Howard, DeAndre Jordan
2. Philadelphia 76ers: Ben Simmons, Danny Green, and Furkan Korkmaz
Ben Simmons, Point Guard: 14.3/7.2/6.9 on 55.7/30.0/61.3% (2020)
Danny Green, Shooting Guard: 7.0/2.7/1.2 on 41.5/38.3/100.0%
Furkan Korkmaz, Shooting Guard: 8.4/2.9/2.4 on 37.4/29.5/82.1%While Russell Westbrook is not on the Sixers’ list of 30 players for whom they’re willing to trade Ben Simmons, the Lakers should be patient because it’s unlikely any team is going to offer more than Russ for Ben.
The 76ers are in a tough situation, currently sitting in 9th place in the East and in the midst of a 3-game losing streak. They desperately need to make a move to trade Ben for a point guard who can lead them to the playoffs. Westbrook is the best point guard the Sixers are going to be able to trade for and Daryl Morey will eventually realize that and make the necessary move to trade Ben Simmons for the best they can get to save their season.
For the Lakers, swapping Russell Westbrook for Ben Simmons gives them the size and defense they need to be a legitimate championship contenders and a rare third All-NBA defender who can guard all five positions. Ultimately, the Lakers could move Simmons from point guard to power forward or small ball center, a position that would optimize Ben’s great defensive ability and allow him to play point center ala Nikola Jokic.
The Lakers could play Ben at the one with Reaves at the two, Green at the three, LeBron at the four, and Davis at the Five. That too is a big lineup that can play small with five out sets or go big and play bully ball in the paint.
PG: BEN SIMMONS, Rajon Rondo, Isaiah Thomas
SG: AUSTIN REAVES, Malik Monk, Wayne Ellington
SF: DANNY GREEN, Furkan Korkmaz, Kent Bazemore,
PF: LEBRON JAMES, Carmelo Anthony, Trevor Ariza
CE: ANTHONY DAVIS, Dwight Howard, DeAndre Jordan
3. Boston Celtics: Jaylen Brown, Marcus Smart, and Josh Richardson
Jaylen Brown, Shooting Guard: 21.1/5.4/2.4 on 46.6/38.4/75.4%
Marcus Smart, Shooting Guard: 11.0/4.0/5.6 on 38.3/27.6/76.4%
Josh Richardson, Shooting Guard: 9.9/2.8/1.2 on 46.0/37.5/81.6%The Boston Celtics are another team struggling against expectations this season and desperately looking for a point guard who can run the offense. Russell Westbrook would be a major upgrade over Marcus Smart.
The Celtics are currently sitting in 8th place in the East with a 15–15 record. There have been conflicts and squabbles between Marcus Smart, Jaylen Brown, and Jason Tatum over sharing the ball and shooting too much. With a new GM and head coach, Boston needs a major move to resurrect their season and trading Brown, Smart, and Richardson for Westbrook, Horton-Tucker, and Nunn is the bold move they need to get back on track.
For the Lakers, Jaylen Brown is the perfect third superstar to replace Russell Westbrook. Brown is a 20-points per game scorer who shoots 38.4% on 7 threes per game. At 6′ 6,” 223 lbs, Brown’s a perfect fit at the three. Smart would be an ideal point guard and huge upgrade defensively for the Lakers. While he’s a streaky and sometimes unreliable 3-point shooter like Westbrook, Smart’s All-NBA defense is a perfect fit on the Lakers.
The Lakers could play Smart at the one with Reaves at the two, Brown at the three, LeBron at the four, and Davis at the Five. Another big lineup with the versatility to play small ball or go big with bully ball in the paint.
PG: MARCUS SMART, Rajon Rondo, Isaiah Thomas
SG: AUSTIN REAVES, Malik Monk, Wayne Ellington
SF: JAYLEN BROWN, Josh Richardson, Kent Bazemore,
PF: LEBRON JAMES, Carmelo Anthony, Trevor Ariza
CE: ANTHONY DAVIS, Dwight Howard, DeAndre Jordan-
The simple fact that the Lakers have had internal discussions about trading Russell Westbrook less than six months with just 30 games after trading most of their available assets for him tells you Los Angeles is not afraid to admit a mistake and at least look at the opportunities to correct the mistake. That’s a lot better than burying your head in the sane and refusing to adjust.
Whether they can find a trading partner to take on Russ $91 million over two years will likely depend on what the Lakers are willing to add to Russ to make a more palatable package. Since the Lakers are not going to trade LeBron or AD, THT and Nunn are the only non-minimum contracts with value. Thus the best package the Lakers can put together to upgrade their starting lineup and rotations is Russ, THT, and Nunn. If needed, we can also throw in the 2027 first round pick.
I’ve included the basic stats and shooting splits for each of the three players the Lakers would get for Russ, THT, and Nunn as well as a proposed starting lineup and rotations. Each of the three trades brings the Lakers back a potential third star as well as more size and defense. Whether the packages offered will be good enough for the players targeted will depend on how the various trade targets perform over the next six weeks.
There’s no question the Lakers may end up waiting until this summer to seriously try to trade Russ, who would be an expiring contract at that point in time but LeBron turns 37 on Dec 30 and his championship window opening is getting smaller every day. That’s why the Lakers will look to trade Russ and why THT and Nunn will need to be included to attract possible trade partners.
Top priority and the move I think makes the most sense is the Lakers trading with the Pacers for Myles Turner, T.J. Warren, and Caris LeVert. Next would be a trade for Ben Simmons, Danny Green, and Furkan Korkmaz. Last would be a trade for Jaylen Brown, Marcus Smart, and Josh Richardson. All are certainly long shots that would shock the entire NBA.
Lakers going to need to do something dramatic in this third Covid driven season. Let me know what you think of these three trades? Thanks.
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I used Fanspo.Com’s Trade Machine for the above three trades. They use the LEBRON (Luck-adjusted player Estimate using a Box prior Regularized ON-off) impact data provided by BBall Index to rate how the trade works for each team.
Here are the results of the three trades:
Russ, THT, & Nunn for Turner, LeVert, and Warren
Lakers -6 wins, Pacers +6 winsRuss, THT, & Nunn for Simmons, Green, and Korkmaz
Lakers -1 win, Sixers +1 winRuss, THT, & Nunn for Brown, Smart, Richardson
Lakers -4 wins, Pacers +4 winsAll three trades favor Lakers trade partner.
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I think the Lakers would be worse off if they trade worse unless it’s for Dame which won’t be happening. You either need an elite shot maker or trove of above average players. Anything less is really just moving pieces around the board but with less time to incorporate them and get them up to speed. While of course any and all of the trades tossed around are possible and the Lakers will likely at least kick the tires on more than one I think it’ll take a lot more losing for the Lakers to truly entertain this notion.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Swapping point guards could solve the dilemmas the Los Angeles Lakers and Philadelphia 76ers find themselves this season. It’s literally the perfect deal for Ben, Russ, Lakers, Sixers, and Rich Paul and Klutch Sports.
The Lakers and Sixers have both underperformed this season and sit in 6th place in their respective conferences. Westbrook would immediately elevate Philadelphia into the top four seeds in the tough Eastern Conference. Meanwhile, Simmons would give the Lakers a replacement for Westbrook who could help solve many of the Lakers’ problems, including making them bigger, better, and more versatile and potent at both ends of the court.
While trading a point guard who can’t shoot for one who won’t shoot could seem counter productive, here are ten reasons why the Los Angeles Lakers should seriously consider trading Russell Westbrook for Ben Simmons:
- Simmons Is a Better Defender. Ben was 1st team All-NBA Defense for 2020 and 2021. Russ has never made an All-NBA Defense team.
- Simmons Takes Better Care of Ball. Ben has a career average of 3.4 turnovers per game whereas Russ’ average is 4.1 turnovers per game.
- Simmons Is a More Efficient Shooter. Ben is a career 56% shooter from the field whereas Russ is just a 43.8% shooter from the field.
- Simmons Makes Lakers Bigger. Ben is 6′ 11,” 240 lbs while Russ is 6′ 3,” 200 lbs. Ben is 8″ taller and 40 lbs heavier than Russ.
- Simmons Is a Better Rebounder. Ben has a career rebounding average of 8.1 rebounds per game versus 7.4 rebounds per game for Russ.
- Simmons Makes Lakers More Versatile. Ben can play point guard, power forward, or center while Russ can only play point guard.
- Simmons Has a Higher PER. Ben is averaging 18.38 PER this season versus 16.61 PER for Russ this season.
- Simmons Makes Lakers Younger. Ben is only 25-years old while Russ is 32-years old. Ben is 7 years younger than Russ.
- Simmons Saves Lakers Salary. Ben earns $33.0 million while Russ earns $44.2 million this season, a difference of $11.2 million per year.
- Simmons Has Longer Contract. Ben has three more years left on his contract while Russ only has one year left on his contract.
How Possible Is a Russell Westbrook for Ben Simmons Trade?
The Sixers should be interested in an offer of Russell Westbrook for Ben Simmons and we could see early action starting this Wednesday when most of the free agents signed this summer finally become eligible to be traded.
Westbrook in many ways is the perfect fit for Philly as he’s a high usage elite playmaker who is a constant threat to post a triple-double but without any 3-point gravity. Ironically, as a point guard, Russ plays very similar to Ben. Trading Simmons for a point guard with similar style of play and ability to impact the game like Westbrook would minimize the adjustments the Sixers have to make on the fly in a more competitive Eastern Conference.
Meanwhile, Ben Simmons is in limbo and the Sixers left with an empty bag. If they want to be legitimate contenders to compete with the favored Bucks and Nets, they’re going to have to make a move before the trade deadline. That Russ has really ramped up his play the last few weeks only makes the potential trade for Ben even more tantalizing for both sides. Other than Kyrie, Russ is probably the best available superstar the Sixers could acquire.
Are there teams who might offer Philly more for Simmons than Westbrook? Per Shams Charania, the Knicks, Wolves, Blazers, Kings, Pacers, and Cavs are all interested in trading for Ben Simmons but won’t be offering a superstar.
How Would Swapping Westbrook for Simmons Affect the Lakers?
A superstar big three of LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Ben Simmons would not only be the perfect solution to the Lakers quest for their 18th NBA but also an agent’s dream come true for Klutch Sports’ mogul Rich Paul.
Swapping Russell Westbrook for Ben Simmons and Furkan Korkmaz would immediately help the rebounding size and points-in-the-paint problems that have devastated the Lakers’ small ball lineups with Anthony Davis at the five. Replacing Westbrook with Simmons also dramatically improves the Lakers defensively. Suddenly, they have three All-NBA quality defenders who can actually defend all five positions in the paint or beyond the 3-point line.
Because Westbrook makes $11 million more per year than Simmons, the Sixers would have to include an additional player like 6′ 7,” 200 lbs Furkan Korkmaz, who would give the Lakers an elite volume 3-point shooter. Additionally, the Lakers would still have Talen Horton-Tucker’s $10 million contract, Kendrick Nunn’s $5 million contracts, and their 2027 first round pick to upgrade one of the other two positions in their starting lineup.
Assuming Simmons was all-in for what the Lakers wanted from him, trading Russell Westbrook for him would certainly improve the Lakers’ odds of winning their 18th championship and position themselves for other moves.
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It would crazy, but if we could get Simmons and Turner that’d be nice.
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Oy vey. As I was reading this, I was wondering how long it’d take Tom to figure out a way to include Turner in the deal. Ain’t happening. Don’t nobody want Russ nor some hodge podge of mostly useless or unproven pieces the Lakers have.
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Let me start by saying I am a fan of the Russell Westbrook trade. While I get as exasperated as any of us at the ridiculous turnovers and missed layups, I’m also amazed a half dozen times each game by a great drive or pass Russ made. He’s getting better each week and I’m glad the front office thought and went for the home run. As we’ve seen post-Kobe, it’s not easy to win championships.
As much as I like Russ, the Lakers are in a tough situation as they may not have the trading chips to land a Myles Turner, Jerami Grant, or Cam Reddish. Not at the trade deadline or next summer. And we know they’re not going to trade LeBron or AD. But Russ for Ben? That’s a deal that makes you wonder if Rich Paul has already pitched it to the Lakers. Like with AD, no team is going to trade for Ben without his approval, considering his current circumstances. So Klutch does have some power over this situation, not unlike what they had with AD.
But Russ playing himself out of being untradeable, just like CP3 did, could change everything. Morey’s not going to get another superstar other than Westbrook for Simmons. Not unless he throws in sweeteners. That the Lakers are interested in Ben says everything because it clearly indicates Westbrook is not untouchable, which is a lot different from the ‘untradeable’ he was four weeks ago.
You don’t trade Russ unless you have an opportunity to make the team much better, which is exactly what Ben Simmons represents. You may say I’m dreaming but I’ll bet you Rob and Rich have talked about this. Imagine how much better our defense would be with Simmons, Davis, and LeBron? Three guys who are big but can defend all five positions at all three levels. It’s Frank Vogel’s wet dream.
The other thing the Russ for Ben trade does is give the Lakers a dramatic boost in size and defense, which has been a big part of their issues playing small with AD at the five. I could see Ben replacing Russ at the one, helping defensively at the four, and even playing some small ball five with LeBron. Ben presents similar spacing problems as Russ but helps in so many other areas that it’s a much better fit. That’s what this trade is all about. Fit! Ben is much easier to fit than Russ.
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The one thing many people don’t keep in mind is that Daryl Morey won’t trade for Russ a second time despite the pressing issue of Ben Simmons. Russ is not his protégé as may be the case between Derick Rose and Tom Thibideaux.
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But his last trade for Westbrook was a success and he really does not have any other way to get a superstar. Ben for Russ may be best deal Daryl can find. For sure, Russ would be a great fit on the Sixers. Always a long shot wishing for a mega trade but the Klutch factor could be real fire and not just smoke.
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Off topic: it is interesting to see the Knicks free falling while Kemba Walker is banished from the rotation. Makes you wonder who the real culprit is. Those Knicks need some parachutes before they experience a hard landing that could be a crushing blow to somebody.
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