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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Clippers and the entire NBA got a rude reminder of just how lethal LeBron James in full playoff mode can still be even at 39-years old as he led the Lakers to a stunning 21-point fourth quarter 116–112 comeback win.
When an exhausting injury-plagued season, failure to make a difference-making trade at the deadline, and tough remaining schedule all seemed to doom the Lakers to end up as a play-in team, LeBron James to the rescue.
Instead of losing three of their first four games after the All-Star break and falling to 31–29 and 10th in the West, the Lakers are now miraculously 32–28 and 9th in the West, just 3.0 games out of 5th place with 22 games to go.With a back-to-back tonight against the lowly Wizards, the Lakers should be able to pick up a needed easy win while maybe resting LeBron James, which would push them to 5-games over .500 for the first time this season.
That would hopefully give the Lakers some desperately needed momentum as they look to finally win a game against the defending champion Denver Nuggets in a nationally televised Saturday night game at Crypto.com Arena.The game against Denver marks the start of seven straight home games against elite opponents who will be favored over the Lakers. After Nuggets, Lakers play Thunder, Kings, Bucks, Timberwolves, Kings, and Warriors.
How the Lakers handle that 7-game stretch will likely determine whether they can realistically win a top-6 spot in the West and avoid the play-in. After that 7-game stretch, the Laker will only have 14 games remaining.Assuming the Lakers beat the Wizards to be 33–28 heading into the 7-game stretch, how many games do Lakers need to win to have a chance to avoid the play-in? They would be 37–31 with 4 out of 7 and 38–30 withy 5 out of 7.
Even at 38–30, the Lakers would likely still be in 9th place in the West with just 14 games remaining. Fortunately, their remaining 14-game schedule is much easier than the touch 7-game West stretch they’re facing right now.Bottom line, the Lakers still have an uphill climb to get out of the play-in and into a top-6 guaranteed playoff spot. Like last year, the Lakers are likely to end up 7th or 8th in the West, needing 1 play-in win to make playoffs.
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LakerTom8 months, 2 weeks ago
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With a back-to-back tonight against the lowly Wizards, the Lakers should be able to pick up a needed easy win while maybe resting LeBron James, which would push them to 5-games over .500 for the first time this season.https://t.co/vIXhtAhmqU pic.twitter.com/H3zPH6GDUd
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 29, 2024
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That would hopefully give the Lakers some desperately needed momentum as they look to finally win a game against the defending champion Denver Nuggets in a nationally televised Saturday night game at https://t.co/84m3Xn4eID Arena.https://t.co/vIXhtAhmqU pic.twitter.com/hAKncvnm6U
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 29, 2024
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LakerTom wrote a new post
If the red-hot Lakers hope to repeat the 18–8 post All-Star run that carried them to last season’s conference finals, they’re going to have to do it amidst a brutal 12-game schedule where they will be the underdogs in 10 games.
The Lakers will not only be underdogs in 10 of their next 12 games but 9 of those 10 games will be against those same Western Conference teams who are tied or ahead of them in the standings based on total losses for season.
Those 2 games vs. the Warriors, 2 games vs. the Kings, and 5 games vs. the Suns, Clippers, Nuggets, Thunder, and Timberwolves will be the measuring stick that tells us whether the Lakers’ championship hopes are realistic.Here’s the schedule for the next 12 games that’s likely to determine whether the Lakers are legitimate championship contenders or simply pretenders. The Spurs and Wizards are the only games where Lakers would be favored.
The problem the Lakers face is not the 3.5 games that separates them from 5th or 6th place in the West and an automatic playoff seed, it’s the 5 teams they have to climb over to get to 5th or 6th place with only 26 games left.
The Lakers’ next 12 games will decide their season. They must finish the next 12 games with an 8–4 record, which means winning 6 out of the 10 games in which they will be underdogs, an almost impossible challenge.
Frankly, the Lakers need to win more than they lose of the next 12 games to still have any realistic chance to make the top-6 in the West and get an automatic playoff seed. Finishing under .500 will doom them to the play-in.The Lakers will need to come out of the All-Star break playing their best basketball of the season with their new starting lineup and rotation continuing to be the offensive juggernaut that’s found out how to win.
Tonight’s road game against the Warriors is a perfect example of the tough challenge the Lakers will face over the next 12 games. After 7 days off, L.A. is still struggling with injuries as LeBron James and Chris Wood will be out.
The Los Angeles Lakers start their challenging 12-game stretch with back-to-back road games against the Warriors and Spurs, missing James, Wood, Vincent, and Vanderbilt and with Christie and Reddish still questionable.
The Lakers and Warriors are tied for 9th in the West as each have 26 losses but Golden State has been one of the hottest teams in the NBA having won 8 of their last 10 games. Lakers won only match this season 145–144 in OT.The Lakers desperately need to win tonight’s game against the Warriors, who will clearly be favored with the game in San Francisco and LeBron James out. Win tonight, and Lakers go up 2–0 vs. Warriors for the season.
Split the remaining 2 games with Golden State and Los Angeles would win the season series 3–1 and get home court advantage over the Warriors should the two teams end up meeting in the Western Conference playoffs.At this point in the season, the Lakers currently own tie breakers against the Warriors, Thunder, Suns, Clippers, and Pelicans while the Nuggets, Timberwolves, Mavs, and Kings now own tie breakers over the Lakers.
How the Los Angeles Lakers fare over the next 12 games, including 9 games against their direct Western Conference competitors, will surely determine whether they’re legitimate contenders or simply pretenders to the throne.The good news for the Lakers is they have the 4th easiest remaining schedule in the NBA for their last 26 games, which means after the next 12 extremely tough games, L.A.’s schedule down the stretch will be easier.
If LeBron and AD can remain healthy and D’Angelo Russell, Austin Reaves, and Rui Hachimura elevate their games to another level, the Lakers could be the lethally dangerous team nobody wants to meet in the playoffs.The Lakers must play the best basketball of their season over the next 12 games if they want to have any chance to meet the Boston Celtics in the 2024 Finals in an epic battle to see which team wins their 18th NBA title.
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Here’s the schedule for the next 12 games that’s likely to determine whether the Lakers are legitimate championship contenders or simply pretenders. The Spurs and Wizards are the only games where Lakers would be favored.https://t.co/42BMgM9usW pic.twitter.com/n90zJEfnBp
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 22, 2024
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The challenge for Darvin Ham will be how to integrate 4 defense-first role players returning from injury into the offense-first 9-man starting lineup and rotation that has transformed the Lakers into an offensive juggernaut.
There’s no question the Lakers’ new starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis and 4-man bench of Dinwiddie, Prince, Wood, and Hayes have been magnificent, winning 6 of their last 7 games.
The Lakers’ new 9-man rotation has increased their offensive rating to top-5 in the league with only a minor decrease in defensive rating in the 16 games since Ham decided to start Russell and Reaves as team’s backcourt.But the likely need for better point-of-attack perimeter defense than what a Russell and Reaves backcourt could provide and the possible return from injury of Reddish, Christie, Vincent, and Vanderbilt could portend change. Everyone knows defense wins championships but the offensive talent in the NBA is now so dominant that ‘great offense beating great defense’ has become the norm, which is exactly what we’re seeing from the Lakers.
After struggling to build a defense-first starting lineup and rotation that could win games, Ham was forced by injuries to return to the same starting lineup the Lakers used to make it to the conference finals last season.
That current starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis and 9-player rotation with Dinwiddie, Prince, Wood, and Hayes as primary backups has been playing great during the last 16 games stretch.Darvin Ham’s biggest mistake was forgetting how important great offense is to winning in the NBA. In retrospect, you build championship starting lineups by understanding that great offense usually beats great defense.
Ham should have prioritized continuity and stuck with the starting lineup that carried the Lakers to the conference finals instead of deciding to break up the Russell and Reaves starting backcourt because they couldn’t defend..Let’s look at the options Ham could have to tweak the starting lineup and rotation with the signing of Spencer Dinwiddie and possible return from injury of Cam Reddish, Max Christie, Gabe Vincent, and Jarred Vanderbilt.
Starting Lineup Options
While there are concerns whether D’Angelo Russell and Austin Reaves can be a championship backcourt, reports indicate the Lakers would prefer to retain the current starting lineup for continuity for the foreseeable future.
There’s no question experience playing with each other was a major factor in how quickly and easily it was for the core group from last year’s starting lineup to immediately click and gain rapport when playing together again. Considering DLO’s evolution as third star, Reaves’ resurgence after a tough start, Davis’ emergence as a legitimate point center, and Rui’s embrace of full playoff-mode attack, this could be LeBron’s best supporting cast ever.
The only reason the Lakers should consider changing the current starting lineup of D’Angelo Russell, Austin Reaves, Rui Hachimura, LeBron James, and Anthony Davis would be for better point-of-attack perimeter defense.
There certainly will be matchups where the Lakers could benefit from having a better point-of-attack perimeter defender like Dinwiddie, Vincent, Reddish, Christie, or Vanderbilt if he can return before the end of season.The single obvious move the Lakers could consider would be to revert to the starting lineup they used to get to the conference finals last season, which would mean Jarred Vanderbilt replacing Rui Hachimura at the three.
That’s a change the Lakers would be smart to consider heading into the playoffs should Vanderbilt’s injury turn out not to be season-ending. Vando is the one defender who is a big enough difference maker to be a starter.The other possible starting lineup the Lakers should consider is Spencer Dinwiddie replacing Rui Hachimura, which would essentially have the Lakers playing a three-guard lineup with Russell, Reaves, and Dinwiddie. Everybody knows Darvin Ham loves 3-guard lineups so expect to see a lot of Russell, Reaves, and Dinwiddie lineups, especially when teams go small. Dinwiddie just has a bigger bag of skills to impact teammates than Rui.
In the end, the Lakers are likely to continue Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis as starters for the remaining 26 games on the regular season schedule and trust they have the bench to backup their starters.
Primary Backup Options
The Lakers current 9-man rotation includes a bench of new point guard Spencer Dinwiddie, former starter Taurean Prince, stretch four Christian Wood, and athletic rim protector and offensive rebounder Jaxson Hayes.
The challenge facing Lakers’ coach Darvin Ham is what does he do when Cam Reddish, Max Christie, and Gabe Vincent are finally healthy and ready to go or if Jarred Vanderbilt’s injury is not season-ending and he’s available?
Ham would be smart to not try and force Reddish, Christie, or Vincent into the current rotation unless there’s an injury. Frankly, Vanderbilt is the only one of the four returning defenders that clearly deserves rotation minutes.The 30–26 Lakers have won 3 in a row and 6 of last 7 games. They’re 9th in the West and with 26 games left, 2.0 games behind the Kings for 8th, 2.5 behind the Mavs for 7th, and 3.5 games behind Pelicans and Suns for 5th. Last season, the Lakers were 25–31 after 56 games and 13th in the West, forcing them to go 18–8 over last 26 games to finish 43–39 and 7th in West. If the Lakers can go 18–8 this year, they’d finish 48–34 and be 5th in West.
The Lakers need to commit to the current offensive-oriented starting lineup and 9-man rotation. Right now, the best backups for Russell and Reaves are Dinwiddie and Christie, who are both better defensively.
While the Lakers could certainly use the defense Christie and Reddish could provide now and Vincent and Vanderbilt might be able to provide later, Ham needs to be careful not to stifle their offensive juggernaut.Ham’s best strategy is to limit changes to the Lakers’ current 9-man rotation to adding one additional perimeter defender to create a 10-man rotation, which could be scaled down further once the team makes the playoffs.
The key to the Lakers being able to replicate last season’s stretch run is health. Right now, the team is close to being as healthy as they have been all season. Their path to the playoffs should be much easier this season.The Lakers should commit to a new 10-player rotation with Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis as the starting lineup and Dinwiddie, Prince, Vanderbilt (Christie if no Vando), Wood, and Hayes coming off the bench.
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But the likely need for better point-of-attack perimeter defense than what a Russell and Reaves backcourt could provide and the possible return from injury of Reddish, Christie, Vincent, and Vanderbilt could portend change.https://t.co/rdCLMsLwAl pic.twitter.com/5VmvGwtszm
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 19, 2024
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Everyone knows defense wins championships but the offensive talent in the NBA is now so dominant that ‘great offense beating great defense’ has become the norm, which is exactly what we’re seeing from the Lakers.https://t.co/rdCLMsLwAl pic.twitter.com/gEU5NYCFhq
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 19, 2024
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Let’s look at the options Ham could have to tweak the starting lineup and rotation with the signing of Spencer Dinwiddie and possible return from injury of Cam Reddish, Max Christie, Gabe Vincent, and Jarred Vanderbilt.https://t.co/rdCLMsLwAl pic.twitter.com/miXGHjdunH
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 19, 2024
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In the end, the Lakers are likely to continue Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis as starters for the remaining 26 games on the regular season schedule and trust they have the bench to backup their starters.https://t.co/rdCLMsLwAl pic.twitter.com/uD7oLIgu6m
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 19, 2024
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The Lakers should commit to a new 10-player rotation with Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis as the starting lineup and Dinwiddie, Prince, Vanderbilt (Christie if no Vando), Wood, and Hayes coming off the bench.https://t.co/rdCLMsLwAl pic.twitter.com/NvEE7ixoYx
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 19, 2024
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I really like our young guys that seem to be enjoying and having fun, BUT, LeBron ain’t here for fun, Ring-a-ding-ding!
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I completely agree with the analysis. I have high hopes for the team than earlier in the season. Things have started to look good, and with the rest of the injured coming back we should definitely do better.
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While the “new” lineup has done well in it’s 7 games all of this should come with a small dose of reality: we beat the Pistons, Hornets, and Knicks minus the majority of their starting lineup. Quality wins over the Jazz and Warriors are to be commended but not blown out of proportion, not that LT is doing that, just that I like to keep my feet on the ground about these things.
This sentence stood out to me as perfectly logical and accurate: “But the likely need for better point-of-attack perimeter defense than what a Russell and Reaves backcourt could provide and the possible return from injury of Reddish, Christie, Vincent, and Vanderbilt could portend change.” This will be even more true in the playoffs and sin e the regular season should be a process by which a coach determines whom to trust in potential playoff matchups it stands to reason this will bear out.
One of Reaves, Russell, or Hachimura will likely go to the bench once Cam comes back. Almost guaranteed when Vando returns because his last few games were like a good stripper. Such a tease of the greatness that could be just around the corner in a VIP booth. What Vando potentially brings…when healthy and in shape…eclipse what Cam, Max and maybe even Hachimura brings unless Rui is lighting it up from three consistently like he did in the playoffs last season.
What I’d truly like to see is more Hachimura and less LeBron down the stretch. Get James’ minutes down and get his ankle and body right for the playoffs or all of this really doesn’t matter and amounts to semantics and fun talk.
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Unless something dramatic changes I see us going 6-4 over our next 10. I think we’ll probably lose to the Clippers, Nuggets, Timberwolves and Suns unless they have guys out. Especially if we see LeBron struggling with his ankle. So here’s hoping we can continue to move the ball well and prove my pessimism wrong lol.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers used D’Angelo Russell’s evolution, Austin Reaves’ resurgence, Anthony Davis’ playmaking, an all-offense starting lineup, and a 3-point shooting revolution to reinvent themselves as an offensive juggernaut.
After spending the season’s first 40 games trying to build a defense-first starting lineup and rotation, the Lakers suddenly surprised everybody and spent the last 16 games reinventing themselves as an offensive juggernaut.
With injuries to the team’s top defenders like Vanderbilt, Vincent, Reddish, and Christie, Ham was finally forced to play his top offensive players in a move that may have changed everything and saved the Lakers’ season.For the first 40 games of the season, the 19–21 Lakers were firmly mired in 13th place in the Western Conference with a low offensive rating of 112.2 (#23), fair defensive rating of 114.0 (#14), and poor net rating of -1.8 (#21).
Over the last 16 games, the Lakers turned their season around, winning 11 of 16, solidifying 9th place in the West, and posting elite offensive rating of 120.2 (#4), defensive rating of 116.5 (#21), and net rating of +3.7 (#8).The Lakers raised their offensive rating from 112.1 the first 40 games to 120.2 last 16 games, an offensive boost of 8.1 points per game at a cost of just 2.5 points per game on defense, for a net improvement of +5.6 points.
The 30–26 Lakers have won 3 straight and 6 of last 7 games, They’re 9th in the West, 2 games behind Kings for 8th, 2.5 games behind Mavs for 7th, and just 3.5 games behind Pelicans for 6th and Suns for 5th seed in the West.So let’s take a deeper dive into how the Los Angeles Lakers reinvented themselves as an offensive juggernaut and repositioned themselves as the NBA team that other playoff teams do not want to meet in the playoffs.
D’Angelo Russell’s Evolution
D’Angelo Russell’s evolution into the difference-making third star and elite volume 3-point shooter the Lakers desperately need has been the driving force behind their emergence as a legitimate championship contender.
During the season’s first 40 games, Russell posted 15.4 points, 2.8 rebounds, 6.1 assists, 0.8 steals, and 0.5 blocks in 29.1 minutes per game, while shooting 47.1% from the field, 39.4% from deep, and 76.0% from the line.
During the season’s last 16 games, DLO averaged 22.3 points, 2.9 rebounds, 6.8 assists, 0.8 steals, and 0.5 blocks in 36.4 minutes per game, while shooting 45.5% from the field, 45.3% from deep, and 88.2% from the line.It’s no coincidence that the Lakers rise from the dead began when Darvin Ham decided to give the starting point guard job back to D’Angelo Russell 17 games ago as L.A. fell 2 games under .500 despite DLO’s 39-point night.
What changed that night was Russell deciding the best way he could complement LeBron James and Anthony Davis was to always be in attack mode to take advantage of them rather than always deferring to them.As simplistic or naive as that decision might have been, give D’Angelo credit for going out over the last 15 games and proving that his theory was right and triggering a dramatic Lakers turnaround over the last 16 games.
During that 16 game run, Russell’s ppg jumped from 15.4 to 22.3, mpg from 29.1 to 36.4, FGA pg from 12.4 to 17.0, 3PA pg from 5.5 to 8.5, and 3PM pg from 2.2 to 3.9, 3P% pg from 39.4% to 45.3%, FT% from 76.0% to 88.2%.Whether D’Angelo Russell can sustain this level of play will be a major factor in the Lakers becoming a legitimate championship contender the second half of the season and DLO earning a home in purple and gold.
Austin Reaves’ Resurgence
Austin Reaves’ resurgence over the last 15 games, following a subpar first 40 games of the season and concerns over his defense, eased any concerns the Lakers had about his future as they refused to trade him for Dejounte.
During the season’s first 40 games, Reaves posted 15.2 points, 4.3 rebounds, 5.1 assists, 0.9 steals, and 0.1 blocks in 30.0 minutes per game, while shooting 48.7% from the field, 34.4% from deep, and 86.9% from the line.
During the season’s last 16 games, Austin averaged 17.5 points, 3.1 boards, 6.2 assists, 1.1 steals, and 0.4 blocks in 33.8 minutes per game, while shooting 49.5% from the field, 40.1% from deep, and 85.0% from the line.While Reaves did not need to reinvent his game like Russell to secure his starting role, he did need to show he could be counted on to be a strong enough scorer, playmaker, and defender to start on a championship team.
While Austin raised his level of play over the last 16 games, the Lakers may still want better perimeter defense than a Russell and Reaves backcourt could deliver, especially when defenders like Vando and Reddish get back.Right now, Reaves is playing like he did during last season’s playoffs. His pairing with Russell has been special, shooting lights out from deep and showing his skill in getting buckets, free throws, and dimes in the paint.
Reaves’ biggest problem is his team-first attitude and willingness to come off the bench could make him vulnerable to being replaced as a starter by a better defender like Vanderbilt, Reddish, Vincent, Christie, or Dinwiddie.Austin Reaves continues to grow in his role as the Lakers’ fourth star behind LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and D’Angelo Russell. He’s met the challenge by giving the Lakers’ starting lineup a fourth offensive star.
Anthony Davis’ Playmaking
The development of Anthony Davis as an elite playmaker not only elevated his offensive repertoire to the superstar level of his defensive arsenal but also turbo charged the Lakers’ elite new AD-centric half-court offense.
During the season’s first 40 games, Davis posted 25.1 points, 12.1 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 1.2 steals, and 2.6 blocks in 36.1 minutes per game, while shooting 55.1% from the field, 33.3% from deep, and 81.0% from the line.
During the season’s last 16 games, Anthony posted 24.4 points, 12.4 boards, 4.7 assists, 0.9 steals, and 1.4 blocks in 34.7 minutes per game, while shooting 55.6% from the field, 20.0% from deep, and 80.7% from the line.The big statistical difference for Anthony Davis between the first 40 games and the last 16 games was the jump in assists from 3.5 to 4.7 per game. Through his 12-year career, Davis has averaged only 2.5 assists per game.
Davis’ improved passing has also caught the eye-tests of the announcers and pundits covering the NBA. Per Lakers, Davis been working a lot with James this season to improve his passing as a counter to double teams.During their first 40 games when defense took priority over offense, the Lakers averaged 114.1 points per game, 19th in the league. During the last 16 games, the Lakers averaged 124.2 points per game, 2nd to Warriors.
During the Lakers’ first 40 games, the Lakers averaged 27.7 assists per game, which was 8th in the league. During the last 16 games, the Lakers have averaged 30.6 assists per game, which was 1st in the entire league.Anthony Davis’ improved playmaking has transformed the Lakers’ half-court offense. AD’s ability to playmake at a superstar level has transformed their moribund half-court offense into a championship caliber attack.
All-Offense Starting Lineup
After 40-games of constant starting lineup tinkering and controversy, injuries to defenders finally forced Lakers’ head coach Darvin Ham to return to a D’Angelo Russell and Austin Reaves offense-first backcourt.
The benefits of the Lakers finally having a modern lineup with five players who can space the court, make plays for their teammates, and were key to making last year’s conference finals were obvious over the last 16 games. Suddenly, the lack of continuity and chemistry that plagued the first 40 games seemed to magically disappear the last 16 games with the Lakers’ new starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis.
One of the major coaching challenges in the NBA is finding that critical balance between offense and defense that would optimize winning and Lakers’ head coach Darvin Ham has certainly struggled with that issue.
While there’s truth in the cliche that defense wins championships, the goal of the game of basketball is to put the ball through the hoop more times than your opponent does. That’s a lesson Darvin Ham needed to learn.The Lakers’ new offense-first starting lineup may still need better perimeter defense down the line but for now it’s brought desperately needed continuity and stability for the team’s entire 12-man rotation.
The bigger challenge will come when the Lakers return to play the remaining 26 games on the schedule with a goal of at least climbing into the top-6 teams in the West to get a guaranteed seed in the playoffs.Injuries and coaching inexperience led the Lakers to struggle with their starting lineups during the first 40 games but their new all-offense starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, Hachimura, James, and Davis is a big winner.
3-Point Shooting Revolution
What D’Angelo Russell’s evolution, Austin Reaves’ resurgence, Anthony Davis’ playmaking, and an all-offense starting lineup have done is launch a 3-point revolution to transform the Lakers into an offensive juggernaut.
During the first 40 games of the season, the Lakers were 28th in the league with only 10.9 made threes per game, 30th in the league with just 30.5 attempted threes per game, and 22nd in league shooting 35.8% on threes.
During the last 16 games, however, the Lakers ranked 16th in the league with 12.4 made threes per game, 25th in the league with 31.2 attempted threes per game, and 3rd in the entire league shooting 39.9% on threes.The main benefit of the Lakers’ 3-point revolution is how it changes their blueprint of how to win games, which is dominate points-in-the-paint and made-free-throws to overcome their usual negative 3-point differential.
While sustaining this level of 3-point shooting may be hard, the Lakers’ enhancements were due to better process, more spacing, fewer turnovers, smarter shot selection, improved ball movement, and increased assists.During the first 40 games, the Lakers 3-point differential was -10.5 points per game. During the last 16 games, that same differential was just -3.6 points per game, a 3-point differential improvement of 6.9 points per game.
During first 40 games, Lakers lost 3PM by 10.5 points but won PIP and FTM by 8.6 points for a -1.9 net difference. Over last 16 games, they won 3PM by 6.9 points and PIP and FTM by 9.5 points for a 16.5 point net differential.The Lakers have parlayed D’Angelo Russell’s evolution, Austin Reaves’ resurgence, Anthony Davis’ playmaking, and a new all-offense starting lineup into a 3-point revolution that’s transformed their blueprint to win.
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D’Angelo Russell’s Evolution
D’Angelo Russell’s evolution into the difference-making third star and elite volume 3-point shooter the Lakers desperately need has been the driving force behind their emergence as a legitimate championship contender.https://t.co/bA1tYX44Gm pic.twitter.com/ZHWegcmp4r
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 15, 2024
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Austin Reaves’ Resurgence
Austin Reaves’ resurgence over the last 15 games, following a subpar first 40 games of the season and concerns over his defense, eased any concerns the Lakers had about his future as they refused to trade him for Dejounte.https://t.co/bA1tYX44Gm pic.twitter.com/zYQWXzXx2t
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 15, 2024
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Anthony Davis’ Playmaking
The development of Anthony Davis as an elite playmaker not only elevated his offensive repertoire to the superstar level of his defensive arsenal but also turbo charged the Lakers’ elite new AD-centric half-court offense.https://t.co/bA1tYX44Gm pic.twitter.com/jAyIVUhxqL
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 15, 2024
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All-Offense Starting Lineup
After 40-games of constant starting lineup tinkering and controversy, injuries to defenders finally forced Lakers’ head coach Darvin Ham to return to a D’Angelo Russell and Austin Reaves offense-first backcourt.https://t.co/bA1tYX44Gm pic.twitter.com/urh29xoSIf
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 15, 2024
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3-Point Shooting Revolution
What D’Angelo Russell’s evolution, Austin Reaves’ resurgence, Anthony Davis’ playmaking, and an all-offense starting lineup have done is launch a 3-point revolution to transform the Lakers into an offensive juggernaut.https://t.co/bA1tYX44Gm pic.twitter.com/ibrFtMd9Kp
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 15, 2024
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Thanks, Buba. The way the Lakers have suddenly become an offensive juggernaut is such a fun story. Will be hard to sustain but it makes winning so much easier and less stressful.
Can’t win w/o good defense and offense. Between DLO suddenly taking as many shots and making them as AD, Reaves getting his mojo back, AD distributing like Jokic, and 5 shooters in the starting lineup, it’s easy to see why the Lakers have become an offensive juggernaut. Basketball gods suddenly rooting for the purple and gold, Buba.
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When all is said and done, DLO is proving he, and not Austin, is the 3rd best player on this team. Austin is 4th best player.
If Ham eventually replaces a starter for more defense, that starter will be Reaves, not Russell imo. Austin could be future 6MOY.
5th best player right now? That’s going to be a great competition between Rui, Spencer, Prince, Vando, Cam, Chris, and Jax.
What’s amazing is how slotting the new starting lineup has stabilized the team’s rotation and now every player seems to know their role and be able to execute in it. The turnaround the last 16 games has just been amazing.
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“What’s amazing is how slotting the new starting lineup has stabilized the team’s rotation and now every player seems to know their role and be able to execute in it.” This is what is keeping me smiling.
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I am starting to think how scary good this team will be when we have Vando, Cam, and Vincent back. I am feeling something good brewing.
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I feel instead of swapping out one offensive player for a defensive player it would be better to get all 5 players on the court, any rotation, to step up their defensive game…putting in a defensive player would just make it a 4 man offense, and the defensive player may be good for an offensive rebound now and then their presence allows teams to cheat off them defensively, they will let players that are poor shooters take more shots….games are often won on shooting percentages…3’s in particular.
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I agree, Howard. Lakers should stick with current lineup for continuity. They can sub in a defender if we have a bad mismatch but give DLO and AR a chance to outscore the guy they’re defending. If so, that’s a win. Our offense is smoking. Ham has to be careful not to extinguish our firepower.
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And remember, Dinwiddie is available off the bench to keep the offense going or to wake up a stagnating offense…
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers need a 3&D starting point guard to anchor their perimeter defense, a starting shooting guard to provide high volume, high percentage 3-point shooting, and a backup center to protect the rim when AD rests.
The above photo presents the Lakers three best options for starting point guard (Murray, Smart, Brogdon), starting shooting guard (Bogdanovic, Hield, and Kennard), and backup center (Olynyk, Gafford, and Claxton).
Strategically, the Lakers need to spend whatever draft capital is necessary to pull off blockbuster trades that bring back one of the three candidates for starting point guard, starting shooting guard, and backup center.With just 4 days until the trade deadline, there will be heavy pressure on Rob Pelinka to somehow, someway replicate the great trade deadline moves from last season that turned the Lakers into a playoff juggernaut.
While last trade deadline only included one first round draft pick, L.A. will have to spend more draft capital this trade deadline, including their 2029 first round pick plus pick swaps for their 2028 and 2030 first round picks.With their recent impressive wins over the Celtics and Knicks, the Lakers may have turned the corner with LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Austin Reaves playing like they did to make the conference finals last season.
LeBron James has once again used social media to put pressure on the Lakers’ front office to pull off a series of blockbuster trades to upgrade the roster and give the team a chance to go after their 18th NBA championship.Here are the Lakers’ best options for a starting point guard who’s an elite point-of-attack defender, starting shooting guard who takes and makes volume threes, and a backup center to protect the rim when Davis rests.
Starting Point Guard
The Lakers’ greatest need is to replace D’Angelo Russell with a legitimate two-way point guard who can create plays for teammates, shoot the three with volume and accuracy, and anchor the team’s point-of-attack defense.
Frankly, there simply aren’t many point guards who meet those criteria. For the Lakers, Dejounte Murray is the premier choice because he has the needed speed and athleticism plus shooting stroke and defense mentality.
While he’s not as good an offensive player as Murray, Marcus Smart is a former DPOY and the best defensive oriented point guard the Lakers could trade for. Smart would be a great second option if L.A. cannot land Murray.Should the Lakers be unable to work out a trade for Dejounte Murray or Marcus Smart, then their next best point guard option is probably Malcolm Brogdon, who would be a more trustworthy version of D’Angelo Russell.
With just four days remaining before the trade deadline, the Lakers have reportedly made Austin Reaves untouchable unless for a legit superstar and are looking to trade Russell, Vincent, Hachimura, and Hood-SchifinoTrading D’Angelo Russell has become a perplexing challenge for the Lakers in multiple ways. First, DLO has been playing so well that he’s making it difficult to let him go much less to find a replacement that’s an upgrade.
Second, Lakers desperately need to improve their backcourt defense but do not want to sacrifice desperately needed backcourt offense to get better defensively. That’s the conundrum of trying to upgrade D’Angelo Russell.In the end, Dejounte Murray is the only point guard candidate who will be an upgrade offensively as well as defensively over D’Angelo Russell, which is why he is the player who’s at the top of the Lakers trade board right now.
Starting Shooting Guard
Next to a new two-way point guard, the Lakers’ greatest need is a starting shooting guard who can take 7 to 9 and make 3 to 4 threes per game to help reduce the team’s current 9-points per game negative 3-point differential.
The Lakers 3-point shooting percentage has actually gotten much better over the last stretch of games. The Lakers as a team are currently shooting 37.0% from deep, which ranks as the league’s 13th best 3-point percentage.
Unfortunately, the Lakers shoot and make so few 3-point shots that they’re outscored by 9-points per game from deep and rank dead last in the NBA in 3-point shots taken and dead last in the NBA in made 3-point shots allowed.What the Lakers need is a starting shooting guard who takes and makes enough 3-point shots to cut the Lakers negative 9-points per game 3-point differential in half by adding 3 to 4 threes to their 11.3 makes per game.
Bogdan Bogdanovic should be the Lakers’ new starting shooting guard and volume 3-point specialist because he takes and makes the most 3-point shots per game of the three candidates and has rapport with Murray.Bogdan Bogdanovic is averaging 17.2/3.1/2.7 with 1.3 steals in 28.8 mpg. He ranks 15th in 3PM with 3.1 per game on 8.4 attempts for 37.0%. He’s clearly the perfect backcourt complement to Hawks’ point guard Dejounte Murray.
Buddy Hield is averaging 17.0/3.2/2.6 with 0.6 steals in 25.7 mpg and ranks 32nd in 3PM with 2.6 3PM per game. Luke Kennard is averaging 10.4/3.1/3.0 with 0.4 steals in 24.4 mpg and ranks 30th in 3PM with 2.7 3PM per game.The Lakers should expand their trade for Hawks’ point guard Dejounte Murray to include Hawk’s shooting guard Bogdan Bogdanovic, which would give the Lakers their first modern championship backcourt of the future.
Backup Rim Protector
Besides a new starting backcourt, the Los Angeles Lakers other major rotation need was for a second big who could either start next to Anthony Davis in a two-bigs lineup or back him up when he rest on the bench.
The Lakers top candidate to be backup rim protector is Nic Claxton, who averages 12.4/10.5/2.0 with 2.2 blocks and 0.7 steals in 29.6 mpg. 24-year old Claxton is 6′ 11″ and 215 lbs and is a ferocious rebounder and shot blocker.
Claxton’s two competitors are the Wizards’ Daniel Gafford, who averaged 10.7/7.9/1.6 with 2.1 blocks and 1.0 steals in 26.3 mpg and the Jazz’ Kelly Olynyk, who averages 8.1/5.1/4.3 with 0.3 steals and 0.8 blocks in 20.5 mpg.While Claxton and Gafford are perfect fits as backup rim protector, Olynyk is really a totally different kind of option for backup center, which is a big who can stretch the floor, attack the paint, and make plays for teammates.
The Lakers also have interest in Kris Dunn, a combo guard who could help replace the lost point-of-attack defense L.A. has lost due to Vanderbilt’s injury. A trade for Olynyk and Dunn could be something L.A. might do.Whom the Lakers chose to be their backup center will likely depend on who can be acquired for the least amount of draft capital. All three centers earn around the MLE. The Lakers would likely take whomever costs less.
It’s even not impossible that the Lakers trade for two centers. I could see a scenario where L.A. traded for Olynyk to start and Claxton to backup.Bottom line, the Lakers need an upgrade at backup center that is a better rim protector than Jaxson Hayes and Christian Wood or has the versatile offensive game of Kelly Olynyk that could transform the Lakers’ offense.
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Here are the Lakers’ best options for a starting point guard who’s an elite point-of-attack defender, starting shooting guard who takes and makes volume threes, and a backup center to protect the rim when Davis rests.https://t.co/IfsSxXwvCG pic.twitter.com/VBD2zTlz8R
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 5, 2024
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Starting Point Guard
In the end, Dejounte Murray is the only point guard candidate who will be an upgrade offensively as well as defensively over D’Angelo Russell, which is why he is the player who’s at the top of the Lakers trade board right now.https://t.co/IfsSxXwvCG pic.twitter.com/uRb1kPARU7
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 5, 2024
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Starting Shooting Guard
The Lakers should expand their trade for Hawks’ point guard Dejounte Murray to include Hawk’s shooting guard Bogdan Bogdanovic, which would give the Lakers their first modern championship backcourt of the future.https://t.co/IfsSxXwvCG pic.twitter.com/xc9Ag8Bont
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 5, 2024
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Backup Rim Protector
Bottom line, the Lakers need an upgrade at backup center that is a better rim protector than Jaxson Hayes and Christian Wood or has the versatile offensive game of Kelly Olynyk that could transform the Lakers’ offense.https://t.co/IfsSxXwvCG pic.twitter.com/rjVvARSAvM
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) February 5, 2024
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