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    Final: Lakers 131, Raptors 125

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    https://x.com/ArtTakesNote/status/1852375280968458643

    You have to give something to get something.

    Austin Reaves, Lakers
    Age: 26

    Contract: $12.9 million this season, $13.9 million next season, $14.9 million in 2026-27 (player option)

    Let’s go back to that all-caps phrase Lacob shouted from the media mountaintops not too long ago: “ALL IN.”

    Months before the Warriors pushed for George and Markkanen, they made an audacious bid for the Lakers’ LeBron James that was summarily refused. But there was an irony that came with that situation, as James and his co-star, Anthony Davis, have privately longed for the Lakers’ power brokers to show that sort of bold, strategic ambition for quite some time.

    That’s where Reaves comes in.

    If the Lakers have any chance of making a major move, it will almost certainly have to include the guard who is known to be a favorite of owner Jeanie Buss and president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka. This Lakers front-office group found him on the undrafted scrap heap in 2021, then saw him turn into one of their favorite in-house success stories. First-year coach JJ Redick is also known to be a huge fan of Reaves. Add that he’s on a very team-friendly deal, and it’s not hard to understand why there’s a strong reluctance to make him available.

    But there’s a difference between greatly valuing a player like Reaves and deeming him virtually untouchable, as league sources say the Lakers have in the past. And if these Lakers find themselves falling behind in the West playoff race midseason, with star-player trade scenarios potentially crossing their proverbial desk, this is an internal discussion they’ll likely have to revisit. For now, Reaves (16.8 points, 6.0 rebounds, 4.8 assists per game) is off to a strong start in his starting role during the Lakers’ 3-2 start. — Amick

    Kuminga, Reaves and 4 more names to watch

    You have to give something to get something.

    Austin Reaves, Lakers
    Age: 26

    Contract: $12.9 million this season, $13.9 million next season, $14.9 million in 2026-27 (player option)

    Let’s go back to that all-caps phrase Lacob shouted from the media mountaintops not too long ago: “ALL IN.”

    Months before the Warriors pushed for George and Markkanen, they made an audacious bid for the Lakers’ LeBron James that was summarily refused. But there was an irony that came with that situation, as James and his co-star, Anthony Davis, have privately longed for the Lakers’ power brokers to show that sort of bold, strategic ambition for quite some time.

    That’s where Reaves comes in.

    If the Lakers have any chance of making a major move, it will almost certainly have to include the guard who is known to be a favorite of owner Jeanie Buss and president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka. This Lakers front-office group found him on the undrafted scrap heap in 2021, then saw him turn into one of their favorite in-house success stories. First-year coach JJ Redick is also known to be a huge fan of Reaves. Add that he’s on a very team-friendly deal, and it’s not hard to understand why there’s a strong reluctance to make him available.

    But there’s a difference between greatly valuing a player like Reaves and deeming him virtually untouchable, as league sources say the Lakers have in the past. And if these Lakers find themselves falling behind in the West playoff race midseason, with star-player trade scenarios potentially crossing their proverbial desk, this is an internal discussion they’ll likely have to revisit. For now, Reaves (16.8 points, 6.0 rebounds, 4.8 assists per game) is off to a strong start in his starting role during the Lakers’ 3-2 start. — Amick

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    • Reaves could be the key for the Lakers to compete if a tradable star were to suddenly become available. Frankly, our starting backcourt of Russell/Reaves was torched by Cavs superior starting backcourt of Mitchell and Garland. Dalton Knecht is more untouchable than Austin Reaves imo.

      • The Cav’s are torching everyone Tom. The Cavs starting back court went off for 59 against the Knicks with all those solid perimeter defenders. They had 47 against the Magic and they have Suggs, 2nd team all defense and KCP.

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    TIME TO START A NEW WINNING STREAK !!!

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    Do Lakers Have a Player Development Program?

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    Proposed Lakers Trade for Kessler and Clarkson

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    https://x.com/LakerTom/status/1852380052127662435

    Davis’ MVP-caliber play

    My bold prediction entering the season was that Davis would finish in the top five in MVP voting. So far, that seems reasonable. He won Western Conference Player of the Week for opening week and has easily been a top-five player to open the season.

    Role-player development

    Los Angeles has been vocal about the constraints of the new collective bargaining agreement, and how it’s causing teams to prioritize depth and development. Two role players, Austin Reaves and Rui Hachimura, have popped to begin the season, looking more like their 2023 selves. Redick has talked both up in his news conferences and empowered them as the No. 3 and No. 4 options within the offensive hierarchy.

    Perimeter defense concerns

    For as well as Reaves and Hachimura have defended at times, they’re both better as complimentary defenders and not primary wing stoppers. And therein lies the primary issue facing the Lakers.

    Improving in the possession battle

    An early emphasis for Redick and his coaching staff has been trying to make up ground in the possession battle and create greater advantages along the margins.

    Lakers Reality Check After 5 Games

    Davis’ MVP-caliber play

    My bold prediction entering the season was that Davis would finish in the top five in MVP voting. So far, that seems reasonable. He won Western Conference Player of the Week for opening week and has easily been a top-five player to open the season.

    Role-player development

    Los Angeles has been vocal about the constraints of the new collective bargaining agreement, and how it’s causing teams to prioritize depth and development. Two role players, Austin Reaves and Rui Hachimura, have popped to begin the season, looking more like their 2023 selves. Redick has talked both up in his news conferences and empowered them as the No. 3 and No. 4 options within the offensive hierarchy.

    Perimeter defense concerns

    For as well as Reaves and Hachimura have defended at times, they’re both better as complimentary defenders and not primary wing stoppers. And therein lies the primary issue facing the Lakers.

    Improving in the possession battle

    An early emphasis for Redick and his coaching staff has been trying to make up ground in the possession battle and create greater advantages along the margins.

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    • It’s not a reality check, these were all the same issues myself and others have been bringing up since mid-summer. Reaves and Rui compete hard, in the NBA that’s generally just not enough. You need talent and/or high skill levels in things like footwork, how to fight through screens, and recognizing a leak out on the break. These are the things we’re struggling with.

      They both score the ball fine. But not dynamically. They’re solid role-players and why they’ve made Reaves nigh untouchable gets sillier every season. I assume there isn’t a grade trade for him out there, at least not yet, and that is a smart move. No need to trade solid players for a “Well I sure hope he’s as solid here as he is on team ____”

      In general, without Vando, the team’s defense is the biggest question mark and, under Reddick, they’ve taken a pretty decent sized step back. It’s early, though, and a lot of that can be corrected by cleaning up little things on both ends. But it needs to start happening sooner than later or this will end up defining the season.

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    Lakers decline Hood-Schifino extension

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    • Final straw for terrible 2023 draft. JHS has more value as a low value expiring contract than as a legitimate prospect and Lewis will become a UFA unless traded. Wonder who was responsible for this draft? Buss Brothers or Rob Pelinka?

      • 2023 was hopefully the anomaly as we didn’t even draft all that well in the 2nd round, either. I think, at the time, the Lakers were very concerned with having a PG on the roster that could at least handle bringing the ball up and being a live body in that role. DLo wasn’t fully in the fold, at the time of the draft.

        In general I feel like we broke my only 2 draft rules:
        -draft the best player, regardless of position (that was Cam Whitmore or B-Pod)
        or
        -draft the most NBA-ready player. That was/is/and will always be Jaquez.

        Not sure what caused us to blow it but blow it we did.

        Gives me hope for at least the possibility of a modest trade, though. Between JHS one of Wood/Reddish and DLo Lakers can now offer $25ish million in expiring contracts and maybe there are other believers in JHS that have more opportunities for him to play. Add in a 2nd rounder, maybe a 1st depending on the player, and you can make 2 interesting moves:

        -trade out 3 for 1 opening up 2 roster spots and, if you work the deal right, lower our cap hit.
        -that would allow us to sign another player or convert a two-way, or both.

        • One of the factors that probably wrongly influenced the front office during the 2023 draft was Darvin Ham being the head coach. Pelinka has no identity or vision. It’s always been the coaches who set direction for Lakers, which is why hiring Redick was so very important.

          I have no doubt that had JJ Redick been the coach at that time, we would probably have drafted Whitmore or Jaquez. Imagine if we had Caruso and Jaquez on this roster. Thankfully, the BB Gods have given us Knecht.

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    5 Things: Lakers Fall Flat and Get Rolled

    Nothing to learn from this other than how to move on from a bad loss. The Phoenix game, even though we coughed up a late lead, felt competitive. This game never did as the Cavs got what they wanted, when they wanted, and how they wanted it. There was not much resistance offered from the Lakers even though we got down big early, again, and had shown that steady approach to coming back works. Whether it’s some guys still finding their legs, the early and lengthy road trip or just that the Cavs are that much better we never really were in this game after the first few minutes.

    1. The Lakers defense ain’t great. We’re giving up 50.8 points in the paint per game so far. That’s, in part, being fueled by our league worst transition defense which gives up 21.2 ppg (the only team in the Association to give up more than 20). Our transition defense is non-existent. In specific, switching everything (or 1-4 when AD’s man happens to be in the paint) every time is both predictable and easily exploitable, as we’ve now seen with our own eyes against quality opponents. The seams it creates are letting guys get to the rim and score. That leads to softer switches that offer more room and then guys shoot the three over us. The physicality we saw in the first 3 games didn’t make the road trip, as can be seen by the vast free throw disparity last night in which Cleveland shot well from everywhere (57.7% overall, 41.5% from three) while only getting to the line 8 times compared to our 33. When you win the free throw battle by that much, one generally expects a W. If we stick with switching 1-4 we need to stay attached better to both players (screener and ball handler) and I’ll take an uptick in fouls called if that’s what it takes. Laying back off the screens like a bunch of softies is just creating quality shots for the other team and isn’t working at all. This was, and remains, my biggest concern with Reddick as a head coach, and so I’m curious to see what changes. If anything does.
    2. Lakers back court needs to be better. Mainly DLo but Reaves needs to be in attack mode at all times, too. Reaves should be in the conversation of “whose team” this is almost as much as AD because he’s more of an initiator of the offense. Shooting the ball a measly 6 (Reaves) and 7 (Russell) times, respectively, means there isn’t enough pressure being applied; although in D’Angelo’s case he did get to the line 7 times when his 3 ball wasn’t (still) falling. There’s not a great option to turn to after those 2 guys so they need to get it done night in and night out a lot better and consistently than they’ve done so far. They look good in wins, bad in losses and as they go so, too, does the Lakers fortunes.
    3. Bronny got his first NBA hoop. Yay.
    4. The Lakers bench needs to do more. Like…a lot more. The Net Rating for the Lakers bench is -4.7 and would be a lot worse without Dalton Knecht. This difference isn’t because they’re letting the other team score at will, the Lakers bench has the 6th best defensive rating in the league. We’re middle of the pack in scoring the rock but lead the league in pace (the bench, not the team overall). It may be worth exploring the idea of slowing it down a bit since we’re killing it in transition, anyhow. At any rate our myopic scoring output is a huge issue as we move further into the season. I expect Knecht to hit the rookie wall at some point (they all do) and other than him nobody is scoring effectively yet. Vando getting minutes over Christie and Hayes could help alleviate that but that isn’t the current reality. Somebody besides Knecht needs to contribute and if you move him to the starting 5 I worry the bench will fall utterly off a cliff.
    5. Good news! It’s still early and the road trip is still salvageable. Win in Toronto. That needs to be the focus. Don’t worry about anything else but executing and getting the W in Canada and then focus on Detroit followed by voting (VOTE!) and then Memphis. Just focus on taking care of the business in front of you. All the history is out of the way now, the team has shown it’s good enough to compete at a high level when fully engaged on a physical level, so make that the priority. If you’re competing at a high level, playing as hard and focused as you can, then good things usually generate themselves. Don’t let the losing define the road trip or when you come back it’ll be harder to find that home mojo, again, and no team worth it’s salt is only good at home. Need to be able to win on the road and win consistently. You also don’t want to tumble down the standings early, we’ve all seen how that affects the late season race to getting favorable playoff placement and it’s not fun. We’re still a top 6 team, just need to go out and play lie one, again.

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    • Nice post Jamie, after looking at the schedule if asked before the season I would have been pleased with a 3-2 start. the Suns game was the one that hurt. could have won that one. just a couple of things. Austin and Rui’s offense have been big parts of our success and each only got 6 shots. thats on JJ. the other thing is our transistion defense will get better once we reduce that mountain of live ball turnovers to atleast a hill. So many of them have occurred at mid court leading to a unreal amont of 3 on 1 fast breaks for the opposition. The imprtant thing now is to win the games we should win. we didnt always do that last year. our next two are games we should win. go Lakers.

      • Thanks man, I feel like a lot of the issues are correctable and the turnovers are total killers right now. That’s gotta get cleaned up ASAP.

    • Good Fiver, Jamie.

      Overall, I’m happy with the 3-2 start. We have a good chance to finish 7-3 for first 10 games. I had predicted 8-2 but the loss to the Suns probably made that improbable

      This team has potential to be a legitimate contender if healthy. Having Vando, Wood, and Koloko would have been a huge difference maker in our two losses. We can dominate the Suns if healthy. The Cavs are a different story. Their 3rd, 4th, and 5th players trump our 3 non-superstar starters. We simply had no answer for their size in the front court.

      I am concerned about LeBron and his battle with Father Time. Seeing him disappear against the Suns and then seeing the entire team disappear against the Cavs should be a wake up call for Rob Pelinka. We cannot wait until Vando, Wood, and Koloko are healthy. We just TOO SMALL.

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    Lakers Bench Needs Dramatic Upgrades

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    Ten teams are currently attempting at least 40 threes per game

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    CAVS (5-0) STAY UNDEFEATED AND BEAT LAKERS 134-110

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    Lakers Should Be Talking To Lonnie Walker

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    • I have felt the same since he was released. Lakers should not have ever let him go. Many players were inconsistent under Ham…as he favored Taurean Prince, and he still does. What roster move could be made to fit him in. File with the league for “career ending injury” for Vanderbilt? The contract they signed him to will probably go down as bad as Mozgov/Deng contracts. Should trade him for 2nd rd pick and a photocopy machine (see Kyle Korver)….I’m up for just cutting him…too bad the stretch provision doesn’t fit (july1- August 31)…

    • Ahh yes, I remember with fondness the ridiculing I heard at the notion I expressed that more and more NBA level talent would be playing overseas…yes…I remember it well. Funny.

      LW4 got paid, and he was smart to do so. He’s played on minimum deals and I could have made an argument for signing him over Max Christie this summer…but we didn’t go that route.

      Based on our cap situation and full roster there’s no smart way to add anyone unless it’s via trade. So get used to this squad for the next couple months folks.

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    Kelly Olynyk is the starting center the Lakers should target

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    Lakers - Cavaliers Starters

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    Hell with DPOY. AD is playing like league MVP!

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