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LakerTom wrote a new post
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Heading into the offseason, the Lakers need to upgrade both their starting lineup and rotation. They simply have too many one-way players who only excel on offense or defense and need to be replaced by two-way players.https://t.co/FXuiRS44Lh pic.twitter.com/jcItRZFoBH
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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The Lakers need to emulate what the Celtics and other top NBA teams are doing and build out a roster capable of rolling out lineups with five players who can shoot the three on offense and switch everything on defense.https://t.co/FXuiRS44Lh pic.twitter.com/L38ZUj3sAq
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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Offensively, the Lakers simply need to take and make more threes. Last season, they made 11.8 threes per game (28th in the NBA) on 31.8 attempts per game (24th in the NBA) despite shooting 37.7% (8th in the NBA).https://t.co/FXuiRS44Lh pic.twitter.com/YKOQ3kL82o
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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In no known universe is Bogdanovic a two way player. He will be 32 and is leaving his prime. Yet you would trade Rui who is 26 and entering his. Rui is a much better defender and can guard 3 through 5. Yes Bogdanovic shot 37% on 8 attempts but that was in a system that featured the 3. Rui shot 43% as a starter on 4 attempts in a system that didn’t. If you believe we need an upgrade over Rui, fine, but it ain’t Bogdanovic. By the way I would start DLO over him. Better shooter and no worse as a defender.
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The Celtics and Mavs led the league with 42.5 and 39.5 3PA per game and 16.5 and 14.6 3PM per game. Playing those teams, the Lakers would face a negative 3-point differential of 14.1 ppg vs. Boston and 8.4 ppg vs. Dallas.https://t.co/FXuiRS44Lh pic.twitter.com/Ejz7SazGQu
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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Defensively, the Lakers need an elite point-of-attack defensive guard to slow down opposing point guards, a legitimate bigger 3&D wing to guard opposing scoring wings, and a backup center who can protect the rim.https://t.co/FXuiRS44Lh pic.twitter.com/0e5zmBW95c
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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The Lakers also need a bigger bulkier defensive center who can bang with larger more physical centers like Nikola Jokic, Domantas Sabonis, or Joel Embiid, who can overpower and bully starting center Anthony Davis.https://t.co/FXuiRS3wVJ pic.twitter.com/cek3bIV7cy
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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Hi Tom,
Great article. I hope the Lakers will draft either Kel’el Ware or Kyle Flipkowski. In my opinion Flip is the best prospect so far among those 4. Kel’el will need more development. Searched highlights and opinions about these 4 kids and Flip comes out as the best among the 4. He has the range and mobility to really have the chance to defend the center position. He will be a good addition to the Lakers roster.
For trading two-way players, what happened with the Mikal Bridges trade will make it more difficult for us to secure Dejounte Murray. Atlanta will now ask the Sun and the Moon from the Lakers just for them to trade Murray. Bridges has not even been named in the All-Star selection and Knicks have given 5 1st round picks and pick swaps for him. It is absurd and crazy but it has set the bar high for this season to acquire two-way players. We will not be able to afford it. Gabe Vincent, Rui and JHS with 2 1st Round Picks will be too much to give for Murray.
I aggree to sign DLo. There is no good PG in the market that will be able to replicate his production unless we get lucky in trades. Even if we trade for an All-Star or someone like Murray, it is still nice to have DLo in the line-up. Prince can still be signed for a minimum deal and play as a reserve role. he is good but not as a starter.
The best scenario is try to get Markannen. He can be a great stretch 4 or 5 for our team. Try to draft a Wing or a Center. Sign a Wing or Center that can be affordable. Retain DLo and some of our young guys. We can only dream
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Thanks, Havoc. It was so damn exciting to see Knecht fall to us. Here’s what I would like Lakers to do next:
Jazz own #2 pick in second round of 2024 NBA draft.
Jazz own Lakers 2027 top-four protected FRP.
Lakers should offer to remove 2027 protections and add 2028 first FRP swap for Jazz' second round pick.
Lakers use pick for Filipowski as b/u center.
Leaves 29,30, & 31 picks for DJM https://t.co/AulcpTR1MX— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 27, 2024
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Was a bummer that we didn’t get a center but Lakers made right move by grabbing Dalton and not missing out on a lottery pick like last year. Knecht is JJ Redick clone.
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Lakers did not make a trade for the 2nd round draft. Knecht was indeed a good pick. He may lack some defense but was said to be a 3 level scorer. I would like the Lakers make a move at Markannen which includes Filipowski. Give utah 3 FRP Rui, JHS and Vincent. make all picks unprotected to make it more enticing for the Jazz. Sign Dlo and maybe find someone cheaper in FA for a defensive guard who can score as well
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The other second round option is for Lakers to buy SRP to use on a backup center. Two prospects who would be great additions to Lakers as backup center w/b lefty Tyler Smith or UCLA's Adem Bona, both projected to go around 10th. We missed on JJJ last year. Don't miss on Bona! https://t.co/EXi0PX0B2P pic.twitter.com/wLQAe1tsSm
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 27, 2024
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Depends on how confident you are the Lakers will still be a winning team in 2027 and 2028 and that the Jazz will not, in which case you got a backup center for nada.
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 27, 2024
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Wanted to wait until after the draft just to reduce the number of hypothetical situations. We now know that the Lakers didn’t draft a big with either pick and instead chose the best player available at 17 and a bonafide project with high upside at 55 who likely slots in as a defensive specialist with the ability to hit the open shot and make the play in front of him. I think these were the right moves. Frankly anyone you draft at 55 is a project. If Bronny has a role on the team it likely means someone has gotten hurt.
I think we’re still going to have an identity of attacking the paint. It’s the strength of our 2 best players, although I expect LeBron to average 8-10 three pointers/game.
I’m not sure what trades are actually available but, with just 2 picks to trade (and bevy if swaps…I know) I don’t see us being major players in most of the trade scenarios out there that I’ve seen. That’s not to say we won’t make a move but I think the Lakers are bringing in Reddick to work with the majority of the current roster. Vincent and JHS are filler, at best. Rui is a decent enough trade chip but if the rest of the league has been watching what we’ve been watching he’s a mid grade starter/above average bench player. Reaves seems nigh-untouchable and Vando was hurt so much last season that his value is fairly low. While you may be if the opinion that the quality of the player involved in a trade doesn’t really matter and that’s it’s more about the money and the picks, I am not. I think that few teams are in the business if shopping out good players just for filler and a few picks that may or may not be favorable. It’s just not good business.
I think we’re seeing teams who are on the cusp of contention making small tweaks and teams that are facing potential tax bills and are not on a clear path to contention shedding good players but the Lakers are unwilling or unable to get in on that action…so far.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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PG: Murray, Ball
SG: Christie, Bronny, Reddish
SF: James, Lewis
PF: Davis, Wood
CE: Olynyk, Holmes— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 26, 2024
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LakerTom wrote a new post
https://x.com/LakerTom/status/1805988718165262339
As is often the case, the Los Angeles Lakers are at the center of the NBA offseason for a variety of reasons.
They officially hired broadcaster and podcaster JJ Redick as their next head coach on Monday, a highly scrutinized process that lasted nearly two months. LeBron James’ future hangs in the balance — at least momentarily — even though the Lakers’ operating assumption for months has been that he will return next season. D’Angelo Russell, who noted he has leverage over the Lakers after their playoff elimination in Denver, has the potential to swing LA’s offseason with his $18.7 million player option. As of Wednesday, Los Angeles has access to trade three first-round draft picks for the first time in years and immense pressure to find the right deal.
What we learned about JJ Redick’s strategy in Lakers intro: More 3s, Anthony Davis’ role and more
Just as things appeared to calm momentarily before Wednesday’s NBA Draft, The Athletic reported on Tuesday that James and Anthony Davis want the Lakers to “go all-in for another elite player” — preferably as soon as this week. Hours later, the New York Knicks traded five first-round picks for Mikal Bridges in a blockbuster deal that signified the Knicks’ all-in approach. It also potentially reset the trade market — a negative for the Lakers, who have relatively limited assets in comparison to some of their competitors — after the Alex Caruso–Josh Giddey swap appeared to lower the price for high-level role players.
The Lakers enter this summer faced with countless questions: Will they make a trade that elevates them to true contender status? Is it a third star? More depth? How will James and Davis feel if LA stands pat? Will that affect James’ free-agency decision? What happens with Russell? Can the Lakers find their latest gem with the No. 17 pick? How, if at all, does Bronny James factor into all of this?
Without further ado, let’s lay out the Lakers’ offseason.
Current projected depth chart
The Lakers have eight players on guaranteed contracts for next season: Davis, Austin Reaves, Rui Hachimura, Jarred Vanderbilt, Gabe Vincent, Christian Wood, Jalen Hood-Schifino and Maxwell Lewis.
Here is their projected depth chart with the current group:
Point guard: Vincent, Hood-Schifino
Shooting guard: Reaves, Lewis
Small forward: Vanderbilt
Power forward: Hachimura
Center: Davis, WoodThere is, of course, flexibility with the positioning. Hachimura and Vanderbilt are relatively interchangeable. Davis and Wood can play together in two-big lineups. Reaves can shift down to be the primary ballhandler (and likely would be, anyway). Lewis can theoretically play either wing spot.
The Lakers then have four players with player options: James ($51.4 million), Russell ($18.7 million), Jaxson Hayes ($2.5 million) and Cam Reddish ($2.5 million). Each must decide on their future by Saturday.
Los Angeles also has three players officially entering free agency: Max Christie (restricted), Taurean Prince and Spencer Dinwiddie.
2024 NBA Draft
The Lakers currently have two picks in the 2024 NBA Draft on Wednesday and Thursday: No. 17 in the first round and No. 55 in the second round (via the LA Clippers). They are projected to draft Colorado forward Tristan da Silva at No. 17 and USC guard Bronny James at No. 55 in Sam Vecenie’s latest mock draft.
Given their notable draft track record, and history of draft-day trades, it’s certainly possible the Lakers move up or down in the first round, or trade for another second-round pick.
Wednesday also marks the first day the Lakers will have access to those three tradeable first-round picks in 2024, 2029 and 2031. They also can use pick swaps in 2026, 2028 and 2030.
Lakers’ salary cap
There are numerous ways the Lakers’ offseason can play out, but the most likely scenario is operating as an over-the-cap team that pushes past the luxury tax line ($171.3 million), the first apron (projected at a $178.7 million team salary) and just under the second apron (projected at $189.5 million), depending on the final figures, which will be determined on June 30.
The Lakers will almost certainly stay below the second apron, which effectively acts as a hard cap for most teams given the significant penalties that accompany it. Teams over the second apron, for example, cannot trade first-round picks seven years in the future, lose their midlevel exception, are limited to 100 percent salary-matching in trades and cannot combine multiple players in a deal, among several other restrictions.
Assuming James either re-signs ($49.9 million) or opts in ($51.4 million), the Lakers will have between approximately $153.6 million to $155.1 million in salary with nine players. That’s before factoring in the player options for Russell, Hayes and Reddish, Christie’s restricted free agency (most restricted free agents are retained by their incumbent team), the potential use of the Nos. 17 and 55 picks (or another pick), and the remaining free-agent cap holds for Prince ($5.4 million) and Dinwiddie ($1.9 million).
Here are various salary-cap scenarios for Los Angeles:
Lakers’ salary scenarios
Current eight players
$103,717,825
Current eight + LeBron James
$155,133,763
Current eight + D’Angelo Russell
$122,410,132
Current eight + LeBron + DLo
$173,826,070
Current eight + all four player options
$178,753,962
Current eight + all four player options + No. 17 pick
$182,584,242The Lakers will likely have one of their two exceptions to spend on a free agent: either the $5.2 million taxpayer midlevel exception or the $12.9 million non-taxpayer midlevel exception (which triggers a hard cap at the first apron).
If James opts in or re-signs, and Russell opts in, the Lakers will only have the $5.2 million exception. If James opts in or re-signs, but Russell opts out and leaves, the Lakers will have access to the $12.9 million exception to replace his roster spot. (As always, there are several plausible scenarios, but those two are the most realistic.)
One under-discussed concern: The Lakers could very well face a roster crunch if all four players with player options opt in and they keep their No. 17 pick. At that point, they’d have 13 players under contract, without factoring in the No. 55 pick, any of their own free agents or any potential signings. In that scenario, the only way the Lakers could create roster spots would be by consolidating the roster through multi-player trades.
Roster needs
There are several clear holes based on the projected roster. But assuming James, Christie and Reddish are back — there is less certainty with Hayes and Russell — the Lakers will still need another two-way wing (or two), another ballhandler and another backup big to fill out the rotation. Hayes and Russell can technically fill two of those voids if they opt in.
As The Athletic previously reported, the Lakers are going to be aggressive looking to upgrade the roster via the trade market. However, vice president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka tempered expectations on Monday about the Lakers making a sizable trade given the trade market and the restraints of the first and second apron.
“If the perfect trade comes along, we can use picks to make it and win a championship, yeah, we’ll do it,” Pelinka said during Redick’s introductory press conference. “Is that trade going to be there? I don’t know. It’s harder in this system to find perfect trades.”
That messaging, while an accurate depiction of the current state of most trade affairs league-wide, is a departure from the optimism Pelinka displayed at the February trade deadline.
If the Lakers don’t make a trade, they will reasonably only have the No. 17 and 55 draft picks, the non-taxpayer midlevel exception or the taxpayer midlevel exception, and veteran’s minimum contracts to improve the roster.
Two-way wings
There is perhaps no position in the modern NBA more important — outside of superstars capable of leading a title team, obviously — than quality 3-and-D wings. At a minimum, it’s the most important role-player position. Players who can defend multiple positions and credibly space the floor are invaluable.
This has been the weakest part of the Lakers’ roster for several years. They have been lacking in two-way contributors on the perimeter since the 2020-21 season, when they last had Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Kyle Kuzma and Caruso.
Success in the modern NBA stems from having as many of those types of guys around one’s stars as possible. It’s why the Celtics, Mavericks, Thunder, Timberwolves and Knicks recently had successful regular seasons and advanced past the first round of the playoffs. The Lakers have size with the foundation of Davis, James, Hachimura, Vanderbilt and Wood. But outside of Davis, only Vanderbilt is a plus-defender on a nightly basis. The Lakers need more size that can adequately defend.
Ideally, they acquire a third frontcourt starter who is a combination of Hachimura’s offensive skill and strength with Vanderbilt’s defense, athleticism, length and energy. Few of those players exist, though, and those that do are quite difficult to attain. Regardless, they need someone who bridges the offense and defense better. More likely than not, they’ll have to address this need on the trade market, barring an incredible free-agency value.
Russell replacement?
In the scenario that Russell opts out and signs with another team, or is sign-and-traded, the Lakers will need to replace his 18.0 points and 6.3 assists. That could come in the form of more usage for the rest of the rotation, especially Reaves, who took a backseat to Russell in the offensive hierarchy last season, and Vincent, who is a year removed from being the starting point guard during the Miami Heat’s NBA Finals run. Redick also plans to use Davis more as a hub at the elbows and above the arc, which will redistribute some of the offensive responsibilities.
Nonetheless, the Lakers will need to nominally replace Russell with another point guard. They could sign one with an exception or a minimum contract, they could draft one or they could trade for one. But the Lakers will need to enter next season with more than just James, Reaves, Vincent and Hood-Schifino as their primary ballhandlers.
Backup big man
Similar to the wing position, the Lakers have lacked ancillary centers since the trio of Marc Gasol, Andre Drummond and Montrezl Harrell in 2020-21. Since then, the Lakers have had a revolving door of subpar journeymen and aging veterans. This summer, the Lakers should invest in the position more financially, either through the draft, free agency or a trade.
There’s a reasonable possibility that they enter next season with the same center trio of Davis, Wood and Hayes. That’s probably not good enough, though. Wood fizzled out after a decent start. He never carried the offensive load the Lakers envisioned; he didn’t prop up non-Davis lineups. He scored in double figures in only 15 of 56 games and scored 15-plus points in just three games. Hayes replaced him in the pecking order over the final few months of the season but was unable to find a role in the Denver series and is relatively limited defensively, despite his athletic 7-foot frame.
The Lakers could use someone better than both players — at a minimum, a better rim protector and more physical paint force. It would be a bonus if that player could play alongside Davis in productive two-big lineups — looks the Lakers have used sparingly over the past two seasons,
Point-of-attack defense
This is a more niche concern, as the potential combination of Vincent, Christie, Vanderbilt and Reaves could address the Lakers’ point-of-attack concerns. Vincent missed 71 games last season. Vanderbilt missed 53. Christie was marginalized for over half the season. Reaves began the season with dead legs after a deep playoff run and a summer with Team USA. The Lakers were limited, in part, because of factors largely outside of their control. Internal improvement is possible, if not likely.
But an athletic, quick, defensive-minded guard would do wonders from an optionality perspective. That’ll be tough to add given their limited resources, limited roster spots and greater needs elsewhere. (Bronny profiles as that player archetype, but it’s unreasonable to expect him to emerge as a rotation player next season.)
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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The Lakers could move up in the draft to target Devin Carter or Ja’Kobe Walter, per @DanWoikeSports
“Some rival executives believe the Lakers could be aggressive in moving up in the first round. Two players they like, Providence’s Devin Carter and Baylor’s Ja’Kobe Walter, are… pic.twitter.com/OhMqfwPfow
— NBACentral (@TheDunkCentral) June 26, 2024
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Another massive deal: Brooklyn has a deal with Houston to return the Nets’ 2026 first-round pick for a 2027 Phoenix Suns first-round pick, sources tell ESPN. Rockets also acquire 2025 right to swap Houston/OKC first for 2025 Suns first-round pick. More details coming on picks… pic.twitter.com/qkTh3KwV63
— Adrian Wojnarowski (@wojespn) June 26, 2024
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Michael H wrote a new post
Aloha,
Seeing OG opting out brought back another wonderful Rob memory. Rob backed out of a 3 way trade with the Knicks and Raptors because he didn’t want to send Horton-Tucker to the Raptors. Later Horton-Tucker was his reason for letting Caruso walk because he claimed we couldn’t keep both. Fake news alert: He could have. Adding those moves to his long list makes it extremely difficult for me to have any faith that he can turn the Lakers around. Poor JJ, hardly knew ya.
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Michael H wrote a new post
Aloha,
For those thinking that the Lakers have the assets for a star, think again.
BREAKING: The Brooklyn Nets have agreed in principle on a trade to send F Mikal Bridges to the New York Knicks for Bojan Bogdanovic, four unprotected first-round picks, a protected first-round pick via Bucks, an unprotected pick swap and a second-rounder, sources
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I don’t know why but anytime I have a certain player in mind that I would like the Lakers to get another team snatches them. OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges are two players I was hoping to be Lakers, but all those hopes are dashed. I know we don’t have much assets to make trades for such players but sometimes I feel like Rob has been too passive. He’s certainly needs to be visionary if the Lakers are to be relevant.
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Five great takeaways per Jovan:
1. JJ Redick won the podcast.
2. Redick;s coaching philosophy has begun to crystallize – modernize lakers offense and defense, more threes, more offensive rebounding, using AD like Nuggets use Jokic, using James off the ball and shooting more threes, less drop coverage, etc. Have fun! Player App.
3. Importannce of player development – draft more important, retaining assets, not losing players to free agency. Use the #17 pick for a rotation player who can help next year, like a center. Reaves, Rui, Max, + JHS. No mention of DLO or Vando.
4. Tempered trade expectations. Worrying about how CBA affects trades, looking for smaller rather than bigger move. Not trading AR for DJM, which could be a mistake imo. Bottom line, Lakers should trade at least 2 of the 3 picks to improve roster. Must do that.
5. Clarification on search and hiring process.
5.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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That’s the opposite of what LeBron said in an interview a couple of weeks ago. He said he preferred depth over a 3rd star.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
https://x.com/LakerTom/status/1805623425828012104
1. An Interior Force With Myles Turner
Pacers receive:
-Rui Hachimura
-Jalen Hood-Schifino
-2024 NBA Draft No. 17 Pick
-2026 First-Round Pick Swap (LAL)Lakers receive:
-Myles Turner2. Bruce Brown Would Be A Great Role Option
Lakers receive:
-Bruce BrownRaptors receive:
-Rui Hachimura
-Jaxson Hayes
-2025 Second-Round Pick (LAC)
-2027 Second-Round Pick (LAL)3. Zach LaVine As A Main Scoring Option
Lakers receive:
-Zach LaVineBulls receive:
-D’Angelo Russell (sign-and-trade)
-Austin Reaves
-Gabe Vincent4. Trae Young Can Be A Game-Changer For The Lakers
Lakers receive:
-Trae YoungHawks receive:
-D’Angelo Russell (sign-and-trade)
-Austin Reaves
-Gabe Vincent
-2029 First-Round Pick (LAL)5. Is Dejounte Murray The Missing Piece?
Lakers receive:
-Dejounte MurrayHawks receive:
-D’Angelo Russell (sign-and-trade)
-Austin Reaves
-2029 First-Round Pick (LAL)5 Comments-
Could these deals happen? If some guys play nice and opt in (looking at Russell and Hayes) sure. Not sure why they would but maybe they like team X and see a bright future there.
1) I would do 1, not sure why Indy would move him now when they just got PS to return but let’s just say they’re at least open to the idea. They won’t be trading him for Rui as they are set at the wing with PS, Mathurin, Nesmith and possibly Toppin returning. You’d need another big as they are a small team all around. Rui is an under-sized 5, at best, and really an under-sized 4. MT is a core member of the team who has been there through the bad and good, hard to see them trading him for an inferior talent who doesn’t help and bust.
2) Don’t see Hayes opting in to get traded somewhere with a starter in place. He at least, one would imagine, want to be the starter penciled in and that isn’t the case in Toronto where that slot is Kelly Olynyk’s to lose, clearly. Maybe swap Wood for Hayes since he did opt in. For Wood and Rui I would definitely do that move but only for the 2nd rounders and maybe push for just the one in 2025.
3) No.
4) No.
5) Just don’t see us having the best offer for Murray in any dimension. Orlando can offer cap relief, or even a landing spot for Capella’s deal, New York could trade Robinson and Shake or McBride and a boatload of equitable to our own picks, just to add a dynamic scorer to help bridge the minutes when Brunson sits and for them both to be on the floor when the game is on the line, etc. There are others, as well, Houston, Clippers (S&T for either Harden or PG), Golden State (same with KT), and so on.
All of this based on the idea that we aren’t trading Reaves for any of the names on this list, which is what I believe is the truth.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
https://x.com/LakerTom/status/1805589669008261248
JJ Redick was officially introduced as head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday, and the first question on everyone’s lips was whether or not he would retain his old job as a podcaster. That question was answered definitively. “I am, for the time being, and hopefully it’s a very, very long time, I am excommunicated from the content space,” Redick said. “There will be no podcast.”
As for the on-court matters? Well, those questions are a bit more complicated. Redick was clear that figuring out how this team will play will be a collaborative process between him, his staff and the yet-to-be-constructed roster. There’s only so much we can take from a single press conference, especially when the coach being introduced has no experience at the professional level.
But Redick and general manager Rob Pelinka did offer some important insight into what the next era of Lakers basketball will look like. Here are some of the highlights from their press conference on Monday.
1. Anthony Davis was more involved in the hire than LeBron James
Typically, teams work closely with their best players when they are looking for a new head coach. That is especially true of players of a certain stature. LeBron James and Anthony Davis, All-NBA players that led the Lakers to the 2020 championship, certainly qualify. But according to Pelinka, one of them played a much bigger part in the process than the other.
2. Pelinka noncommittal about trading draft picks
Redick’s success or failure as a coach is going to be defined by the roster Pelinka builds for him. Even now, mere days before the draft, we aren’t sure what that roster is going to look like. Are the Lakers going to emphasize continuity and largely run this group back? Or are they going to invest the picks and youth needed to make a major trade and really go for it now, while James and Davis are still stars?
3. The Lakers are looking to modernize
If there was one instructive quote about Redick’s coaching philosophy, it was this: “I’m gonna use math,” he quipped before repeating himself. Virtually everything he said followed that line of thinking. He said openly that he wants James, who shot 41% on 3-pointers last season, to shoot more 3s if he’s back next season. He said the same of Rui Hachimura. The Lakers have been a low 3-point volume team since James arrived. Redick is seemingly eager to change that.
But his quest to modernize the Lakers extends beyond on-court strategy. The front office has long been known for its family-business approach. While there are a lot of influential voices on major decisions, the Lakers have never been known for spending to build robust scouting or analytics departments. Reports have indicated that they plan to invest more in those areas under Redick, and Pelinka explained that one key way they plan to do so will be by emphasizing technology moving forward.
“JJ and I have had some really robust conversations around innovation of sort of even gamifying player development. If you think about a 20-year-old basketball player today and maybe a 20-year-old basketball player, I don’t know, 10, 15, 20 years ago, the modiums of learning are completely different. I mean, we all probably, some of us have kids, we have nephews, nieces. Kids and athletes are learning in new and innovative ways. So we’ve talked about how do we translate coach Redick’s offensive system to app-based or a phone-based deliverable where players can be buying into a philosophy and learning it in a way that meets today’s young player.” And I think innovation has got to be at the core of that. We have a vision for, to your point of hiring out his support staff in sort of this tech, bullpen way of getting innovative minds to help bring his basketball strategy and bring his basketball philosophy to life in a way that our players can grasp it, learn it and eventually grow their basketball IQ.”
The Lakers have spent years behind the times. It’s been evident in their playing styles throughout the James era and even before. The league changed around them and they refused to change with it. But they’ve made an unconventional hire in Redick, and they appear ready to give him the resources he needs to bring the entire organization up to speed.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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Pass. Dude needs to play on a team with zero expectations so he can get into a clearer head space. I think he can be a serviceable backup center, and maybe more, but he just came in with too much hype and had too many early injuries.