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LakerTom wrote a new post
THE LOS ANGELES LAKERS HAVE CLINCHED THE 3RD SEED WHAT A RIDE. 50 WINS, 81/82 GAMES. OFFS HERE WE COME 😤😈🙌🙌🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/VQVuGotrsm— LakeShowGo (@LakeShowGo) April 12, 2025
THE LOS ANGELES LAKERS HAVE CLINCHED THE 3RD SEED WHAT A RIDE. 50 WINS, 81/82 GAMES. OFFS HERE WE COME 😤😈🙌🙌🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/VQVuGotrsm— LakeShowGo (@LakeShowGo) April 12, 2025
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LakerTom4 days, 21 hours ago
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The last time the Lakers won 50 games was in the bubble championship year and their first in an 82-game season in more than a decade.
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Michael H wrote a new post
Aloha,
Luka has had many great games with the Lakers but this was the first time we saw the Destroyer of Worlds version of Luka. Being able to channel that kind of emotion into that performance was remarkable. It’s was Kobe like.
When the team saw that Luka was on a roll it seemed like they all slipped in to the back seat and watched him drive. LeBron and Rui began to contribute in the 2nd half when Luka only scored a “measly” 14.
AD was the opposite of Luka. As Laker fans we have seen that version of AD from time to time, slipping into the woodwork. As great as AD is, he will forever be a side kick. Now it wasn’t all his fault. We applied the Joker defense and swarmed him whenever possible and he was playing without a true play maker. But it just revealed the difference between Luka and AD. AD needs help, Luka doesn’t. We also got to see him play his beloved power forward position. This left him out on the perimeter on both offense and defense where he is not nearly as effective. I’ve said it before and I will say it again AD’s best position is center. Period.
Dallas has a real size advantage over us and I thought we handled it very well. With Rui back, our small ball line up is very effective as the rotations were crisp and on point.
I would still like more help at the 5 but there isn’t much we can do about that until the summer.With the Warriors losing last night we are guaranteed at least the 5th seed. The Clippers, Griz and Nuggets are behind us and we hold the tie breakers. The Griz play the nuggets. So one of them can’t pass us. Actually there is a way we can win the 3rd seed without winning another game. If the TWolves beat the Griz, and the Griz beat the Nuggets and the Warriors beat the Clippers that would give us the 3rd seed. Not impossible at all.
Still I would prefer to beat the Rockets and get it over with. It will be interesting to see who the Rockets play. They rested all of their starters against the Clippers. They are locked into the 2nd seed and should prioritize health over a win. Still we beat them last time, so we’ll see how they handle it.
Regardless, we are in a good spot and will have a week for LeBron to rest before the playoffs. A luxury we didn’t have the last two years. We will not need the Luka the destroyer of worlds version of Luka to have a deep playoff run but it’s nice to know that version is available if needed.
Aloha,
Luka has had many great games with the Lakers but this was the first time we saw the Destroyer of Worlds version of Luka. Being able to channel that kind of emotion into that performance was remarkable. It’s was Kobe like.
When the team saw that Luka was on a roll it seemed like they all slipped in to the back seat and watched him drive. LeBron and Rui began to contribute in the 2nd half when Luka only scored a “measly” 14.
AD was the opposite of Luka. As Laker fans we have seen that version of AD from time to time, slipping into the woodwork. As great as AD is, he will forever be a side kick. Now it wasn’t all his fault. We applied the Joker defense and swarmed him whenever possible and he was playing without a true play maker. But it just revealed the difference between Luka and AD. AD needs help, Luka doesn’t. We also got to see him play his beloved power forward position. This left him out on the perimeter on both offense and defense where he is not nearly as effective. I’ve said it before and I will say it again AD’s best position is center. Period.
Dallas has a real size advantage over us and I thought we handled it very well. With Rui back, our small ball line up is very effective as the rotations were crisp and on point.
I would still like more help at the 5 but there isn’t much we can do about that until the summer.With the Warriors losing last night we are guaranteed at least the 5th seed. The Clippers, Griz and Nuggets are behind us and we hold the tie breakers. The Griz play the nuggets. So one of them can’t pass us. Actually there is a way we can win the 3rd seed without winning another game. If the TWolves beat the Griz, and the Griz beat the Nuggets and the Warriors beat the Clippers that would give us the 3rd seed. Not impossible at all.
Still I would prefer to beat the Rockets and get it over with. It will be interesting to see who the Rockets play. They rested all of their starters against the Clippers. They are locked into the 2nd seed and should prioritize health over a win. Still we beat them last time, so we’ll see how they handle it.
Regardless, we are in a good spot and will have a week for LeBron to rest before the playoffs. A luxury we didn’t have the last two years. We will not need the Luka the destroyer of worlds version of Luka to have a deep playoff run but it’s nice to know that version is available if needed.
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Hey Michael! After some thought, I have decided to add some takes to your brilliant post. I’ve been reflecting on your insights about Anthony Davis, and honestly, the contrast between AD and Luka couldn’t be more striking. Luka’s most significant edge is reliability—game after game, you know what you’re getting from him. Even if he’s having an off-shooting night, Luka seamlessly pivots, finding creative ways to elevate his teammates and make an impact.
Meanwhile, despite his incredible talent, AD tends to fade into the background during crucial moments. Their difference isn’t just noticeable—it’s a complete game-changer! What do you all think? -
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LakerTom wrote a new post
“They all had my back. That’s what we talked about before the game and everybody had my back from coaches to players. We’re trying to build something special here. That was really nice to see.”Luka on the moment during a TO where he was embraced by his teammates and fans pic.twitter.com/PWVz2oxYwt— LakeShowScoop (@LakeShowScoop) April 10, 2025
“They all had my back. That’s what we talked about before the game and everybody had my back from coaches to players. We’re trying to build something special here. That was really nice to see.”Luka on the moment during a TO where he was embraced by his teammates and fans pic.twitter.com/PWVz2oxYwt— LakeShowScoop (@LakeShowScoop) April 10, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Hurt by Mavericks trade, Luka Dončić is now feeling the love in L.A. and beyond https://t.co/TF51o9UESu— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 10, 2025
Hurt by Mavericks trade, Luka Dončić is now feeling the love in L.A. and beyond https://t.co/TF51o9UESu— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 10, 2025
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FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE:
In February, at the Lakers’ UCLA Health Training Facility in El Segundo, Calif., Luka Dončić sat hunched over, staring at the ground or into the distance. There were respites for smiles and smirks, but Dončić, a typically reserved but jovial personality, was still processing the shock of the blockbuster trade that shipped him from Dallas to Los Angeles.
“That first day was really hard,” Dončić said at his introductory news conference. “I felt like these last 48 hours were one month.”
Dončić returned to Dallas on Wednesday, playing in American Airlines Center as an opponent for the first time. But beyond the emotional return, which included the “Hvala za vse” T-shirts — Slovenian for “Thank you for everything” — and a tribute video during starting lineup introductions that moved Dončić to tears, the purple and gold jerseys dotting the crowd made it feel like anything but a road game. Dončić received cheers whenever he scored and “MVP!” chants at the free-throw line.
And that part, the embrace of Lakers Nation, the superstar has most certainly welcomed.
“Oh, yeah, big time,” Dončić said in an exclusive interview with The Athletic last week. “I remember the first couple games, they were always cheering me up. It’s been amazing for me.”
Dončić’s Dallas exit had been hurtful. At a time when he was expecting a super-max contract in the summer and closing on his $15 million home, he was instead awoken from his sleep to the news he was being traded — losing out on over $100 million — all while being disparaged on the way out.
The Mavericks questioned Dončić’s defense, conditioning, weight and work ethic, according to league sources. To many, the trade was nonsensical from the Mavericks’ perspective. They were trading away a generational superstar not yet in his prime. But the message from Dallas was that the franchise wanted to go in a new direction and build a different culture.
The Lakers, meanwhile, saw a basketball genius and the heir to their next era.
There were questions about who the face of the franchise would be following LeBron James’ retirement. The Lakers hoped it would be Anthony Davis — or he’d at least bridge them into their next era — but they were clearly open to alternative paths. The golden off-ramp, to bring in a 25-year-old global superstar still on the rise, was too attractive to pass up.
“I think Luka Dončić joining forces with the Los Angeles Lakers is a seismic event in NBA history,” said Rob Pelinka, Lakers vice president of basketball operations and general manager, at Dončić’s introductory news conference. “The reason I say that is because we have a 25-year-old global superstar that’s going to get on the stage with the most popular and influential basketball brand on the globe. …
“If you think about kids in Barcelona, or kids in Buenos Aires, or children in Shanghai or Sydney, they’re going to be wearing a No. 77 Luka Dončić Lakers jersey and bringing joy to basketball, just like he does. And that’s why it’s powerful.”
Like the one-name Laker greats — West, Baylor, Wilt, Kareem, Magic, Shaq, Kobe and LeBron — that came before him, Luka has quickly built an emotional connection with the Lakers fan base that helped him get back on his feet.
Shortly after the trade, Carrera Cafe commissioned artist Arutyun Gozkuchikyan to paint a food mural on the wall next to the Melrose Avenue restaurant.
But the lifelong Los Angeles Lakers fan convinced the cafe that he had a better idea: he would paint the first Dončić mural for them.
Gozkuchikyan, 42, had experience painting basketball murals, having done multiple Kobe Bryant paintings over the past half-decade, including one of the first in 2020 of the late superstar. When the cafe obliged and asked Gozkuchikyan for a reference for his vision, there was only one option in his mind.
“It was Kobe and Luka,” said Gozkuchikyan, who is also known as ArToon.
Back in December 2019, in the final Lakers game that Bryant would attend, he took his 13-year-old daughter, Gigi, to watch Dončić, her favorite player.
During the game, Bryant playfully trash-talked Dončić in Slovenian, Dončić’s native language. The two chatted afterward and embraced in a photo that was eventually memorialized after Kobe and Gigi’s deaths on Jan. 26, 2020.
(Photo: Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
“I remember the exact moment that happened,” Dončić said of the interaction in his introductory news conference on Feb. 3. “It will always stay in my mind. It was an amazing moment. Just for Kobe to know my name was amazing for me. I just wish Kobe and Gigi were here to see this moment.”Over five years later, Gozkuchikyan wanted to welcome Dončić with a mural of him alongside the late Lakers legend. Only Gozkuchikyan wanted to make a notable change — he painted Dončić in a Lakers jersey and changed Bryant’s orange WNBA hoodie and green Eagles beanie to purple and yellow, respectively.
The mural immediately went viral, being shared on all corners of social media. Dončić even reposted it to his Instagram story.
“I thought it was just the most proper way of an introduction to Luka coming to L.A.,” Gozkuchikyan said. “LA has a lot of GOATs, but Kobe is our GOAT.”
“It’s unbelievable,” Dončić said in late February about the mural. “You know how much I admire him.”
Dončić is a man of few words during his news conferences. He’s respectful, but he prefers to keep his answers and availability as quick as possible.
“I like short answers,” Dončić joked three weeks ago.
But when it comes to his love for the fans, he is giving with his time. Dončić routinely stops to sign autographs at games — at home and on the road — and even outside of the team’s hotel when arriving on the team bus or leaving for shootaround, practice or games. It’s an uncommon act, especially from a superstar of Dončić’s status. Some players might occasionally stop for an autograph or photo, but Dončić makes it a point to fulfill as many as he can.
His mentor, Mavericks legend Dirk Nowitzki, was similar, and Dončić decided as a rookie that regardless of how great or famous he became, he’d always make time to give back to his fans.
“He was a big influence for me and he always stops no matter what,” Dončić told The Athletic.
Dončić remembers what it’s like to be a kid wanting to take a photo or have memorabilia signed by his idols. Those gestures mean something to him.
“I was raised like that,” Dončić said. “I’ve always done it.”
Dončić’s acts within the Los Angeles community and the Lakers fan base have also not gone unnoticed. Within a week of his arrival, he donated $500,000 to the Los Angeles wildfire relief, which took place nearly a month before he was a Laker.
Hours ahead of his first game against Dallas, Dončić had his Hollywood moment when Jordan Brand released an ad featuring a man, presumed to be Dončić, in a gray tracksuit removing a “77” Texas license plate off a purple Koenigsegg. As he moved away to reveal a purple “77” California license plate, “All My Ex’s Live in Texas” by George Strait played in the background.
As the car revved, the screen went black and the message “Full Tank. No Mercy,” flashed in red.
Dončić and his shoe sponsor doubled down on his revenge game, teaming up to buy out a lot at the corner of South Figueroa and West 11th Streets. A purple and white sign said, “Free parking. Courtesy of Luka.”
“It’s a kind gesture that’s never been done before,” said Rian, a Lakers fan who attended the game and parked in the free parking lot.
One of Dončić’s under-the-radar acts of kindness happened when he was scrolling through X and saw a tweet from Patrik Zrnko, a 16-year-old from Slovenia.
Zrnko, his mom, Slavica, and younger brother, Brin, had planned a trip to Los Angeles to watch the Lakers play the Milwaukee Bucks on March 20. But with that game concluding a six-games-in-eight-days stretch for the Lakers, Los Angeles decided to rest several key players, including Dončić.
Zrnko tweeted at the franchise that he was saddened that they made such a long voyage to not see the full squad. He tagged Dončić, LeBron James, Rui Hachimura, Gabe Vincent (who’s deactivated his X account), Jarred Vanderbilt and team reporter/broadcaster Mike Trudell.
Dončić was moved by the post. He sent the tweet to his business manager, Lara Beth Seager, saying he wanted to arrange for his foundation to buy tickets for Zrnko and his family.
“For Luka to do that, it means the world,” Zrnko told The Athletic. “He’s the star of Los Angeles and the biggest name in Slovenia. So to reach out to us, it’s like, we didn’t have words.”
Dončić finally said goodbye to Dallas on Wednesday, closing a chapter that saw him take the franchise all the way to the NBA Finals less than a year ago.
As he walked off the floor after tying his season-high with 45 points, his teammates stood up, clapping and cheering for him. Dončić sat on the bench, with his team still on its feet and surrounding him.
The imagery was poetic — Dončić’s new team circling him and forming a barrier of protection.
“They all had my back,” Dončić said of the moment. “That’s what we talk about before the game, and everybody had my back, from coaches to players and we’re trying to build something special here.”
The 112-97 win over the Mavericks guaranteed the Lakers a playoff spot and a top-five finish (based on tiebreakers and the teams they’re jockeying with still having remaining games against one another).
Dončić is tasked with leading both the end of this Lakers iteration and, eventually, the next one. Titles are the expectation and the feel-good vibes will only last so long before there is scrutiny about his place among the franchise’s all-time greats.
But the Lakers, as the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference, have a real shot to go on a deep playoff run, which would be the third time for Dončić over the past four postseasons.
When asked if he feels like a Laker yet, Dončić told The Athletic he’s still “getting there.” But with each stepback 3-pointer and behind-the-back pass and lob to a rolling big man, he is looking more like himself — all while earning the adoration of the fan base.
“It just feels like getting into a new home, you know?” Dončić said of Los Angeles. “Dallas was my home for seven years, almost seven years. It really felt like home. So, I’m just trying to build a new home and I’m getting more and more comfortable.”
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Imagine the Lakers trading Magic for McHale, or Kobe for Pierce. That’s how Mavs fans feel.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Luka Dončić’s Dallas return reminds us that some things are bigger than titles https://t.co/1neqoHr3H7— LakerTom (@LakerTom) April 10, 2025
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
When his name was finally called, after he’d wiped the tears away once more, Luka Dončić walked through the tunnel of players. But Markieff Morris, the 14-year NBA veteran, knew exactly what his teammate of the last couple of seasons needed.
A hug.
Morris, pivotal in the culture of the Dallas Mavericks during last year’s NBA Finals run, emerged from the shadows and into the spotlight following Dončić. With open arms and a smile, Morris embraced the 26-year-old superstar. Dončić rested his head on his teammate’s shoulder as Morris consoled him with closed fist pats on his back.
As guarded as Dončić can be, he couldn’t hide just how overwhelmed he was in his return to Dallas.
“So many emotions. I can’t even explain it,” Dončić told ESPN’s Lisa Salters after dropping 45 in his first return to Dallas as a Los Angeles Laker. “I don’t know how I did it because when I was watching that video, it was like, ‘There is no way I’m playing this game.’ But all my teammates had my back.”
What was visible on the face of Dončić, in his welling eyes, in his quivering lip, was the humanity of professional athletes and the communal spirit of sports. While it’s often most tangible in the NBA, it is common for this element of the league to get lost in the most visible discourse, which plays out in debate shows and social media arguments. It often feels more septic than sentimental.
The Mavericks fan base, for two months now, and Dončić reminded us Wednesday of the emotion and connectivity undergirding all of this. In the NBA, where allegiance can be as much to players as to teams, nearly as important as winning is who wins. The process of building a championship is what gives hoisting the trophy its sensation. And in between championship runs, which for most followers are rare, a large part of the appeal is the relationship between fans and players, especially superstars.
Mavs fans love Dončić. And Dončić loves Dallas. Family is greater than flaws. What the Mavericks franchise lost sight of was how a title led by Dončić is a significantly more meaningful title. Dallas general manager Nico Harrison is the antagonist in a story with a moral we’d all be wise to remember: Winning a title isn’t the only valuable thing in sports — it may not even be the most valuable.
Dončić was 19 when he moved from Madrid to Dallas. He became a grown man in a city that knows how to take care of its stars. Everything is bigger in Texas, including the adoration. And Dončić was knighted as the successor to Dirk Nowitzki.
What was so clear was how much that mattered to him as he watched 6 1/2 years flash before his eyes on the video board. The people he met. The events he attended. The spots he grew to love. The backroads he memorized like an offensive set. It was home.
It’s a business, for sure. Players get traded. Fan bases often want trades. Fresh starts are needed when relationships run their course. But most times, some level of prep is afforded.
The pending departure is often predictable. The way contracts work, and how relationships erode, all parties tend to have the opportunity to begin processing. No better example of that than Klay Thompson. The Mavericks guard signed as a free agent in the summer. But his departure from the Golden State Warriors had been at least a planted seed for years.
Dončić and his beloved Mavericks fans were robbed of the opportunity to prepare even a little. He is such a superstar, the idea of trading him so ludicrous, when would he envision being on a new team? Players of his caliber, per the NBA in which he grew up, dictate these things. So having someone else decide this for him had to make it even harder to swallow.
Wednesday was closure. A memorial service for a relationship severed too soon. Sounds hyperbolic, for sure. But watching Dončić, hearing those fans, it felt like an apt comparison.
Though Harrison’s vision hasn’t taken shape yet, with all the injuries the Mavericks have endured, it has some logic to it. Defense wins championships. Anthony Davis is an elite defender and one of the best two-way players in the NBA. With Kyrie Irving, a pair of quality centers, outside shooting in Thompson and P.J. Washington — the logic makes sense.
Nobody cares about that in Dallas. Nobody in the American Airlines Center cared Wednesday.
Play: Video
Mavericks fans will wear Dončić’s jersey even if it’s a Lakers jersey — which, if you know the franchise history, was formerly sacrilegious after all Nowitzki’s battles with Kobe Bryant. Setting aside the highly questionable logic that Dončić couldn’t ever deliver a title, the display the basketball world witnessed in Dallas was a population that prefers its superstar over a championship. The fans gave the impression they’d rather go through the next decade riding with Dončić as he tries to get it done than to capture one without him.
Of the NBA’s 30 teams, 18 have one or no championships in their franchise history. For most fan bases, it’s about the memories and moments. It’s about falling in love with a talent, a personality, a style of play, and watching it blossom. It’s about taking on the powerhouse franchises. It’s about riding with your guys, especially the face of the franchise who orchestrates so much of what makes NBA fandom special.
How brutal to lose your homegrown superstar to a powerhouse franchise.
Dončić, certainly worthy of the Lakers’ standard, might eventually ingratiate himself into Lakers culture. He’ll likely create new moments for a fan base that also can appreciate his ability. He’ll grow a relationship with Los Angeles, where stars of his caliber tend to find belonging. He could eventually feel about Lakers fans as he does about Dallas fans.
But first, clearly, he needed a true goodbye. He needed to face what he was losing, to feel what was snatched from him. Fortunately for us all, Dončić was secure enough to share his humanity. It was a lot to take in.
After he got through the rest of his teammates, another big bro, LeBron James, was waiting for him. Dončić needed another hug.
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MICHAEL HINRICH
Blog Editor
Michael Hinrich, AKA Michael H, has been a Lakers fan since his 5th grade basketball coach, who had played with Wilt Chamberlain at Kansas, turned him into a Wilt fan and Lakers fan when Wilt was traded to L.A.
Another expat from the LA Times Lakers Blog, where he met LakerTom and Jamie Sweet, Michael’s stream of consciousness writing style and savvy intelligence is refreshing and invites conversation and response.
As far as day jobs, Michael has been a councilor, truck washer, bank V.P., and semi-professional writer who just published his first novel. He currently works part-time designing greenhouse systems and just enjoying the good life in Hawaii.
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