While it’s looking like the Portland Trail Blazers will be the Los Angeles Lakers’ first round playoff opponent, the stats and matchups between the teams suggest LA would be smart to start Kyle Kuzma for Danny Green.
With Portland starting a traditional two-big lineup that includes 7′ 0″ Jusuf Nurkic and 6′ 11″ Zach Collins, the Lakers clearly need to counter with their normal starting front court of 7′ 0″ JaVale McGee and 6′ 10″ Anthony Davis. But does it necessarily follow the Lakers should start their current starting bubble guard tandem of Danny Green and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope against the Blazers’ All-Star guards Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum?
There’s a case to be made the Lakers could benefit from thinking outside the box and starting Kyle Kuzma instead of Danny Green because he would make the Lakers a better, more dangerous team at both ends of the court. Who’s playing well, how McCollum’s back holds up, and what the stats from the teams’ three prior matchups say strongly argue starting Kuzma over Green could be a savvy series-changing move by the Lakers’ Frank Vogel.
First, it’s obvious KCP will be the Lakers’ primary defender on Damian Lillard with the team’s other starting guard defending CJ McCollum, who’s been struggling with his shooting in the bubble due to a lower back injury. Vogel’s also made it clear he thinks the Lakers are “going to need two quick guards against most of these teams we could be facing. It’s a small-ball league, so we’re going to need defensive speed on the perimeter.”
That statement in itself should raise a red flag. Vogel needs to rethink whether Danny Green fits the definition of a “quick, speedy guard” at this point in his career as the recent evidence clearly shows he has lost a step. Green lacked the speed or quickness to stay in front of Murray or navigate his way through picks to prevent Jamal from forcing switches to take advantage of him, which is exactly what McCullum is going to do too.
That’s why Vogel benched Green against the Pacers after Murray hunted switches and scored easy baskets on him several times in a row and it was no coincidence Kyle Kuzma was the player he chose to replace Green. Kuzma’s shown the quickness, length, and athleticism to defend guards and Vogel would be wise to remember what happened in the Pacers game when he puts together his defensive game plan for the Trail Blazers series.
Kuzma’s defense has improved dramatically in the bubble games. While he still has a long way to go to become an elite defender, the effort and results he showed defending scoring guards like James Harden cannot be ignored. Meanwhile, Green’s 115.6 defensive rating for Lakers players in the bubble ranks dead last on the team and his -16 individual net rating ranked 12th. In other words, Green’s stats confirm what the eye test is telling you.
If that were not enough, Vogel should take a long look at the stats from the three games the Lakers and Blazers played before the coronavirus hiatus because those numbers make a compelling case for Kuzma over Green. Kuzma averaged 18.7 points and 8.3 rebounds in 26.4 minutes while Green averaged 3.7 points and 3.3 rebounds in 20.7 minutes. Kyle Kuzma also posted far better offensive, defensive, and net ratings for the three games.
I don’t expect Frank Vogel to start Kyle Kuzma over Danny Green should the Blazers end up being the Lakers’ first round opponent but I’ll be rooting like every Lakers for Danny to play like the savvy vet he is and prove me wrong. Unfortunately, the chances are the Lakers are going to need Kyle Kuzma in the starting lineup at some point during the Blazers series and I just hope and pray Frank Vogel recognizes this sooner rather than after it’s too late.
It’s reassuring Frank Vogel plans to have Kyle Kuzma play big minutes as the team’s sixth man but the Lakers are going to need him to start at some point during these playoffs if they plan to win their 17th NBA championship.
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Another great view of Kuzma’s game winner!
Kobe was with @Lakers during Kuz's game winner. 🙏 pic.twitter.com/tK184yi7nc
— LakeShowScoop (@LakeShowScoop) August 12, 2020
Lakers Path to the NBA Finals. Bring it one!
Anyone still think the Lakers are gonna make it to the Finals?
Round 1 – Blazers (3 guards to wreck their suspect perimeter DEF)
Round 2 – Rockets (Small ball + 2 elite guards to wreck their suspect perimeter DEF)
Round 3 – Clippers (The two best two-way wings in the league)
— Rebellious Scholar (@larryemcdaniel) August 12, 2020
1. Blazers
2. Rockets
3. Clippers
4. Bucks
Shades of Don Nelson. Dame and Blazers get lucky win!
Shooter's roll. #PhantomCam pic.twitter.com/y7ZSc994tt
— NBA (@NBA) August 12, 2020
LOL. Shades of Don Nelson and the Celtics!
This is probably one of the most controversial trades I could conceivably propose and I’m sure there will be lots of naysayers who reject the idea of trading KCP or AC for anybody. Even the trade machine seems to say the trade is a bad idea and would help the Pacers win 15 more games and the Lakers lose 15 more games. But what those fans and the trade machine ignore are trades are usually won by the team who gets the best players and what those best players do to improve that team’s roster.
But please at least keep an open mind and think about how adding Turner and Oladipo could transform the Lakers into a legitimate championship juggernaut and dynasty in a way that goes well beyond the LeBron James era. Turner is only 24-years old and has already been in DPOY discussions and at 6’11” and 250 pounds has the height and size to be a better rim protector and low post defender than McGee or Howard. And unlike either of them, he has enough lateral quickness and speed to defend stretch centers on the perimeter. He’s a better fit than DeMarcus Cousins to play center alongside Anthony Davis. He’s a better 3-point shooter ( career 35.7%) and defender.
Right now, the Lakers are playing their version of ‘small ball’ around 40% of the time. If they were to trade for Turner and then sign Boogie, they would be able to play that same deadly version of ‘small ball’ for 48 minutes per game, which would be devastating. While Morris did a great job at the four next to Davis at the five, he’s not the rim protector or perimeter defender that Turner is. There’s a reason the Celtics and Warriors want to trade for Myles and it’s specificially to add a player who can matchup with Davis. Adding him to the Lakers doubles down on the ‘small ball’ defense that powered the Lakers to their 17th championship and suddenly makes them younger at the five without forcing AD to play there all the time.
As for Oladipo, yes, he’s a gamble and would have to pass a physical by the Lakers medical team but a torn quad is not like a torn Achilles or knee and Victor should regain the athteticism that made him an All-NBA and All-Defensive player and he is still only 28-years old. Every NBA dynasty has had a superstar guard (LeBron is really that for these Lakers) and the third superstar the Lakers need to take over from LeBron and be the co-superstar with AD going forward is Oladipo. Trading for him will give us his Bird rights so if he recovers we can exceed the cap and sign him to a max deal, something we can’t do with a free agent like Giannis or if we sign-and-trade for a star. Trading for a young stud and then maxing him is the only way for the Lakers to get a third superstar. That’s why trading for Oladip is worth the risk.
Land them both and the Lakers suddenly are a team in its prime with a huge championship window that lasts way past when LeBron retires. It’s worth trading Kuz, KCP, AC, Green, McGee, and the pick because it creates a Lakers dynasty that could last for another five to six years.