Lakers coach Frank Vogel on Anthony Davis’s buzzer-beater in Game 2 win over Nuggets: “That’s a shot Kobe Bryant would hit. … That’s a Mamba shot.” pic.twitter.com/oib6erksOM
— Ben Golliver (@BenGolliver) September 21, 2020
Posts
Did this really go in?
Missed call. Definitely seems like jokic airballed this jumper pic.twitter.com/cParhHCDNv
— Main Team (@MainTeamSports) September 21, 2020
Six More Wins!
6 more wins! 👀🏆 pic.twitter.com/Qo9Iu2ZoL2
— LakeShow (@LakeShowCP) September 21, 2020
Clutch Game Winner Officially Signals Start of Anthony Davis Era for Lakers!
No disrespect to LeBron James, who valiantly took the mantle from Kobe Bryant and carried this team through the most difficult and unprecedented season in the history of the NBA, but Anthony Davis is the Lakers’ future.
When AD’s game-winning buzzer-beating dagger-three splashed through the net, it was like the world stopped, the team’s legacy clock reset, and the era where Anthony Davis takes over as Lakers top superstar officially began. Out of respect, the Lakers will still be known as LeBron’s team like they had been known as Shaq’s team but the cognoscenti will know the moment had come when the team’s future depended on AD like it once did with Kobe.
Great as LeBron James is, the Lakers will only go as far as Anthony Davis can carry them. We saw hints of this throughout this long disjointed season and its harsh reality during the second half of last night’s Nuggets’ game. There will be games LeBron can still dominate just like there were with Shaq but the time has finally arrived when LeBron and the Lakers need to look to AD to close games like Shaq and the Lakers needed to look to Kobe.
While LeBron James is still the King and MVP of the regular season, it will likely be the ascent of Anthony Davis to Finals MVP and best player in the league that wins the Los Angeles Lakers their 17th NBA championship. That’s what this season, the Klutch Sports driven trade for AD, LeBron’s taking the baton from Kobe, and James’ respect and deference to empower Davis has all been about: winning championships and building a legacy.
This has been an unbelievably tough season for the Lakers with obstacles like the tragic death of Kobe Bryant, the five-month coronavirus layoff, and losing home court advantage to the bubble repeatedly blocking their way. But the basketball gods may finally be smiling on the Lakers as the bubble playoffs have eliminated the Bucks and Clippers, their main competitors, and cleared the road for Los Angeles to win its 17th NBA championship.
No disrespect to the Nuggets, Heat,or Celtics but this season is the Lakers’ best opportunity to win a championship with the Bucks and Clippers gone and the healthy Warriors and the new look Nets back in the mix next year. Who knows how long LeBron James can continue to cheat Father Time, what blockbuster moves franchises may make to create new superteams, or how long the coronavirus pandemic will devalue home court advantage.
When LeBron James joined the Lakers in free agency two summers ago, critics said he did it for family reasons. In retrospect, the decision was a calculated move to enhance his legacy and chances to become the GOAT. LeBron could play four more seasons after this, retire at 40-years old after his sixth season and maybe fourth championship as a Laker, and trump Michael Jordan as the GOAT with seven NBA championship rings.
No NBA superstar has ever had the career savvy and vision of LeBron to understand how combining his star power, the Lakers’ legacy, and AD’s talents could give him his best chance to surpass MJ to become the GOAT. That’s why he has deferred to AD and is willing to give him the opportunity to become Finals MVP and best player on the planet and even take a pay cut on his last contract with the Lakers. It’s all part of his master plan to win.
That clutch step-back dagger three at the buzzer by Anthony Davis not only positioned the team six games away from their 17th championship but also gave the rest of the NBA formal notice the Anthony Davis era had begun.
5 Things: “Kobe!”, Lakers take 2-0 lead over Denver
With one epic, clutch three pointer from the beyond the arc Anthony Davis joined the pantheon of clutch Laker playoff performers, canned his first playoff game winner and gave his team a 2-0 advantage in the western conference finals. Not bad for a Sunday in the Bubble.
- Anthony Davis channeling his inner Mamba. On a night where they were wearing his signature Laker jersey, where he has a difficult first half scoring the ball and most importantly when his team needed him Anthony Davis stepped up big time. His three to win it stopped an epic scoring push by Nikola “Joker” Jokic who was dropping in buckets from everywhere over anybody. We had squandered the lead and Denver looked poised for one of their patented post-season comebacks. That shot changed all of that. For all their playoff grit the Nuggets are, for the first time, down 2-0 hole. So it’ll be a different test for them starting Tuesday night. Biggest basket of AD’s young career and certainly his highest as a Laker. Mason Plumlee going to be kicking himself for slipping a non-existent screen by LeBron for a good long while.
- LeBron’s big first half. James looked so dominant in the first half, and especially in the first quarter, it had the in-air broadcast team openly wondering how the Nuggets could survive. While he cooled off in the second half his string start helped build a cushion that enables us to withstand another furious Denver rally late in the game.
- Alex Caruso has arrived. While he missed his own go-ahead three in the play before AD’s epic bucket Alex had a great game. While it wasn’t his flashiest stat line, AC had a highlight dunk, was perfect like all but one Laker from the free throw line, and is playing like a seasoned vet. Not sure so much could have been expected of Alex when the playoffs started but, in my mind, Alex has proved himself to be an essential part of the Lakers present and future.
- The Big Man isn’t dead! But JaVale May have started his last game of the series if not the remainder of the playoffs. Dwight’s just playing at a higher level. The only reason I would argue for keeping JaVale a starter is to help keep Dwight out of early foul trouble. He picked up 5 in 13 minutes of action last night and we need him available in the 4th with a couple fouls to spare to check Nikola when the game is likely going to be on the line. JaVale is longer but Howard’s the better defender and athlete. His foot speed allows him to stay in from of Jokic and he looks hyper-motivated. Great game from Dwight, fouls and all.
- The Free Throw game. We shot a lot in game 1, they shot a ton in game 2. Now there will be equality in the amount of free throws dispensed by the refs. Or it’ll be akin to a hockey match with fewer than 10 free throws each. Lol, who knows. The one thing we need to do is play this same great defense but without fouling. Easier said than done but that’s the challenge to keep this series tilted in our favor.
Don’t go counting the Nuggets out yet, either. They found a way to stymie our offense by clogging up the paint and giving us three point shots. We are not a great three point shooting team so we’ll either need to sacrifice defense and go smaller (like we did against Houston) or we’ll need to play better defense and not put them at the line so much. A few more Nugget made free throws, a 3 pointer from Jamal Murray (2-9, one a half court heave) or a better game by any number of Denver players and this could have gone very differently. We still need to bring that first half A game. But there’s a lot to like about where we are. Go Lakers.