Nearly two weeks before the Los Angeles Lakers traded for Luka Dončić, coach JJ Redick emphasized the Lakers’ inability to generate easy offense by drawing double teams.
“We don’t have a guy on our team that’s going to necessarily always draw two to the ball,” Redick said on Jan. 19 after a 116-102 loss to the LA Clippers. “We don’t have a guy on our team that’s going to be able to get past his guy one-on-one and get to the paint and spread it out to the perimeter. Like, that’s just not our team.”
The Lakers, Redick felt, had a bit of a geometry problem.
For as great as LeBron James and Anthony Davis were, and for as much defensive attention they commanded, it wasn’t enough to consistently break defenses and generate the caliber of high-percentage open 3-pointers that the league’s best teams like Boston and Cleveland do.
And then the Lakers acquired Dončić.
The superstar is perhaps the preeminent pick-and-roll practitioner in the league. Most defenses send at least two defenders — if not more — to the ball when he receives a ball screen. And when they defend him that way, Dončić has an array of options to dissect them, from hitting the roller to finding a weak-side cutter or shooter to swinging the ball to the weak-side safety valve.
“People start learning that at some point in the game, they’re going to double-team me,” Dončić said after the Lakers’ 125-109 win over the San Antonio Spurs on Monday. “Like, always I accept that and I like playing that. It saves my energy. And, we just get to play four-on-three. I think guys are doing great out of that.”
MORE FROM ABOVE ARTICLE RE LUKA
CHANGING GEOMETRY OF LAKERS OFFENSE
Doncic’s arrival has changed the geometry of LA’s offense. The Lakers have actualized Redick’s preseason vision of becoming a high 3-point volume team, one of the primary offensive principles in the modern era.
The Lakers are attempting 42.3 3-point attempts per 100 possessions since Dončić made his debut on Feb. 10, the second-highest mark in the NBA over that stretch. Before that date, the Lakers averaged 34.3 3-point attempts per 100 possessions, which ranked 26th in the league. With Dončić on the floor, the Lakers’ 3-point frequency increases by 6 percent, a mark that ranks in the 94th percentile league-wide, according to Cleaning The Glass.
Dončić is a threat to pull up or step back for 3s at anywhere within 30 feet, putting defenses on edge as they try to take that away while preventing him from shredding them with his generational court vision and playmaking.
…
Interestingly, while Dončić’s presence has modernized the offense, it hasn’t led to league-shattering results. The Lakers’ offense has only been 2.5 points per 100 possessions better with Dončić on the floor, per NBA.com. Their 116.1 offensive rating with Dončić on the floor would rank just seventh in the NBA.
“He creates such havoc for teams’ defenses that 90 percent of the time people are blitzing him, as you can probably see, and he makes the right play out of the blitz,” Austin Reaves said. “He doesn’t try to force it too much in those situations, and he makes the right play. So therefore you’re playing four-on-three, and it just comes down to playing the game the right way and passing it to the open person, because three people can’t guard four.”
The latest example of how the offense has dramatically changed came on Monday versus the Spurs. The Lakers made 19 3-pointers, tied for their second-most of the season. They attempted 48 3-pointers, tied for their fourth-most of the season. And of those 3s, 34 of them were uncontested shots (70.8 percent), Redick said.
FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE RE
LUKA AND VERTICAL THREAT:
The Lakers will often run either high pick-and-rolls with Dončić and Jaxson Hayes, who has quietly been a significant factor in their 2025 turnaround, or a double drag action in which Hayes and a perimeter player will both screen for Dončić, forcing the defense to read and react against a maze of bodies.
Dončić prefers playing alongside a vertical lob threat, as he did in Dallas with Dereck Lively II and Daniel Gafford. That preference is why the Lakers traded for Mark Williams before ultimately rescinding the trade. They wanted to pair Dončić with a rim-running lob threat.
But Hayes has become one of the league’s better finishers around the rim, with incredible hands, quickness, explosion and a ridiculous catch radius. He leads the league in field-goal percentage (77.3 percent) since Jan. 30, when he replaced Davis as the team’s starting center.
…
“You can see the difference,” Dončić said about having Hayes in the lineup. “For me, it helps me a lot.”
And it’s not just Hayes’ rim-running and finishing. It’s also his playmaking. He’s grown as a passer out of the short roll this season, finding weak-side shooters and cutters with four-on-three and three-on-two advantages. His activity in the middle of the floor is a sneaky component of the Lakers’ offense.
“If you don’t have a threat at the rim, then it’s really just three-on-three and teams are able to scram back and get back matched up,” Redick said. “Having someone again that has the threat of catching a lob or getting a tip or getting a drop-off pass for a dunk, that creates, we call it marginal indecision against offensive players that we’re trying to create with our defense. That creates marginal indecision for the defenders more.”
Dončić and Reaves have ramped up their chemistry in recent games, in part because James has been out and Reaves has had to step up as the No. 2 in the offense. It’s a role Reaves has carried at various points this season whenever James or Davis (pre-trade) missed time.
FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
Nearly two weeks before the Los Angeles Lakers traded for Luka Dončić, coach JJ Redick emphasized the Lakers’ inability to generate easy offense by drawing double teams.
“We don’t have a guy on our team that’s going to necessarily always draw two to the ball,” Redick said on Jan. 19 after a 116-102 loss to the LA Clippers. “We don’t have a guy on our team that’s going to be able to get past his guy one-on-one and get to the paint and spread it out to the perimeter. Like, that’s just not our team.”
The Lakers, Redick felt, had a bit of a geometry problem.
For as great as LeBron James and Anthony Davis were, and for as much defensive attention they commanded, it wasn’t enough to consistently break defenses and generate the caliber of high-percentage open 3-pointers that the league’s best teams like Boston and Cleveland do.
And then the Lakers acquired Dončić.
The superstar is perhaps the preeminent pick-and-roll practitioner in the league. Most defenses send at least two defenders — if not more — to the ball when he receives a ball screen. And when they defend him that way, Dončić has an array of options to dissect them, from hitting the roller to finding a weak-side cutter or shooter to swinging the ball to the weak-side safety valve.
“People start learning that at some point in the game, they’re going to double-team me,” Dončić said after the Lakers’ 125-109 win over the San Antonio Spurs on Monday. “Like, always I accept that and I like playing that. It saves my energy. And, we just get to play four-on-three. I think guys are doing great out of that.”
MORE FROM ABOVE ARTICLE RE LUKA
CHANGING GEOMETRY OF LAKERS OFFENSE
Doncic’s arrival has changed the geometry of LA’s offense. The Lakers have actualized Redick’s preseason vision of becoming a high 3-point volume team, one of the primary offensive principles in the modern era.
The Lakers are attempting 42.3 3-point attempts per 100 possessions since Dončić made his debut on Feb. 10, the second-highest mark in the NBA over that stretch. Before that date, the Lakers averaged 34.3 3-point attempts per 100 possessions, which ranked 26th in the league. With Dončić on the floor, the Lakers’ 3-point frequency increases by 6 percent, a mark that ranks in the 94th percentile league-wide, according to Cleaning The Glass.
Dončić is a threat to pull up or step back for 3s at anywhere within 30 feet, putting defenses on edge as they try to take that away while preventing him from shredding them with his generational court vision and playmaking.
…
Interestingly, while Dončić’s presence has modernized the offense, it hasn’t led to league-shattering results. The Lakers’ offense has only been 2.5 points per 100 possessions better with Dončić on the floor, per NBA.com. Their 116.1 offensive rating with Dončić on the floor would rank just seventh in the NBA.
“He creates such havoc for teams’ defenses that 90 percent of the time people are blitzing him, as you can probably see, and he makes the right play out of the blitz,” Austin Reaves said. “He doesn’t try to force it too much in those situations, and he makes the right play. So therefore you’re playing four-on-three, and it just comes down to playing the game the right way and passing it to the open person, because three people can’t guard four.”
The latest example of how the offense has dramatically changed came on Monday versus the Spurs. The Lakers made 19 3-pointers, tied for their second-most of the season. They attempted 48 3-pointers, tied for their fourth-most of the season. And of those 3s, 34 of them were uncontested shots (70.8 percent), Redick said.
FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE RE
LUKA AND VERTICAL THREAT:
The Lakers will often run either high pick-and-rolls with Dončić and Jaxson Hayes, who has quietly been a significant factor in their 2025 turnaround, or a double drag action in which Hayes and a perimeter player will both screen for Dončić, forcing the defense to read and react against a maze of bodies.
Dončić prefers playing alongside a vertical lob threat, as he did in Dallas with Dereck Lively II and Daniel Gafford. That preference is why the Lakers traded for Mark Williams before ultimately rescinding the trade. They wanted to pair Dončić with a rim-running lob threat.
But Hayes has become one of the league’s better finishers around the rim, with incredible hands, quickness, explosion and a ridiculous catch radius. He leads the league in field-goal percentage (77.3 percent) since Jan. 30, when he replaced Davis as the team’s starting center.
…
“You can see the difference,” Dončić said about having Hayes in the lineup. “For me, it helps me a lot.”
And it’s not just Hayes’ rim-running and finishing. It’s also his playmaking. He’s grown as a passer out of the short roll this season, finding weak-side shooters and cutters with four-on-three and three-on-two advantages. His activity in the middle of the floor is a sneaky component of the Lakers’ offense.
“If you don’t have a threat at the rim, then it’s really just three-on-three and teams are able to scram back and get back matched up,” Redick said. “Having someone again that has the threat of catching a lob or getting a tip or getting a drop-off pass for a dunk, that creates, we call it marginal indecision against offensive players that we’re trying to create with our defense. That creates marginal indecision for the defenders more.”
Dončić and Reaves have ramped up their chemistry in recent games, in part because James has been out and Reaves has had to step up as the No. 2 in the offense. It’s a role Reaves has carried at various points this season whenever James or Davis (pre-trade) missed time.