JAMIE SWEET’S ‘5 THINGS
Lakers’ Post Game Reports & Analysis
-
Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
So far the closing trio of LeBron, Davis and Wood has shown itself to be pretty capable, especially when the other team is also fielding a large selection of players. In a game where D’Angelo Russell had his first big game and Davis played like the beast we need him to be for the full 48 it was the trio of James, Davis and Wood that stood out.
- AD in beast mode. Since his second half no-show (and the global clamor it created) AD has been engaged on both ends. In all fairness to Davis I challenge anyone to remember a game he didn’t show up on defense for. His issues are getting and staying engaged on offense. We need him to be a constant threat both inside and out or it won’t matter who he’s on the floor with, we’ll be having a hard time scoring the ball. He was stellar in the paint, grabbing boards (something the rest of the tem is struggling with so far) and affecting the other team’s ability to score with blocks and steals.
- LeBron over the line again. Last night he only played 33 minutes but it came on the heels of a back-to-back game. I’ll admit I was surprised to see him n the lineup and it shows how dedicated he is to putting together a solid season to get the team into good position for the playoffs. Win a lotta games, earn some home court advantage. Sneak in like last year, face an uphill climb the whole way. While he didn’t have a superlative-generating game he was solid across the board. More importantly he looks like he’s moving well, even after a long game the night before.
- D-Lo busts out. His shot was sparkling as D-Lo was masterful scoring inside and out. Why this level of aggression can’t be an every game thing is the only mystery to me. He led the team in points, assists, made threes ( ona another night most of the team couldn’t find the mark from distance) and was a a consistent threat to score all game. I’d rather he defer to pretty much nobody at this point, D-Lo has all the tools and just needs to use them more often.
- Reaves and Vincent coming around? They both had probably their best game of the season, which is scary considering the overall results were pedestrian to say the least. Still, it’s encouraging to se what are certain to be 2 key players start to find the groove a little bit.
- Wood cementing a role and Hayes getting some solid run. Both played a season high in minutes and Wood was on the floor down the stretch to help close the game. Honestly, if I’m Darvin Ham, I look at moving James down to the guard position and putting Vando in while moving Reaves to the bench if the latter continues to struggle and get hunted on post ups and hard rubs. There will be a crunch when it comes to minutes when Vanderbilt returns and his game isn’t likely to show much rust because it’s built pretty much on hustle and defense. Wood and AD are showing some nice synchronicity out there and it allows LeBron to defend a zone on the perimeter rather than bang as much down low. It also allows AD to be more of a free-roamer on D while trusting Wood to rebound and alter shots with his length. While this may not end up happening any time soon (at least not until Reaves is given a nice long leash to return to form), I won’t be surprised if one of the first moves ham makes to alter the rotation is to move Wood from the bench to a starter.
Got a big one tonight against in-house rivals the Clippers. not so much because of the super epic and amazing trade that went down (whee) but rather because the coat-tail riders have been smoking us like cheap reefer for a couple seasons now. Time to light them up.
-
-
Maybe take a shot at Danny Green right now. Can’t be any worse the what we’re trotting out there at this point….
-
I thought the same thing, would at least give us some kind of option w/true savvy at the 2z
-
-
Thanks LT, while I don’t see any major lineup changes in the immediate future I can see a definitive role for him going forward
-
-
Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
It took a lot to even force OT, and that goes double when your coach is still working out who should play when and with whom (his words, paraphrased for brevity). Having defensive stalwart Jared Vanderbilt unavailable for most of the preseason has had a cascade effect of a dual nature: roles and minutes have opened up for some guys who might not have gotten the shot and the defense has looked God-awful most nights. So, even with DeAaron Fox going down and out for a short period of time in the 4th quarter with what ended up being a fairly serious ankle injury, the Lakers were unable to eke out a win in one of the tougher road venues in the Association. Still, a couple positives can yet be gleaned.
- Wrong lineup to close the game. Not too sure what the coaching staff has seen from gabe Vincent that makes them so certain he should be on the floor for the closing moments…and in OT. Shooting 33.3% overall and 0-fer from three is the kind of offensive punch that means you’re a defensive ace in the hole. Unfortunately that’s not really true, at least not yet. It’s not that Vincent played badly, per se, it’s that Coach Ham broke one of, maybe the first, cardinal rule of basketball: stay with the hot hand. It looked like Rui Hachimura had found his groove a little bit in the 4th quarter, hit a three, hit a step back, was rebounding the ball well, not turning it over…and was yanked. In his time in the 4th and OT Vincent attempted (and missed) 1 total shot meaning the bulk of everything fell to LeBron, DLo, Prince and AD when it came to the offense. Would have liked to see a better defensive lineup and hachimura likely has plenty in the tank unlike…
- Taurean Prince closing games is another question mark for me. His shot was falling early but he looked pretty done towards the end while racking up 41 minutes. His defense was certainly cooked by then. This is another one of those cascade effects of two factors: Reaves sucking big time and Vando being out. Coach Ham has to either put a lineup out there that tries to help space the floor or stop the other team from scoring and, unfortunately, closing lineups with Prince don’t honestly do either one. Teams will forever let Taurean Prince launch as many shots as he cares to take from three over letting AD and LeBron dominate the paint and they’ll do it with gladness in their hearts.
- Speaking of dominating the paint… We didn’t. Here’s a Nostradamus for ya: we will lose every single game of the season if we’re not within +/- 5 points of the other team in paint points. Last night we lost that battle 56-44 (-12) and the incredible thing about that is we lost that battle while dominating them in fastbreak points (22-7). That tells you one thing: our half court defense was absolutely hot garbage last night. Not having Vando and Gabe Vincent not being quite the defensive pest has hurt us already this season. D-Lo may have made a small improvement in that area but the flip side of that is teams now hunt guys like Prince or Reaves.
- Another curious choice regarding the rotation. Much has been made of Coach Ham’s predilection (addiction?) for trotting out 3 guard line ups. Sure enough during a disastrous stretch in the 4th we saw Reaves, Vincent and D-Lo out there, unable to rebound or stop guys from getting to the hoop. Domantas Sabonis fouled out with a few minutes to go in regulation and we responded by…staying with the same guys. No hachimura (+9 for the game in PER) and no Christian Wood (team leading +12). Wood had a perfect game going, too. No misses from any kind of shot you can take in an NBA game and 5 boards to boot. Yet, somehow, the two most effective bench players saw zero minutes down the stretch of the 4th quarter or OT? I’m not ready to proclaim any player other than LeBron and AD as “must play in crunch time (when actually playing)” but Wood and Hachimura had shown themselves to be at least as effective as Vincent was. Defensively I get it, but you’re telling me you can’t rotate guys by possession to make sure you score enough to win a basketball game? That after Fox was so very obviously limping you couldn’t go to a more physically punishing line up and force him to either play defense without fouling (finished the game 5 fouls) or get to the rim? Please…
- The team went away from AD even when he cleared out and demanded the ball. AD had 5 fourth quarter shots (made 1, another reason a little more C-Wood would have made some sense given this was the first of a back-to-back) and but one shot and bucket in OT. They missed him in favor of three pointers multiple times in OT after Sabonis fouled out. We did not exploit the most obvious weakness in the Kings which was an injured point guard whom we didn’t put into pick and roll actions or a missing All Star center for AD to bully. This isn’t rocket science, the coach sometimes has to tell the players to exploit the obvious advantages. It’s hard to stomach winnable losses and, for me, this was one of those.
Back at it tonight at home against the unbeaten Orlando Magic. I’m sure we’ll see the minutes restriction roughly back in place and maybe even a more expanded role for Wood and/or Hayes to give AD more rest. It would help if Reaves could hit the broad side of the barn or Vincent to show the aggression he played with in Miami when they’re called upon.
-
Great fiver, Jamie. Man, I don’t know if it’s promising or terrifying that we’re in such a mutual state of agreement. Kumbaya, Man. Hoping for Ham to miraculously start Christian Wood tonight.
-
I believe Darvin will start Wood tonight as the front court starters for the Magic are 6’10”, 6’10” and 6’10″….Darvin is probably reading the media and sensing a need to “do something”….
-
Seems like the logical thing to do. Opportunity knocks. Will Darvin answer?
-
-
-
Nice post Jamie, for me our biggest problem so far this year is our back court shooting, especially in the 1st quarter. We are constantly playing from behind. If our guards were making the open looks they normally make we could possibly undefeated. Their Shooting has been that bad.
-
Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
I’m not going to go so far as to say this game is blueprint-worthy in terms of mapping out a road to consistent success but it did show us a team with a lot of heart and showcased the overall depth and potential that Ham can use to get the job done on a nightly basis. While AD and LeBron featured prominently in the win (like they do), it was a lot more than just the superstar tandem that helped make the first win of the season and the first game at Crypto come out right.
- The unheralded play of Cam Reddish and Christian Wood. Two dudes with more negative press than they probably deserve. Neither has the rep of defensive stopper, Wood has always been seen as a score-first (only?) player and Cam has been over-hyped at every stop along the way in his still young career. Neither one made a 3 pointer (combined 0-5, an onerous trend on a Laker team purported to have improved it’s three point shooting), nor did they score into the double digit range. Still, Cam had an impact on defense in the first half checking Durant and paving the way for what Wood helped do in the second half. Along with his 10 big rebounds Wood played some admirable defense on KD and got to the stripe despite the jumper not falling. These are the kind of things you need to do on this team, especially when three-point specialist Taurean Prince couldn’t buy a bucket all night long. When the scoring gets lean, turn to your defense.
- The defense was pretty solid all night long. Other than the 3rd quarter where I thought we picked up a bad habit from last season (the legendary third quarter struggles we endured for 3/4 of the season regardless of who was on the team) we really turned it around as a team in the 4th quarter. We clamped down on the entire team as Phoenix scored 5 baskets in the final frame, four of those were by Durant. 5-20 in the 4th quarter is getting after it and getting it done, I don’t care that Booker and Beal were out. These are all pros, these guys can all hoop, and therefor that was some great team defense.
- Going back to what works for this team under Coach Ham. Game 1 looked like what people want to see or think the Lakers should be: a team that shoots a lot of threes. We won last night by going back to the thing we’re best at: dominating the paint. There’s just no reason for the Lakers to shoot more than 30 three pointers in any game. Not unless a couple guys get hot and stay hot and that was definitely not the recipe last night. Instead the Lakers returned to their old friend the paint where they utterly dominated Phoenix to the tune of 60 to 36 fueled in part by a 16-6 edge in fastbreak points. Overall I thought our defense led to a ton of our offense, which is pretty much how this team is built to win. There may come a day when the lakers more resemble a modern NBA team with all the threes and such but I still have a hard time seeing this team play in that mode consistently and in a way that will generate wins.
- 1st quarter malaise. Was it just me or was Crupto really, really quiet for like the first hour of the game. Did everyone get a 3rd quarter shot of tequila or something? Halftime espresso? At any rate, the Lakers woke Crypto up with a stellar 4th but come on people, you paid your money now get loud! In defense of the fans our overall effort in the first frame was not great, almost as bad as Phoenix’s play in the fourth. This is where I think the Lakers truly miss Jared Vanderbilt and his energy and effort. Prince wasn’t hitting his shots, LeBron was still easing into the game, AD was, too. That meant that, outside of our guard corp, there just wasn’t much to get pumped about.
- Grand larceny. Another stat that jumped out to me was that almost every laker that played got at least one steal. Ironically only Wood and Reddish came up empty in the thievery department but made up for it with stellar defense. While we may not end up leading the league in steals or blocks it’s effort like this that will lead the way on D. There are some wrinkles to work out on offense (like getting Rui Hachimura going, maybe run some plays for the dude?) but if the defense shows up on a nightly basis we’ll be just fine.
Lakers have a couple days off before facing Sacramento (along with Ham’s three time outs to play with in the 4th, I’m pretty sure this factored into the logic of playing James over 30 minutes, as well). The Kings are looking to re-capture lightning in a bottle and, along with every other western conference team that’s played and won a solitary game, sits in a 6-way tie atop the conference in first place. The Lakers a re looking to continue their early winning ways and match their total wins through 12 games last season in game 3.
-
Our “A” Team beat their “B” Team. Well the game was pretty much won by LBJ, that’s a shame.
-
-
True. But where is DLO, Vincent, Reaves, Rui and others? Can’t imagine how good we’d be with Dame or KD. Stop shooting 3.s all ya, you too LBJ, we can’t make them as usual. I would say in our lackeys’ defense that you need 30 minutes routinely to get rhythm.
-
They were pretty mid before. Got some money and care even less now. Hard not to have seen this coming. The top two are worth maybe 8.8/10 and the contenders are 9.5 or better. Only shot this team has is a big trade or if the real contenders have injuries.
-
-
-
-
Terrific game by the Lakers and terrific Fiver, Jamie.
1. I’m always amazed at how everything seems to change when the games count. Suddenly, all the guys who shined in preseason come back to earth and we see two wild cards in Wood and Reddish suddenly shine now that the games are for real.
Frankly, I couldn’t be happier because Wood and Reddish both have size and I’m a big believer that the Lakers need to go jumbo big with Wood in the starting lineup along with LeBron and AD. What we saw in the fourth quarter is the first quarter this season where the Lakers looked legit. Darvin saw that, too. Chris Wood can be a difference maker for this team.
2. Defense won and having great positional size in the fourth quarter was a big difference maker. Ham should be seriously considering starting Christian Wood next to James and Davis. What we may be watching could be Wood and Reddish pushing their way into the Lakers rotation. The question is whom will they replace? DLo and Rui become more tradable.
Rui, Reaves, Prince, and Vando are going to be in a vicious competition for minutes. Reaves will break out but the other three might be suddenly find themselves out of the rotation.
3. I agree with most of what you’re saying about the Lakers still prioritizing winning the battles for points in the paint and made free throws. That’s our identity. Yes, we want to also try to negate and even win the 3-point shooting battle but not at the cost of points in the paint and made free throws, which come from attacking the rim.
I still want the Lakers to fire away from outside. What we need to compete for a championship is the synergy you get from 3-point shooting creating lanes to the rim and great defensive stops generate fast break opportunities. Everything is linked. We’re just trying to make sure we’re running on all cylinders and our offense and defense are in sync. To do that, we need better outside shooting than we’ve seen so far. Just don’t forget our identity: PIP & MFT.
4. The answer to the first and third quarter problems is go big with Wood as the fifth starter. Right now, Chris has second best +/- on team, Vando is still hurt, and Prince has fallen to dead last in +/-. My entire impression of Taurean is he can shoot but he’s too small to defend the guys we need defended. Christian Wood should be the fifth starter.
5. Was great to see more activity on defense, especially since our identity is not to foul, which is part of our MFT strategy. It’s the ability now to throw 3 or 4 different guys with length at a player like KD. In the end, that was the most impressive thing about last night. LeBron showing he can still close and the Lakers showing they can slow down KD.
-
Thanks LT, regarding Wood starting I think they’ll give Vando some run when his foot lets him play and he gets up to game speed. I kind of like Wood coming in off the bench at this point for another reason: Rui has had a really rough start to the season and we need somebody to score off the bench when AD and/or LeBron is out there alone (and in the non-staggered minutes for sure). We saw the return of the Three Guard Lineup, as well, and it fared about as well as it did last season which is to say fairly mediocre.
I think that Wood could eventually seize that starting spot which would likely mean he priced his way right outta town next summer. That would be a great story for him personally. All in all it will be the defense and rebounding that determine the starting and finishing, Ham made that a staple last season and I don’t see him changing it up now.
-
Aloha Jamie, nice post. It was nice to see Woods effort on defense. In an odd way KD was a good match up for Wood. He is not a banger and while he has long strides he isn’t super quick. His bread and butter is getting to his spots and shooting over people. Woods length made that more difficult. Plus he was great on the boards. I don’t know if it would be as effective if the Suns were at full strength. That 4th quarter focus was on KD. With Booker and Beal, it would have required LeBron to play on the perimeter a lot more. I’m looking forward to Vando coming back, just to see where is at now. As for shooting, we won’t shoot 17% from 3 often. But you are right that our primary focus should remain in the paint.
-
Thanks Michael. My critique against us shooting three’s isn’t really on the players, they’re all fine. They all shoot in the mid to high 30’s which is respectable. The real issue is, and for awhile now has been, the coach. Since I can’t remember when we’ve brought in coaches that maximize post play and ball movement. We never bring in guys who install screening actions like we see on other teams. This is where my empirical evidence begins, the Lakers as a team philosophy have yet to fully embrace the three point “revolution” and, in some ways, it’s easy to see why.
Elite shooters are by and large specialists. They do one thing really well and that’s shoot. So if you’re not creating and running plays to get those guys shots and they don’t do much else well…where’s the role on the team? Ham has said since day one on the job that he wants to attack the paint. Given the makeup of the team this all makes sense.
Someday we may have one of those teams that launches threes with more regularity (and hopefully more accuracy) but until the guys brought in fit that mold I’m not holding my breath. I thought LT’s comments, that we want to find the balance in our attempts and hopefully that bears out in makes. IMO 30 is the goal. Given that LBJ is likely to average between 5.5 and 7.5 3PT FGA’s/game (just where’s been heading for awhile now) and the rest of the roster 30 seems like a solid goal on a nightly basis. like Stu lantz says, let success be your guide.
Which logically brings us to Anthony Davis. To say “AD should shoot/half” or whatever is kind of disingenuous in that it places an artificial goal into place. AD has never averaged more than 3.5 3PY FGA/season and that he did once…in2019-20. Before that his high was 2.6 and after that 2.8 (the following, injury-plagued season.
More specifically, and relevant, is he’s never made even close to 2 3 pointers/game. That high mark is 1.2 (also in 2019-20). Really that’s just bad, inexperienced coaching by Darvin. Why even bring it up? Better to say “we want AD to be aggressive and decisive in his shot selection and floor reads” because that’s what you really need outta the dude. he’s at his worst when he’s out there pondering the right move. Just go hard to the rim or take the open 3. The rest will sort itself out just fine.
-
Big issue is you can’t always count on threes. I love it as adding to the PIP and MFTs but it can’t be a substitute. Our identity is PIP and MFT. Just want to add 3PM to that list, not take anything off.
As for AD, I have no problem with him taking the threes. Just have to make a high percentage if you want to hoist 6 of them per game.
It’s not the number but the green light from the coach that counts here, Jamie. Ham doesn’t expect AD to take 6 a game. Just take them when they’re there because it will help his overall game.
-
-
-
-
-
If I’m PHX I’m walking away from this game with a knowing smile on my face. Huge difference trying to stop KD when Book & Beal are on the court. But yeah…let’s nominate Wood for DPOY…lol.
-
Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. Nobody bossing Denver around, and that was before some onerous calls by the refs to kick off the season. Mile high altitude must mess with them, too. The truth is the Lakers simply didn’t execute well enough to beat poised and polished Nuggets squad. Some had hoped that the departure of a few key players might reveal a wrinkle or weakness. When you have Jokic and Murray, the rest is pretty much gravy.
- Let’s get something straight about the Nuggets. When healthy and engaged I’m not sure there’s a team that has enough firepower, skill and chemistry to beat them. Especially in Denver. Losing a couple guys won’t change a thing when the guy who made them better, Jokic, is still suiting up for the team Colorado. The Timberwolves, with the defensive aplomb of Gobert especially, have the best matchups. For us to win, or most teams for that matter, you have to win the small battles: rebounds, points i the paint, free throws, and keep your turnovers down. Too often our turnovers, which were pretty low all things concerned, led to easy buckets when we didn’t do a great job getting back. That won’t cut it against the Nuggets, not anymore.
- The mysterious case of the here one half, gone the next Anthony Davis. That didn’t take too long… What has long been my, and many other lakers fans, biggest knock against AD is his ability to vanish when we need to shine brightest. It’s just not in his DNA, not everyone can be like a Kobe or leBron or Magic. Once again, with the Lakers needing more, AD, he seemed to wilt into the floor against a double team scheme. I long ago gave up on hoping for AD to play more like __________ player who was born with the clutch gene. It’s just not in him, not on an every game basis. He played really well on defense bt we need him to be a consistent threat for 4 quarters on both ends for this to have a shred of hope in ending with another banner. It’s just that simple.
- Their guards outplayed our guards. Yeah some calls maybe didn’t go our way but our starting guards also missed a lot of wide open shots. With big money comes big expectations. D Lo and Reaves both signed lucrative extensions and need to be better hitting the open shots this offense is certain to generate on a nightly basis. Other than Vincent, and for a short burst Cam Reddish, we didn’t get all that much out of any guards against the Nuggets while KCP and Murray went off on us all game long.
- Prince’s shooting kept us in the game. While he often looked a little lost on D and was as guilty as any Laker of not getting back, Prince showcased his shooting and that’s a bright spot going forward. Were it not for his efforts from three this game would have been a true blowout.
- LeBron looked smooth and I approve of the minutes limit. This is what comes with relying so very much ona 39 year old. if the first game of the season told me anything it’s that our depth still needs to do a better job rising to the task at hand or those LeBron minutes are going to creep up, up, up and I fear that will result in what could be a borderline career-ending injury. While difficult to watch, especially in the 4th as we saw the game start to slip away when AD couldn’t get it going, this is the correct blueprint for handling a 39 year hoops savant. He cannot play 35+ mpg, we need to keep it around 30, save for overtime games. This is why the legendary Laker Tom Load management Plan needs to happen more than it did last season: hit ’em hard, hit ’em early, blow ’em out, rest your key guys down the stretch while the bench mops up.
A lot was made of the “Who’s your daddy” chant. That, my friends, is a bonafide sign of fear, loathing and respect. Add it to the “Beat LA” chant as another feather in the cap of how the Lakers can uniquely annoy and inspire vitriol in another big city. Kind of big, well…not really. Guess Michael Malone ain’t the only one worried about the lakers more than any other team.
-
Great fiver, Jamie.
1. Don’t know of another center who can post up and score on AD like Jokic did. No question guy is best player in the NBA right now. This game ended like last game. Nuggets are our daddy right now. They look like they’re in midseason form.
2. The disappearing Anthony Davis has to be blamed on the player and the coaches. You can’t anoint a guy the face of the franchise and ask him to shoot six threes per game and then do nothing to help him live up to that goal. As for AD, I’m getting tired of having to make excuses for his not taking the torch from LeBron. Not ready for anything but a great game tonight. No fucking excuses.
3. Where is Max Christie and all the Christie fans throwing shade at me for questioning if he can really hold a rotation spot in a championship team at 20-years old. No disrespect for Max, but get serious. The good news is Reddish looks promising and even though he’s really a three, he could be our best backup at the two. Reaves should not have been unplugged by Ham. Honestly, though Russell and Reaves were not really the problem. AD was IMO.
4. Prince looked good and his shooting was excellent but his net stats all looking blah. He competes on defense but reminds me of Troy Brown in that the challenge is always a couple of microseconds and millimeters from getting to the ball. Rui and Gabe looked terrible.
5. LeBron looks great and I love keeping him under 30 mpg. Ham just should not have pulled him at that point. In less than 3 minutes a 4-point deficit became a 12-point deficit. AD takes and misses a three. Joker nails a three. Reaves missed a three. KCP hits a three. Lakers timeout. Darvin will learn.
-
Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
And so with less fanfare than it began, the preseason has concluded. With a loss to the Phoenix Suns the lakers finished the preseason with a 2-4 record. This should concern nobody because there were times when this team flashed some dominant potential. The main goal, which is always get everyone through preseason healthy, may have come up a little bit short but our key guys look good and are healthy so all in and all an unqualified success. Let’s dig in.
- Anthony Davis looks to be in regular season form. I’m curious to see how a more regular role (by that I mean playing in the 4th quarter) impacts his on-court play but there’s no denying AD is entering the season already in beast mode. The defense is on point, he’s the focal point of the offense, and he’s doing it as smoothly as I’ve seen him play in a long time. Whether this is a result of knowing he’s the first option and not semi-deferring or a byproduct of an off season change I don’t much care. If this version of AD can play at this level for 30+ mpg he’ll be in all the conversations: MVP, DPOY, Most Improved (ok maybe not that one). We’ll also have a decent record and if few other players hit (other than LeBron) we’ll slide right into the playoffs at 4 or 5, maybe higher if some other teams stumble out of the gate. AD is the way now, all hail AD.
- LeBron James is moving fluidly. Honestly the only thing I’ve been really watching during preseason other than how some of the new guys play in the mix is how LeBron moves. He looks good and so whatever Mad Scientist he took his foot to has some good vibes coming his way from all of Laker nation. While not blowing me away with his explosiveness he generally doesn’t until well into November, early December as he works his body into game-shape. At 39 I’m willing to give him all the way until March as I’d rather he ease his way along rather than go down and have to rehab, or worse get surgery. While it does feel like a little less hinges on LeBron’s impact this season there’s no denying his impact come playoff time.
- The Holdovers. I’m talking Reaves, Hachimura, Vanderbilt and Russell. Mixed results, in my opinion. That’s to be expected in talent that resides squarely in the “above-average” tier of the NBA. Consistency is the hallmark of super stardom, none of these guys are knocking on that door with really only Russell and Reaves even having the potential to do so (mostly Russell). Still, when Reaves has played he’s looked exactly like where he left off and still not playing all that much point. Still mostly functioning off-ball to start possessions. Hachimura looks more like regular season Rui and not playoff knight of death Rui and, while unfortunate, not surprising. Some guys can’t manufacture the other gear without the situation demanding it of them. I’m not worried about him though, he’s got his new deal, we know he can rise to the occasion and so if his midseason play isn’t all we hoped for the team has the depth to mitigate that. Vando looked great in his first game and has been sidelined by a heel injury ever since. Same goes here, no need to rush back as that’s what the depth we accumulated this offseason is for. Russell is the only one I expected a little more out of and the returns have also been mixed. There is a point in which the hype hits the ceiling and D-Lo may have reached that point. I understand deferring to AD but he really needs to force himself into the third option role on this team for us to have lasting success.
- The New Guys. That would be Prince, Vincent, Wood and Hayes. I would say “pretty much as advertised” to a man. Prince has slowed down his foul-a-minute defense and that’s enabled him to fill in for Vando but the argument that his shooting brings more to the table than Vando’s defense isn’t a strong one. I don’t see Prince as commanding a defender to stay on him like other sharp-shooters, he’s just a solid release valve and that’s fine. Vincent, cut from the same cloth as Schroder before him, is a solid backup. Won’t ‘wow’ you on any given night but does his job as well as can be expected. Wood and Hayes will battle for a role and it will basically come down to defense. I had hoped to see one of them run away with the chance to be the starting center but they both measure up to specialist back up center. hayes as the better rim runner, Woods as the better shooter, but neither of them did enough for me to advocate starting them over wither Prince or Vando. Honestly, since the start of camp I’ve though the last starting spot was Vando’s to lose and nothing the other guys did while he was out changed my mind. I didn’t list Reddish here because the dude is clearly a major project with time running out for him to figure it out if he wants to earn a paycheck larger than the vet minimum in any given season.
- Has Ham really changed up his coaching? A little. The five out sets are there, at least to start possessions, but we generally resort back to the comfort zones of AD and LBJ which is ball in hand face up/back to the basket/make a move. The defense looks a little tighter out of the gate than last season, thanks largely to D-Lo’s improved focus and AD coming into camp with something to prove, and I expect that to get even better after a couple of weeks of settling into some rotations. So, while it’s hard for to endorse the idea that Coach ham has changed a lot of his integral philosophies, I can say he’s refined his approach to using them with the players on the roster. I’d still like to see us utilize plays that get specialist players their pet shots, that goes for guys like Wood and Prince. It drives me a little bonkers when we just stash those guys in the corner and hope they make a shot. In the same vein I’d like to see Wood and Hayes involved in more P&R near the top of the key with D-LO, Reaves and Vincent. Letting the defense dictate the action won’t cut it when the player with the ball isn’t LeBron or AD, not everyone can just “take what the defense gives them” and one of the hallmarks of a great coach is making mid-tier players better by using actions that benefit their skill set. Again, some of this might be preseason issues and things will get more intricate as the season wears on, but I’d like to see some synergy starting to develop akin to what we’ve seen evolve in places like Miami and Golden State.
All in all, color me pleased. Sure Max Christie could have silenced his doubters and seized the backup 2 guard role (he didn’t), of course Vando could have probably played last night and given us one more preseaon glimpse of what that line up could look like (does it really matter in preseason??? no) but LeBron and AD got through it all healthy, Reaves was eased into everything after his long summer, and everyone who was here last season looks reasonably ready to pick up where they left off. While there may still be some growing pains I’m pretty stoked about the potential of this season and looking forward to opening night against the champs.
Go Lakers. - Load More Posts
JAMIE SWEET
Associate Publisher
Jamie Sweet and his eagerly awaited ‘5 Things’ post after every Lakers game have become a staple feature of Lakerholics. Jamie’s the Laker fan who jumpstarts and drives conversations with his informed comments and insightful observations.
Another refugee from the LA Times Lakers Blog, Jamie’s a must read Lakerholics poster and commenter whose reputation as a savvy but objective fan is well deserved
You can always get in touch with Jamie on the Lakerholics blog. You can also check out his work with the Garage Theatre in Long Beach or with his band Gnarwhal.
FEATURED ARTICLE

Lakers Bet On Lights-Out Shooting And Aggressive Small Ball Defense
Redick’s surprise late-season gamble to transform the Lakers’ offense into a volume 3-point shooting juggernaut and their defense into a trapping and swarming small ball attack paid off big as L.A. won 50 games and #3 seed.
FEATURED PODCAST
NBA Observations- Big Money Spent For The Clippers And Heat, Are The Lakers Next?
The guys from the Lakers Fast Break return for some NBA Observation as they share thoughts on the recent big-money extensions for Miami coach Erik Spoelstra and the Clipper’s Kawhi Leonard. Does this mean the Lakers will be opening up their wallet a little more as well? Plus after Toronto Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic’s huge rant after the Lakers game because of the fourth-quarter free throw disparity, we ponder if Darvin Ham will ever show that kind of energy if he remains as the guys on the sidelines for LA. We’re back talking some big $$$, and wondering if the Lakers are ready to go on a spending spree? Find out our thoughts on the latest Lakers Fast Break podcast!
Don’t forget to watch the Lakers games with us LIVE at playback.tv/lakersfastbreak and our newest Lakers Fast Break merchandise site is now up at https://tinyurl.com/39yb4ta3, check it out!
Please Like, Share, and Subscribe to our channel and our social media @lakersfastbreak on Twitter.
If you have questions, give us a shout-out on Twitter, YouTube, Twitch, Kick, Instagram, TikTok, or Facebook, or send us your thoughts to lakersfastbreak@yahoo.com or become a supporter of the Lakers Fast Break today at https://anchor.fm/lakers-fast-break
The views and opinions expressed on the Lakers Fast Break are those of the panelists or guests themselves and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Lakers Fast Break or its owners. Any content or thoughts provided by our panelists or guests are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual, anyone, or anything.
Presented by our friends at lakerholics.com, lakersball.com, Pop Culture Cosmos, Inside Sports Fantasy Football, Vampires and Vitae, SynBlades.com, YouTube’s John Mikaelian, the novel Congratulations, You Suck (available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble), The Happy Hoarder, EmpireJeffTV, Larry Lakers Dribbling Chat Chat, Lakers Corner, and Retro City Games!
FEATURED TWEET
Lakers stars used speed and space of transition as stage for talent
https://twitter.com/Lakers/status/1437491268544835595
Recent Comments










WHO’S ONLINE
[who-is-online-now]
Great fiver, Jamie. We’re in a moment of synchronicity where we could actually write each other’s articles.
I’m confident Wood will become a starter soon. The numbers will demand it. Ham has done a great job getting him to play like he should. There were a few times Chris passed that I wished he would have shot but he’s paying attention to defense and working hard. His rebounding is a major defensive plus.
Frankly, I’m more worried about our guard play. We really have come to rely on Reaves and his slump is killing us. If we weren’t so shorthanded suddenly, I’d sit him for a few games. I don’t think he’s going to get his mojo back unless he sits down for a few games.
Backcourt is going to be major focus at trade deadline unless Russell and Reaves suddenly show they can play the defensive side of the position better. We could use a POA defender like Caruso and volume 3-point shooter like Hield at deadline.