JAMIE SWEET’S ‘5 THINGS
Lakers’ Post Game Reports & Analysis
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
There was no let-down with the return of LeBron James. Nor was the absence of Lonnie Walker IV or Austin Reaves an issue as the Lakers steam-rolled the Atlanta Hawks at home in a wire to wire win. LeBron, Russ and the supporting cast had everything working as the Lakers win streak grew to 4.
- The King’s reign is strong. There are some young players gunning for the throne and, to date, Giannis has been the only one to touch the Sun. Since LeBron took the NBA torch from Kobe he has reigned long and well. This might be my favorite LeBron season as a Laker because of his supporting cast and its myriad array of issues. Fact is all NBA teams are imperfect in some form or another and rely on their best players to get them to the next level. LeBron has been doing just that since mid-December.
- Russell’s great all around game. I’m quite sure there is nothing Russ can do to convince those who want to see him traded that this is working now. Too much water under the bridge to reverse ingrained opinions or notions. I, myself, had doubts this would work or that Westbrook would accept a bench role so easily and also excel in it and that he could continue to play well without the elite finishing skills of AD. We were and are all wrong. Russ has shown that he can have a starter’s impact off the bench with his elite rebounding and passing. He never has been or will be an elite scorer but it doesn’t matter if he’s getting teammates easy buckets..which he is. Including a nifty LeBron/Russ 2-man game. Last season it felt like James and Westbrook just alternated controlling possessions and that wasn’t very successful. This season LeBron is more off-ball than at any other pony as a Laker, which isn’t a lot mind you, but it’s allowing the guards in the team to be involved and that’s what’s working.
- Kendrick Nunn getting some solid run. He’s still at the top of my “most likely to be traded” list next to PatBev but it was still really nice to see Nunn have a solid game in a non-garbage time role. He can still be a factor in the NBA and likely had a fair amount of rust to shake off and confidence to build back up after a year off from a lingering injury. The Lakers will need Kendrick to contribute if he stays on the team. His shooting could be a key factor this season if he can keep this up and in the playoffs, should such a thing be in the cards for this team, he could be a difference maker.
- Schröder playing well with LeBron. We saw Dennis excel without LeBron, taking more shots, controlling the ball, and showing that he can play at his Euro League level in the NBA. I wanted to see him do that with James playing and Dennis delivered. There are a bevy of players who are playing as much for their next contract as they are to win now. The two can coexist, although it can also ruin team chemistry if the former outweighs the latter. Kudos to coach Ham in managing the desire to showcase with the needs of the team, especially in the case of Dennis and Russ who both have a lot of potential money on the line next summer.
- True garbage time. Great seeing LeBron play fewer than 35 minutes in a win. It allowed us to see some of our younger guys get some run in the waning moments of the game once the double digit lead was truly insurmountable. The G Leaguers all got to play as the only active roster not to see floor time was Damien Jones (DNP-sore right toe). The newest Laker, Sterling Brown, also got tossed in the fire right off the bay. When the guys from the G-League and the Two Ways get to play it either means a terrible loss or a blow out win. Loving the still too infrequent blow out wins but I’ll take whatever wins we can get.
Back-to-back tonight, won’t be blown away if LeBron doesn’t play but I hope he does. We need to start proving our mettle against division and conference teams, teams we have a hard time beating this season. These are the teams you want to beat at least once because should the Lakers get to the playoffs that’s who we’ll face in the first 3 rounds, more if we’re a playin team. Tonight against the Kings would be a good place to start.
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Great post Jamie. The whole trade Russ faction is missing an important element. Even if the Lakers want to trade Russ, we so few seller and too many buyers, teams are not going to just dump good players for 2 future picks that may or may not be valuable in 5 to 7 years. They are going to look for packages that help them build in the next couple of years. Honestly that’s going to make it harder to land any quality player in any trade. At least not until the last couple of days before the trade deadline. Which is in a way good for the Lakers. With the way we have been playing I would like to see what this squad can do if we are ever healthy again. That will go a long way in deciding what we should do this summer.
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Winning is always a cure for many ills but I want to say the best thing I saw last night was Nunn getting out of his slump. That was a welcome sight. If he continues to play like this it would be a good problem to have as far as coaching goes. Great win!
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Good fiver, Jamie.
1. LeBron is still the King.
2. Should we keep Russ?
3. Nunn raising his trade value.
4. Dennis turning into Euro Dennis
5. Real garbage time. -
Jamie, I forgot to add that you made a great point about Russ and his all-around play. He is the engine that drives this team. A lot of folks here just hate him plain and simple. Some hate him for what he makes. Some for his inability to score. The guy can give you a triple double almost on a nightly basis even coming off the bench.
When he was signed into that contract somebody saw it fit to reward him for his hard work and deservingly so. Besides who in their right mind wouldn’t take a 47 mil contract and run with it? Not every player is perfect but you can always count on Russ to show up. And when he does he is going to give it his all. To me, that’s all I ask for.-
They’re all professionals who want to win (and keep their jobs). In our Lakerholic desire for greatness, it’s easy to overlook that.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
This was a statement win for the Lakers franchise. When star players are hurt it’s up to the unsung teammates to do their best to meet the challenge. The Lakers have not much but vet minimum players to fall back on when one or more of their marquee stars goes down, a thinness much critiqued by Planet Earth and a major source of Pelinka-inspired ire for fans. Last night, for a game at least, those players showed that faith to be warranted as a motley gang of Lakers overcame a mostly healthy and rolling Miami Heat team.
- Dennis Schroder’s best game by a country mile. This was the version of Flash Laker’s fans had been hoping to see. The unstoppable paint penetrator, the slow-gather but accurate three point shooter, and the drive and dish playmaker. Euro League Schroder, at last! Dennis’ line of 32 pts, 4 boards, 4 steals and 2 dimes was needed in every aspect to manage the win last night. He got to the line 14 times applying pressure on a variety of Miami defenders all game long and taking on the scoring burden left to the team by LeBron’s absence due to illness. The best part was he had only one turnover which helped minimize the 17 turnovers the team coughed up (most of that on Russ). Dennis needs to bottle this game and play with this level of aggression whomever else is on the floor with him from now on.
- Russell Westbrook’s sloppy but impactful game. There won’t be many wins following a 7 turnover game from Russ. He’s too critical for getting guys easy shots for that to work but for a night we escaped despite a subpar passing game from Westbrook. He nearly had another triple-double off the bench but didn’t chase it. Despite the 7 TOs he did have 9 dimes and 8 rebounds and scored some seriously clutch baskets down the stretch. It gets harder and harder for me to see the team trading Russ and easier and easier for me to see them justifying keeping him the whole season and possibly beyond, for the right price. Best of all Russ seems to have won the fans in the home crowd over with his effort, if not polish.
- Kendrick Nunn’s best game in a looooong time (maybe the whole season). It had to happen eventually, right? Nunn couldn’t be awful for forever, the guy has too much talent. In limited action Nunn had his most complete and least-forced game in a purple and gold uniform. With Troy Brown Jr. leaving the game early due to another injury his production was desperately needed for a team that has fewer and fewer scoring options to turn to. His line of 9 points on 4-9 shooting (1-3 from downtown) and 3 rebounds won’t ‘wow’ anyone or reverse the general consensus that his MLE signing is one of the worst ever for the Lakers but it’s a clear step in the right direction for a player we all hoped to see more out of but have yet to see it consistently.
- More high quality Wenyan Gabriel minutes. A lot of players struggle in limited minutes. Wenyan has a simple role and he’s making the most of it and he’s doing that consistently which is the key for bench players. Like Nunn’s, his box score won’t jump out at you but it was efficient and the guy plays so hard that much of what he does by way of keeping possessions alive, fighting for position that allows our guards to grab boards and not pad his own stats are all critical elements of Laker success this season. He may not be playing his way into a massive deal next season but it’s easy to see Wenyan at least sticking around the league as his corner three is rounding into shape, his effort is always there, and he’s playing focused and within his role.
- What works about the small guard lineup. I’m personally not a huge fan but coach Ham keeps trotting it out so we have to at least take a look at what about the 3-4 guard lineups he is deploying does indeed work. It makes the team harder to guard on the perimeter and allows for more drives to the rim. Schroder and Russ in particular are elite at finding seams and exploding to the hoop for a layup or pass. Now, depending on the defense, those drives can have very mixed results but if the correct read is made more often than not it does have the potential of at least partially offsetting our woebegone outside shooting. It also has problems on the defensive glass that put the onus and burden on Thomas Bryant and Wenyan Gabriel to box out consistently while also covering their man in roll schemes which isn’t easy even for elite defenders. Still, it could end up being a useful tool if we go down to three guards, LBJ and AD or Bryant in the future. For myself, when everyone is healthy, I would hope that some of the potential line ups featuring more size get as extended a look as the small line ups have.
All in all a high quality win and now the winning streak is a legit three whole games. With the hope that we’ll have James back for the next game and AD back before the trade deadline the Lakers a re still in a decent position to make the playin and at least challenge for the 6th seed, Anyone who had said that was a possibility after the 2-10 start when we were all feeling the doom and gloom would likely be lying. Fans resigned themselves to a lost season or hoping a trade would bail us out but then something happened: the Lakers just started to play harder. Not even all that much better, just harder and with more intent. Yes, it also came with a short burst of the potential MVP versions of LeBron and AD but those 2 have played together in a scant 14 games this season, a lot of those were the early losses, as well. So, with 38 games played and coming up on the halfway mark, we need to look for hope in the players who do play consistently to find a way forward. Just like last night.
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You make an important point, which has been a major point behind the front office’s hesitancy to invest in this team. For much of this season, the team has underperformed for a variety of reasons, including poor roster construction from the front office. They’ve lost games they should have won and played poorly even when healthy.
While there were promising signs from AD before the injury and LeBron after AD’s injury, the team was still losing and falling further behind. AD playing like MVP. LeBron still dominating. Now we can add, Schroder to Bryant and Reaves and Walker at times. This was the Dennis Schroder who led Germany to the wins in the Euro games. Not the Schroder from 2021.
It’s taken time but the team is suddenly getting better. They’ve been persistent all season long but finally they’re breaking through. The vibe is different too. Rather than coming out and giving a good effort, this team came out to do their part and get a win. That should be what the front office has been waiting for.
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See I think that they’ll use this as reasons why NOT to make a major, or really any, move. They’ll point to all the vet min guys and say how they’re over-performing their value, that all we need is AD, LBJ and Russ to play to form and this team is legit. They’ve basically constructed a no trade wall around this season, for some reason, and it doesn’t feel like that’s changing.
Take the very reasonable idea of trading LW4 for someone that is either under contract or won’t command the salary he might next season. Nothing wacky or crazy about that. If the Lakers want to keep Thomas Bryant and Reaves it’s unlikely they’ll be able to afford LW4. Not impossible but unlikely. Will Rob make a move or just another useful asset walk for nothing?
If he performs to type nothing will happen this season. Has yet to make an in-season trade and all signs are pointing more and more to staying as-is.
Who knows, though, something crazy could come down the pike and Rob could (finally) make a move but I’m not really holding my breath for that to happen.
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Well, we both have our schticks and are sticking to them. You’ve been right so far in that the Lakers are doing everything they can to avoid making a trade. We’ll get the answer by February 9th.
I think the way LeBron and AD have been playing and how wide open the West is and how much better the team is playing makes it near impossible for the Lakers not to trade at least one of the picks to get more size, shooting, and defense.
Frankly, any smart front office would immediately push all of their chips into the middle with the Lakers hand. They don’t need a third star, just four or five better fitting players.
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Again, a good one, Jamie. I am more than happy about the team’s overall play. Like I said yesterday, the team is figuring things out and a win like this goes a long way in making the players believe in themselves. After all it is this Miami team that just beat the Clippers the other day.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
I had a feeling this might happen. It was easy to bury the Lakers as dead and gone when LeBron looked mortal just a couple weeks ago. Since he had a string of inefficient, 30+ point games, LeBron decided that he was going to go back to what works: scoring inside. The King did it again last night as he strung together back-to-back 40+ point games which just so happened to coincide with two Laker victories. Coach Ham in his post-game presser made it clear that this is the plan going forward, to ride LeBron until the wheels fall off or help returns.
- LeBron defying reality. If there’s one reason for the Laker’s front office to pull the trigger on a trade it should be the way LeBron is playing right now. When he’s commanding the paint like he is now there are few things that can deter his scoring. He gets to the line more, as well, which puts even more pressure on the defense and helps his teammates who can get to the rim and create contact like Schroder did last night. The King’s line was both epic and necessary as the Laker bench frittered away a big second half lead without Russ to get them easy baskets. What had almost looked like some potential 4th quarter rest turned into a close affair and LeBron ended up playing a team-high 40 minutes.
- Thomas Bryant filling in more than ably. He’s been more efficient than he was last night (9-17, no 3 pt. FGA) but it’s work on the glass on both ends that is helping keep the Lakers afloat while AD rests his injured foot. The big man continued to show he has completely recovered from a year of dealing with leg injuries by pulling down a game high 15 rebounds, 5 on the offensive end which proved critical as we needed all of those second chance points to pull this one out. If it were up to me I would experiment quite a bit with AD and Bryant on the floor with LeBron and maybe Russ. His pick and roll game is strong because he can shoot it from the rim out to the three point line. Loving the effort we’re seeing and this guy is playing his way into at least an MLE if not more.
- Austin Reaves bounce-back game. Reaves had largely struggled on this road trip but found his shot and his game again in Charlotte as he had a very True Grit-style game. 7 assists to one turnover helped reverse an ugly stretch of games for the sophomore and his shot came back in a game that really helped salvage the road trip. While I’d still like to see Reaves start we need games like this from him on a consistent basis wherever he plays in the rotation for us to have a shot most nights, especially with Davis and Lonnie Walker 4 out.
- Wenyan Gabriel finding his niche. It’s getting harder for me to remember that Wenyan had been all but cast out of the NBA until last season’s AARP team needed youth and energy so desperately Rob scoured the trash heap for anyone who could run fast or jump high. In 11 minutes the young forward posted a team high +15. While that stat can often be a tad misleading I thought that, in this case, it showed how much his backup minutes can swing the tide of a game. We don’t need Wenyan to replicate what LeBron brings when he comes in for the 38 year old legend, we just need him to consistently play hard and with focus. That’s it. He often shares the floor with Russ or Schroder when LBJ sits and the PGs are doing a good job of playing to his skillset and talent and his hustle can help shape a quarter, for good or ill. I like that he’s taking wide-open threes, not forcing his shot or his offense and just playing hard with heart. That alone can be something that helps win some ball games in any sport.
- The hits just keep on-a-coming. Lonnie Walker IV has been out a couple games, Russell has foot intermittent soreness in his left foot and AD is out indefinitely. No real update on any of them so hoping Russ and Lonnie play in the next one because my guess is we won’t see AD until late January, at best. More likely will be after the trading deadline which will all but be the final obstacle Rob needs to continue his waffling and dithering. In his defense nothing is really happening everywhere as the western conference pile-up has made it possible for everyone who would be interested in a trade holding onto their cards until clarity is achieved and chances for a playin berth fade to almost nothing. With the news that Indy and Myles have opened talks on keeping him the list of potential trade partners just keeps on shrinking. Whether that will doom this team or force them to come together and truly battle for something great remains to be seen.
Home against Miami in what one hopes will be a revenge game and see a winning streak worth mentioning get started. Beat the Heat and we’ll have won three games in a row. If LeBron scores 40 he will be on another list of one as only he and Jordan have scored 40+ in back-to-back games but nobody his age has gone three in a row. It’s likely the kind of effort the Lakers will need to pull out a W. Whether any of this inspired the Laker “Brain Trust” to action isn’t debatable as I don’t think it will. They’ll justify this as treading water successfully and hoping AD’s return is enough to get them over the hump as-is. We’ll have to debate the intelligence of this plan in a few weeks, or at least after the trade deadline, because I don’t see much hope in it now but with The King playing like this anything feels possible.
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Excellent analysis, Jamie! The part I like and the most satisfying to me about LeBron is #1:
“When he’s commanding the paint like he is now there are few things that can deter his scoring. He gets to the line more,….”.
Yes, he gets to the line more and deservingly so. This is what LeBron is capable of doing on a nightly basis if refs gave him what he earns attacking the rim and not purposely giving Shaq treatment because of his size and power.
Think about it for a second, the Greek freak gets a ton of points through his and-1s by relentlessly attacking the rim and is consistently rewarded with shooting fouls. If LeBron is given the same treatment he would have the most and-1s in a season. How many times in the past have we seen LeBron getting clobbered when he drives to the rim only to be ignored or assessed an offensive foul?
Good to see him rewarded with his fair share of hard work by the referees in this game and here is hoping we will get to see him rewarded more often and consistently going forward.
Thank you for the great job, Jamie! -
Good fiver, Jamie. I’m with you on beating the Heat and keeping the baby winning streak alive. Winning streaks happen when teams have a perfect storm of a superstar on a streak, opponents who lose star players, and a lick of good luck. Think we’re due for one of those. 6 more games to Jan 15.,
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Looking at the box score and seeing we gave up 40+ points in back-to-back quarters was all anyone really needed to do to understand why we lost this game. Looking at everyone’s stat line you’d think this game might have been close. We shot well, 50% for the game, 45% from three, but that was where the good vibes ended. Giving up a 41 point 2nd quarter and a 40 point 3rd doomed this game which was never really close.
- Sooooo I guess we’re waiting until after Christmas to get some kind of confirmed info on AD? Maybe New Years? Wouldn’t want to rush this team because we all know how well they respond to pressure. Heck, let’s get an even 10 opinions on what happened when AD’s foot seemed to bump into Jokic in midair. Let’s feel confident in the diagnosis because that might be the last professional thing the front office does this season.
- PatBev clowning while losing. You’re shooting 35% overall, 27% from three. Goofing off and clowning isn’t what this team needs right now. You’re helping the team give up 3.2 points/game when you’re on the court. Be a better player, not a better clown.
- None outta Nunn. After clamoring for more of…well, anything to the media Nunn has gone out and shot 6-18 in 31 minutes over 2 games. His garbage time scoring won’t be enough to up his value on the market (hard to see him signing anything but vet minimum deals or playing overseas after this season) and there is little question that this has been an awful waste of our MLE from two seasons ago.
- If the Lakers want to be taken seriously then they have to more than show up on offense. Scoring 120 points is usually enough to win you a basketball game. Of course, giving up 134 means you basically showed up for half the game. There’s an entire other end of the court some teams choose to worry about, too. It’s called “the defensive end”. Until they all try hard on both ends this team will continue to be a bad joke, again.
- Lakers missing Russ and Reaves off the bench. LeBron had 31 points on 21 shots, 11 assists and just 2 turnovers, and generally played pretty well. You could even make a case for the whole starting five we deployed scoring pretty well and evenly. But the bench was essentially a no-show. Since nobody really played much D we needed a lot more scoring from the bench for us to have been able to try and make this competitive. A lot of these guys will be fighting just to stay in the NBA in a few months, they have a chance here to show why they should and nobody is really stepping up, yet. Russ and Reaves off the bench, even though I still think Austin should start, are a solid combo of guards for a coach to be able to go to. Nunn and Christie? Notsomuch.
Really, it’s not the scrubs fault. Nobody should honestly expect a bunch of NBA journeymen on minimum deals to carry a franchise when two of the star players go down and the best guy off the bench follows suit. As long as Russ and Reaves are joining AD in street clothes we’ll be losing games. This team just doesn’t have enough to win without them. Honestly, if AD is out for 4+ weeks, it won’t really matter. This team was always going as far as AD and LBJ could take them. Even the King isn’t enough these days if the rest of the team only half shows up.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Inspiring as the comeback was it kind of just made it an even bigger bummer when we ended up losing. At least for me. Wasted was another superlative game by AD, a solid game by Russ and another big night of scoring by LeBron. The same issues remain the same issues and now the coach is having to basically play a 6-7 man rotation on most nights to be competitive. To say this is unsustainable is to put it lightly.
- The first half. It can easily be said that such an incredible comeback might not have been needed had we handled our business better in the opening two quarters. Went back and checked the shot chart to see how we scored in the first half. We gave 37 and 28 points per quarter in the first half good for, what honestly should have been a commanding, 65 points to our 50. Our overall intensity and defense was a lot better in the second half but that kind of effort is not a luxury this team has. We’re simply not good or deep enough to feel like we can turn it on and win a game. Not by a longshot.
- The second half and overtime. The most important number of the second half was 29. That’s the number of minutes AD played which is to say all of the potential minutes available. LeBron played all but 2 or so, also too many. For the life of me I don’t understand how the Lakers can imagine that a 7 man rotation will stand up to the grind of the 82 game season AND be ready for a playin round or two AND compete for a title after that. The logic boggles the mind. Or at least it does until one remembers that the Lakers willfully traded or simply let walk the bevvy of valuable role-players we once featured.
- LeBron’s heroics or smarts. LeBron is not playing smart basketball, he’s playing straight hero ball. His shot chart worked out thusly:
-1st quarter: 1-2 FGs, zero 3’s, zero FTA
-2nd quarter: 4-6 FGs, 0-2 on threes, 1-2 FTA
-3rd quarter: 3-5 FGs, 1-2 on threes, zero FTA
-4th quarter: 5-10 FGs, 2-6 on threes, 1-2 FTs (w/4:25 left in the game)
-OT: 1-2 FGs, 0-1 on threes,
LeBron in the 4th tried to go it alone and it isn’t really working for the Lakers as a team. Juxtapose LBJ’s 10 FGAs with AD’s 4, Russ’s 5 (and at least one of those was an offensive rebound/put-back) and we’re seeing the same formula that resulted in losses. It would be one thing if we were seeing a vintage version of LeBron (fewer threes, more forays into the paint) but we’re not. He’s a jump shooter now. Of his 25 FGAs (which led the team) 11 were from three. He only got fouled on shots twice (or at least only two were called) and neither of those were and-1s. I can sympathize with LeBron for not forcing the action inside, he has not seen many friendly whistles as a Laker, but that means he has to balance his aggression better, not try and dominate just in the 4th. - More team, less Big 3. Coach Ham is riding his three best players right into the ground. or at least AD and LeBron, Russ has a never-ending motor it’s just his jumper that doesn’t work when you want it to. You could see in OT that LeBron and AD were utterly gassed. Even in the 4th when LeBron settled for his lazy pull up threes, one or two of those and get the man 2 minutes on the pine. Technically 10 Lakers played basketball last night, only 7 of them played 10+ minutes and Schroder and Beverley each played 19. It’s just not sustainable, man. You can ride it hard but when the wheels fall off don’t be shocked or surprised. Coach Ham needs to do a better job of two things: finding productive rest for LeBron and AD and getting his role-players more involved in the scoring. It will make things better now, in the playoffs (lol, I know, I know but one can hope, right?), and for the whole team.
- Pride in your homecourt. Look, I’m sure all the Lakers really wanted to win last night. The loss dropped us to 6-7 at Crypto. That’s not a winning mentality at home. We’re not a terrible road team, like Golden State, and if we just took better care of business in LA then this season would have a very different feel to it. At home we need to get the excitement generating players going. Get Lonnie Walker some runways to take off of. Let Kendrick Nunn play 15 minutes so he can get in 8 more FGAs. Maybe let Max Christie play or one of the two-way guys for like 5 minutes and see if they can get the home crowd buzzing from a hard-earned basket. Something.
Well Minny lost so we’re exactly where we were before we lost to Boston with lots of season left to go. Tomorrow will be the first day almost anyone can be traded anywhere. Will there be a huge move tomorrow?!?! I don’t think so, no. I think we see this team continue as-is until a lot closer to 2/9/2023. I can imagine a world where we trade PatBev and/or Nunn in December…but I’m not, nor have I ever been, a big believer in Rob and his choices as GM. If we do trade for someone expect it to be a name more than a player we actually need. Rob will go for flashy, not substance. He’s well and truly shown his disdain for role-players since he took over jettisoning one after the other in favor of name players that, for the most part, don’t work out. So, in the end, logic and empirical evidence win out, again, over hope and dreaming. No trades will happen until 2023 would be my guess. Which is what’s it been for awhile now. Search for answers within, gentlemen, search for answers within.
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Thanks for the 5er, Jamie. As always, you hit the nail squarely on the head. But I want to elaborate on #4 – More team, less Big Three.
Here is the thing – Sometimes the Lakers have looked every bit as awkwardly constructed, and talent diminished as ever.
With the way the team is currently built, the Lakers are asking for LeBron and AD to make the impossible possible every night.
Yet, more than anything else, they have looked human.In an 82-game season, that style of basketball is simply not sustainable. Both lebron and AD, and even the front office, appear to be aware of that. But unless Lakers make a move, help seems further off than ever before.
You can’t just have two people score. It’s a team game… they’ve struggled to score or stop anybody in close games around the end of regulation when things seem to matter. These are things that need to be addressed.
Carrying a team on your back is exhausting. Being the entire offense for a whole game on a nightly basis takes its toll, and whether it means Lebron and AD suffer a drop-off in efficiency, start to take their foot off the gas, or get injured, it’s fair to anticipate some loss in production. In fact, by the time February trade deadline rolls around both LeBron and AD may be hitting a mental and pysical wall if they can’t find enough help. It is the same situation Luca Doncic is in, in terms of his usage rate.
I also agree that we need to get excitement generating players to infuse energy that the team needs to get to a higher gear. Excellent breakdown, Jamie!
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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.
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My only complaint about Westy is shooting.