WELCOME TO LAKERHOLICS
A Virtual Community for Lakers Fans
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
The Lakers may have found the formula for optimizing LeBron James at this point in his career by surrounding him with an army of smart, young, talented, team-first players who could be his best supporting cast ever.
The Lakers making the conference finals stunned the basketball world and left the late-to-the-party pundits and need-to-see-it-to-believe-it doubters eating their false words but not realizing they haven’t seen anything yet. What Lakers’ critics and haters don’t see is Pelinka not only put together a roster than could help LeBron James win a ring at 38. He’s also assembled an army of young talent that perfectly complements today’s LeBron James.
The new-look roster Rob created was not a short-term cobbled-together shot to win LeBron one last championship at 38. It was a masterclass move to build a roster that could end James time as a Laker with a dynasty.
In what should be the twilight of his career, LeBron James is still a top-10 player capable of carrying his team to a championship, especially when surrounded on the Lakers by the best supporting cast ever in his career.The Los Angeles Lakers surround superstar LeBron James with 7 players, who can be broken down into four tiers, starting with the Second Superstar, the Starting Guards, the Starting Forwards, and the Backup Guards.
1. The Second Superstar
Heading that army of talent surrounding LeBron is 30-year old superstar Anthony Davis, who‘s finally taken the torch from James as the team’s most valuable player and reclaimed his standing as the league’s best defender.
Finally healthy and arguably playing even better than during the Lakers’ 2020 Bubble Championship run, Davis is #1 in the playoffs in defensive and total rebounds and blocked shots while anchoring the Lakers #1 defense. Davis is averaging 21.2/14.1/2.7 in 36.9 mpg shooting 53.0/27.3/83.8% with +7.5 plus/minus. Meanwhile, LeBron has been able to coast, averaging 23.4/10.0/5.3 in 37.4 mpg shooting 49.1/26.3/76.2% with +1.7 plus/minus.
While LeBron James is likely just a top-10 rather than top-5 NBA superstar, the new rim-and-paint focused Anthony Davis is healthy, engaged, and dominating as the best center and defensive player in the entire league.
2. The Starting Guards
After trading Westbrook and Beverley, the Lakers’ new starting backcourt has been 27-year old D’Angelo Russell and 25-year old Austin Reaves, a pair of young, do-everything combo guards who can shoot, pass, and defend.
The Russell and Reaves duo has not only given the Lakers two young lead guards who have size, length, and talent to score at all three levels, rebound at both ends of the court, and make plays for themselves and teammates. In the playoffs, Russell is averaging 15.7/3.3/5.0 in 31.6 mpg shooting 44.5/34.7/77.3% with +4.6 plus/minus while Austin Reaves is averaging 15.4/4.8/4.3 in 35.1 mpg shooting 43.4/38.7/85/7% with +6.8 plus/minus.
Two superstars and two legitimate stars almost guarantees the Los Angeles Lakers will have at least four players with double digit points every game. The Lakers hope Russell and Reaves will be their backcourt of the future.
3. The Starting Forwards
By trading for pair of 6′ 8″ power forwards in 24-year old Jarred Vanderbilt and 25-year old Rui Hachimura, the Los Angeles Lakers were able to finally fill their long-time need for taller defenders to guard bigger wing scorers.
Vanderbilt and Hachimura have given the Lakers a pair of ‘starting’ quality forwards with totally different skill sets. Vanderbilt is an legitimate elite wing defender while Hachimura has great potential as a 2-way 3&D wing. Vanderbilt is averaging 5.3/3.7/0.9 in 17.2 mpg shooting 40.7/25.0/66.7% with -0.3 plus/minus as a starter while Hachimura is averaging 11.3/3.6/0.6 in 21.2 mpg shooting 57.0/53.3/8.3% with +1.3 plus/minus off the bench.
Heading into Denver, there’s a possibility Darvin Ham may once again make a change to the starting lineup. Going big and playing Hachimura instead of Schroder would make great sense against the Denver Nuggets.
4. The Backup Guards
One of the Lakers’ greatest strengths in the playoffs so far has been the depth and versatility of their bench, especially their backcourt where a duo of ‘starting’ quality backup guards have empowered the team’s bench.
Steady contributions from Dennis Schroder and the re-emergence of Lonnie Walker after losing his starting job due to injury have given the Lakers consistent defensive chops and offensive firepower off the bench. Schroder is averaging 7.5/1.7/2.9 in 24.3 mpg shooting 41.1/30.8/84.6% with +4.5 plus/minus while Walker is averaging 6.8/0.9/0.9 in 13.4 mpg shooting 52.3/39.1/75.0% with +1.0 plus/minus. Walker was Memphis Game 4 hero.
The Lakers’ backcourt depth and diversity due to Dennis Schroder and Lonnie Walker IV was a big factor in their beating the second seed Grizzlies and defending champion Warriors in the first two rounds of the playoffs.
The Los Angeles Lakers remain slight underdogs to the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Finals, which start tomorrow night in Denver. L.A. will be looking to finish this road series in six games like rounds 1 and 2.
That means the Lakers must somehow steal one of the first two games in Denver. They flew to Denver last night to get a jump on getting acclimated to the altitude. The Nuggets are surely the best team the Lakers have faced. The Nuggets not only have 2-time MVP Nikola Jokic but also boast a lethal offensive team that shoots 3’s at 37.9%, 2nd best among all playoff teams. This series will undoubtedly come down to Anthony Davis vs. Nikola Jokic.
Should the Los Angeles Lakers beat the Denver Nuggets, they would then likely meet the Boston Celtics in what could be the greatest Finals in NBA history as both franchises are currently tied with 17 championships each. The Lakers have already pulled off the best comeback in NBA history, going from winning a Play-In game to taking down the favored #2 Grizzlies and defending champ Warriors is six games and making the conference finals.
Should the Los Angeles Lakers stretch their string of playoff series wins on the road to four and beat their rival Boston Celtics for the franchise’s 18th NBA championship, LeBron would likely consider this his best roster ever.
-
-
Nice post Tom, this is certainly a quality group and several guys are young enough that they will certainly become even better players. But as far as LeBrons best supporting group, I have to give that to the Heat. 4 hall of famer’s along with some seasoned vets off the bench like Battier, Juan Howard and Mike Miller. That was quite a team. Personally I’m excited by the age of this group. They will provide a quality core beyond LeBron.
-
Thanks, Michael. It’s so hard to compare teams from different eras. Those Heat teams were great no doubt.
For me, if this team can come through and win four road series to take #18 over the Celtics, they would be the best Lakers roster ever in my mind.
The story itself is the stuff of legends.
-
-
-
-
Thanks, Dean. We’ll have to wait and see how this roster does the rest of these playoffs but coming back from 2-10 start, winning play-in, then winning four straight road playoff series including beating Celtics in Finals for #18 has to be considered one of the greatest finishes in NBA history. I might consider them the best Lakers team ever too. No bigger challenge than winning it all after the way we started. Total dream come true type of stuff that never ever happens.
-
-
1. Second Superstar
Heading that army of talent surrounding LeBron is 30-year old Anthony Davis, who‘s finally taken torch from James and reclaimed standing as league’s best defender.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/y4rcXbCEoW
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
-
2. The Starting Guards
After trading Westbrook and Beverley, the Lakers’ new starting backcourt has been 27-year old D’Angelo Russell and 25-year old Austin Reaves, a pair of young, do-everything combo guards who can shoot, pass, and defend.
https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/kBBX2R55i2
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
-
3. The Starting Forwards
By trading for pair of 6′ 8″ power forwards in 24-year old Jarred Vanderbilt and 25-year old Rui Hachimura, the Los Angeles Lakers were able to finally fill their long-time need for taller defenders to guard bigger wing scorers.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/vO3SnAYnif
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
-
4. The Backup Guards
One of the Lakers’ greatest strengths in the playoffs so far has been the depth and versatility of their bench, especially their backcourt where a duo of ‘starting’ quality backup guards have empowered the team’s bench.https://t.co/f8Hc88E3Ah pic.twitter.com/sVry37dbuY
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 15, 2023
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
LeBron James and Anthony Davis rejected claims by Lakers doubters and critics who want to put a ceiling on their season and confirmed they’re not satisfied just playing with house money. They want another championship.
That may be presumptuous for a #7 seed that had to finish the season on 41–29 tear and win an overtime Play-In game to make the playoffs but after upsetting the Grizzlies and Warriors, the Lakers are now getting greedy. When asked if the Lakers were happy to be playing with ‘house money,’ LeBron James and Anthony Davis dismissed the idea they’d be satisfied with doing that and reiterated their only goal was another championship.
The idea LeBron James and Anthony Davis should be happy to be where they are and satisfied that they have made it to the conference finals is contrary to everything we know about what winning means to them.
“That’s y’all expectation,” Davis said. “Our expectations inside are way higher than showing up to the Western Conference finals. Want to shock the world. … Me and Bron want another one, now it’s time to go get it.”Even after dominating both the Memphis Grizzlies in the first round and the champion Golden State Warriors in the second round in six games, the Los Angeles Lakers are still being universally underrated and disrespected. Despite having the #1 rated defense in the entire playoffs, the Lakers are still underdogs to the Boston Celtics, who are current favorites to win their 18th NBA championship, and Denver Nuggets, whom the Lakers play next.
After starting out 2–10, the Lakers were essentially written off by everyone as they fell to 13th in the West with a 25–31 record 13 games behind the top seeded Denver Nuggets as they approached the February 9 trade deadline. Then came the big trades by Rob Pelinka that saved the Lakers season. They traded Westbrook, a first round pick, and 5 five unwanted players for 5 rotation players in Hachimura, Russell, Vanderbilt, Beasley, and Bamba.
The trade for 5 new players combined with the emergence of Austin Reaves as a secondary star and the return to the rotation of Lonnie Walker IV have transformed the Lakers from lottery team to a championship contender. The new-look Lakers now have a dramatically improved starting lineup and a deep and diverse 8-player rotation that’s growing and getting better every game. The Lakers have 5 players averaging double digits in playoffs.
The NBA media has been slow to react to the Lakers’ playoff dominance and it will likely take another road upset by the Lakers to start the West finals before the pundits and prognosticators become ‘woke’ on the Lakers. The Lakers will follow the same plan for winning road series that worked in Memphis and San Francisco: Steal one of the two first home games in Denver and then sweep them in L.A. to take a commanding 3–1 lead.
Unlike the first two rounds, the Nuggets will be the Lakers’ first playoff opponent with an elite center in Nikola Jokic who can challenge Anthony Davis and who has the 3-point gravity to draw him away from the rim.
The Lakers will likely return to their usual starting lineup with defensive ace Jarred Vanderbilt although there’s also a possibility the Lakers might opt to go bigger by starting Rui Hachimura instead of Vanderbilt.Strategically, Darvin Ham needs to have Anthony Davis’ mirror Nikola Jokic’s minutes. Lakers cannot allow Joker to go against a lineup without Anthony Davis. Lakers should play Bamba when AD goes to the bench.
The Lakers will hopefully be able to have Davis play Jokic 1-on-1 and turn him into a big scorer rather than a playmaker. They need to control him and make him one-dimensional. Davis is Lakers’ advantage over Jokic.While the rest of the basketball world may not yet realize how good this Lakers’ roster could be, LeBron James and Anthony Davis both totally understand they’re just 8 more wins from their 18th NBA championship.
-
When asked if the Lakers were happy to be playing with ‘house money,’ LeBron James and Anthony Davis dismissed the idea they’d be satisfied with doing that and reiterated their only goal was another championship.https://t.co/Fi7gs7Z1tV
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 13, 2023
-
The idea LeBron James and Anthony Davis should be happy to be where they are and satisfied that they have made it to the conference finals is contrary to everything we know about what winning means to them.https://t.co/Fi7gs7Z1tV
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 13, 2023
-
“That’s y’all expectation,” Davis said. “Our expectations inside are way higher than showing up to the Western Conference finals. Want to shock the world. … Me and Bron want another one, now it’s time to go get it.”https://t.co/Fi7gs7Z1tV
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 13, 2023
-
Excellent artisle. But one small thing: You say in section 4 that “Walker was Memphis Game 4 hero.” I think you mean Warriors instead of Memphis. Curry even wrote on the autograph he gave Walker at the conclusion of the series: “I’ll never forgive you for game 4.”
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
After missing an opportunity to close out the Warriors, Darvin Ham may now be forced to replace Jarred Vanderbilt as a starter due to his shooting struggles to give the Lakers a better chance to win Game 6 tomorrow night.
While Ham’s been amenable to midstream changes at the back end of his rotation, as evidenced by his promotion of Lonnie Walker IV, changing one of his starters while holding a 3–2 lead in the series would be a surprise. However, a 1-game lead on the defending champs is not what you could call a stranglehold on the series. The Lakers know they’re just a couple of losses to a hot shooting Golden State team away from elimination themselves.
There’s no question Vanderbilt has been struggling. He’s averaging just 3.6 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 0.8 assists in 16.6 minutes against the Warriors, down from 7.2 points, 3.8 rebound, and 1.2 assists in 19.8 mpg in Round 1. While he shot a respectable 54.8% from the field and 29.4% from three in Round 1, Vanderbilt’s shot and confidence have abandoned him this series. He’s shooting just 18.2% from the field and 18.2% from the 3-point line.
It was one thing when Vanderbilt could be hidden because Poole was a basket case but now that Jordan’s hitting open shots, Jarred’s become a liability the Warriors are taking advantage of to stifle the Lakers’ offense. It’s hard to win in the playoffs without a good start to the game and the second half and there no doubt that Vanderbilt’s team worst -10.0 net rating for this series has clearly cost the Lakers. Game 6 is the Lakers’ Game 7.
Darvin Ham can’t wait any longer to fix the Lakers’ starting lineup. Here are the three lineup changes he should consider to give the Lakers a better chance at defeating the Warriors and making the conference finals.
1. Dennis Schroder for Jarred Vanderbilt
By the time a series reaches Game 6, winning comes down to execution. If the Lakers want to match up better against the Warriors’ small-ball lineups, Darvin Ham should start Dennis Schroder instead of Jarred Vanderbilt.
Schroder’s 113.0 offensive rating and +9.5 net rating are the best of any Lakers player in this series and his 103.5 defensive rating vs. the Warriors second best on the team. Dennis has been a spark plug at both ends.
He’s averaging 11.8 points, 2.0 rebounds, and 2.6 assists per game in 26.8 minutes per game while shooting 47.6% from the field, 33.3% from deep, and 77.8% from the line. His series plus minus of 24.0 is best on the team.While it’s a small sample size, Anthony Davis, LeBron James, D’Angelo Russell, Austin Reaves, and Dennis Schroder is the Lakers’ second most used 5-player lineup with the team’s third best +4.0 net rating for series. They’ve only logged 18 minutes in the series but they’re one of only three Lakers 5-player lineups with positive net ratings after the loss in Game 5. Suddenly, the stats and analytics are showing a much closer series.
Starting Dennis Schroder for Jarred Vanderbilt is probably Darvin Ham’s best option. Rather than gambling by going big, it makes sense to lean into what’s been one of the Lakers’ best 5-player lineups to start Game 6.
2. Rui Hachimura for Jarred Vanderbilt
Should Lakers’ coach Darvin Ham decide to go big against the small ball Warriors in Game 6, then Rui Hachimura with his size and high percentage post-up shooting would be the logical starter to replace Jarred Vanderbilt.
Hachimura’s 104.3 offensive rating is second worst, his 107.1 defensive rating third best, and his -2.8 net rating 4th best on the team for the series. His elite shooting has been highly underutilized by the Lakers this series. Rui’s averaging just 7.5 points, 2.4 rebounds, and 0.6 assists per game in 16.9 minutes per game but shooting 60.9% from the field, 62.5% from deep, and 83.3% from the line. His series plus minus of -2.0 is 8th on the team.
There’s a risk challenging an opponent by going big when they go small or small when they go big. The Lakers would be gambling that Rui’s lethal shooting would be more valuable than his ability to guard smaller players. In many ways, Ham choosing to go big would be doubling-down on the Lakers’ ability to dominate the backboards and win points-in-the-paint and made-free-throws battles while helping reduce their 3-point differential.
Replacing Vanderbilt with Hachimura could be a bold and savvy move for a rookie head coach to make in a series where his team is ahead 3 -2 but in need of a huge win. The Warriors may have no answer for Lakers going big.
3. Lonnie Walker IV for Jarred Vanderbilt
Should Coach Ham want to surprise everybody he could roll the dice on the fearless player who won Game 4 and try to catch lightning-in-a-bottle again by replacing Jarred Vanderbilt with Lakers’ supersub Lonnie Walker IV.
Walker’s 109.6 offensive rating is 3rd best on the Lakers and his 102.1 defensive rating and his +9.5 net rating best of any Lakers player in this series. Per the numbers and the eye test, Lonnie has been playing great.
He’s averaging 10.0 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 1.8 assists per game in 22.9 minutes per game while shooting 55.2% from the field, 30.8% from deep, and 100.0% from the line. His series plus minus of 24.0 is also team best.As crazy as it may seem, there’s a good argument that Lonnie Walker IV might be exactly what the Lakers need to finish off the Warriors in Game 6. It’s not a fluke that he has the best defensive and net rating on the Lakers. Calling on Walker is not as big a gamble as going big with Hachimura but still riskier than going super small with Dennis Schroder, in whom Darvin has total confidence. Lonnie could be best answer if Dennis is not 100%.
While James, Davis, Russell, Reaves, and Walker have only played a total of 6 minutes together in this series, they posted a 120.0 offensive rating, a 92.9 defensive rating, and a team second best +27.1 net rating for the series.
-
While he shot a respectable 54.8% from the field and 29.4% from three in Round 1, Vanderbilt’s shot and confidence have abandoned him this series. He’s shooting just 18.2% from the field and 18.2% from the 3-point line.https://t.co/SY18B1pA49
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
There’s no question Vanderbilt has been struggling. He’s averaging just 3.6 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 0.8 assists in 16.6 minutes against the Warriors, down from 7.2 points, 3.8 rebound, and 1.2 assists in 19.8 mpg in Round 1.https://t.co/SY18B1pA49
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
After missing an opportunity to close out the Warriors, Darvin Ham may now be forced to replace Jarred Vanderbilt as a starter due to his shooting struggles to give the Lakers a better chance to win Game 6 tomorrow night.https://t.co/LV0sowyKcy
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
I agree that Vanderbilt should come off the bench in this series as much as I like him. I am intrigued by the options for Schroeder, Rui, and Walker. Especially Walker. The good thing is we have the option to go big or small. Kind of reminds me of the bubble roster. Ham needs to make these changes as we can’t afford to go to a game seven. So, yeah, this post is right on point.
-
1. Dennis Schroder for Jarred Vanderbilt
By the time a series reaches Game 6, winning comes down to execution. If Lakers want to match up better against Warriors’ small-ball lineups, Darvin Ham should start Dennis Schroder instead of Jarred Vanderbilt.https://t.co/SY18B1pA49 pic.twitter.com/zLI6gVUtBp
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
2. Rui Hachimura for Jarred Vanderbilt
Should Lakers’ coach Darvin Ham decide to go big against small ball Warriors in Game 6, then Rui Hachimura with his size and high percentage post-up shooting would be logical starter to replace Jarred Vanderbilt.https://t.co/SY18B1pA49 pic.twitter.com/tXdMp3PFbv
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
3. Lonnie Walker IV for Jarred Vanderbilt
Should Coach Ham want to surprise everybody he could roll dice on fearless player who won Game 4 & try to catch lightning-in-a-bottle again by replacing Jarred Vanderbilt with Lakers’ supersub Lonnie Walker IV.https://t.co/SY18B1pA49 pic.twitter.com/UnESSWDn2h
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 12, 2023
-
I’ll be fine with Rui or Dennis sub for Vando at the start. Not so much for Lonnie ’cause his D is not good, though not bad.
-
Thanks for reading and commenting, Dean.
I’d like to see either of the three get a start. It’s tough when one of the starters starts to pull the team down, especially when he’s your second best defender and defense is your main calling card.
Rui and Dennis are the more logical choices. I worry more about Rui on D because of the Dubs’ quickness than I do Lonnie. Earlier he was not good but I watched a lot of his possessions in this series and he has the best footwork and hustle of the three. He is the best athlete of them.
I just think the Lakers need to boost that the change could provide. I know it’s not fair but when Jarred clanks a three from the corner or pulls a Ben Simmons under the rim, it just deflates the team much like Russ used to do. I see that as a coach and it screams make a change.
-
I think a lot depends on if Wiggins can play. If we are going small I would probably choose Dennis. Although it would be interesting to see how the rotation would look, with all 3 of our PG options starting. One thing though, I’m not sure I understand your concern about Poole. He doesn’t start and Vando is rarely on the floor at the same time as Poole. And though Vano has only been getting 11 minutes they have him guarding Dray or Wiggins. They have pretty much taken him off of Steph.
-
Poole playing bad just kind of balanced Vando playing bad. Poole suddenly hitting open shots flips that balance now to Warriors. Lakers can’t afford to have 0 points and 18% shooting in the starting lineup.
Leads to Dubs playing 5 on 4 on offense and allows them to pack it in on LeBron and AD. Our problem in this series has not been our defense. It’s been our offense.
-
-
-
-
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
Sometimes a picture’s clearly worth a thousand words. That smug smile on LeBron James’ face says it all as he eyes what could grow and develop into the deepest and most diverse supporting cast in his 20-year NBA career.
Slowly but surely, the rest of the basketball world is suddenly realizing the extreme roster makeover Rob Pelinka engineered at the trade deadline just might have transformed the Los Angeles Lakers into a championship team. Davis taking the torch from James, the emergence of Reaves, Schroder, and Walker, and trades for Hachimura, Russell, Vanderbilt, Beasley, and Bamba have morphed the Lakers from lottery team to legitimate title contender.
Even scarier for the rest of the NBA are the reports that the Lakers are so confident they have the key components to another championship that their plan from the start is to re-sign everybody for whom they traded. Watching how quickly this team has come together and how well they are playing has given the Lakers ownership and front office a sense of trust and confidence to invest heavily in the franchise’s next dynasty.
What makes this surrounding cast maybe the best LeBron James has ever had starts with Anthony Davis elevating his game and taking the torch from LeBron James as the team’s alpha superstar and its future franchise face.
With Davis ascending and an elite backcourt that includes Russell, Reaves, Schroder, and Walker, and front court with Vanderbilt and Hachimura, the Lakers no longer have to rely on LeBron for scoring and playmaking.
The Lakers have 7 players who could score 20 points on any given night in Davis, James, Russell, Reaves, Schroder, Hachimura, and Walker plus 3 players James trusts to run the offense in Russell, Reaves, and Schroder. That has freed LeBron for a role he’s never had the luxury to fill before, which is as the team’s ‘wild card’ that Lakers’ head coach Darvin Ham can play when he needs more scoring, playmaking, rebounding, or defense.
One of the things paramount in the Lakers’ decision to undergo an extreme makeover at the trade deadline was to finally surround LeBron James with a roster that could free him from primary scoring and playmaking duties. LeBron’s always been a genius managing his team’s playoff runs and not having to primary scoring or playmaking duties has freed him to focus specifically on defense, where he’s become the Director of Defense.
The Lakers still believe LeBron James will be able to play at a high level for several more seasons and the major moves at the trade deadline were designed to smooth his transition into as the Lakers ‘wild card’ superstar.
The Lakers have been playing ‘must win’ games for almost 3 months as they struggled to overcome a 2–10 start and fought their way to the play-in tournament and then to a 3–1 lead in the second round over the Warriors.
While the Lakers’ makeover was inspired, it was their revitalized defense powered by Anthony Davis protecting the rim like Bill Russell and Jarred Vanderbilt shutting down shooters like Michael Cooper that dominated. The ascension of Davis and addition of Vanderbilt were game changers. The Lakers’ 105.3 defensive rating, 47.7 rebounds per game, 7.5 blocks per game, and 14.8 stocks per game are all ranked #1 among playoff teams.
Lakers coach Darvin Ham has narrowed his playoff rotation to 8 players, including an elite starting lineup of Russell, Reaves, James, Vanderbilt, and Davis backed by a new 3-player bench of Schroder, Hachimura, and Walker. The return of Lonnie Walker IV was the latest savvy move by the Lakers’ rookie head coach, who’s been pushing all the right buttons. Walker not only saved the Lakers in Game 4 but gives them another difference maker.
The Lakers’ starting lineup has posted a +10 net rating and the team is the #1 ranked defense in the playoffs. Every one of the 8 Lakers players in Ham’s rotation has posted a positive net rating so far in these playoffs.
Unlike the other NBA teams left in the playoffs, the Los Angeles Lakers are an unfinished product that has only been together as a team since the trade deadline and desperately needs time to get better every game and series.
Darvin Ham and his staff deserve high praise for the job they did during a difficult and tumultuous regular season and for seamlessly changing direction saving the season and fighting their way into these playoffs. Darvin Ham may have started the season as a rookie NBA head coach but he’s learned on the fly how to build winning lineups and rotations and to make important offensive and defensive adjustments in the playoffs.
After dispatching the tough Memphis Grizzlies in 6 games, the Lakers now have the champion Golden State Warriors in a 3–1 hole in their critical second round series Game 5 scheduled tomorrow night in San Francisco. While the Warriors have the shooting to come back from a 3–1 hole, the Lakers continue to grow, develop, and get better as the series progresses. The true test will be whether L.A. can eliminate Golden State in Game 5.
Closing out the current NBA champion Golden State Warriors in a 5-game Gentleman’s Sweep is not going to be easy and should be an excellent test of just how far the new-look Los Angeles Lakers have come this season.
-
I have the Lakers showing their growth from round 1 to round 2 by beating the NBA champions in their home arena to move into the Western Conference Finals against the Denver Nuggets.
With Celtics losing tonight, Lakers should finally open as the new favorites to win the NBA championship. Could there be a Lakers vs. Heat rematch in the Finals. Only way for LA to get home court.
Everything breaking in the Lakers favor as they get better every game and series. Going to take a real surprise for any of the teams who are left to derail this Lakers juggernaut.
-
Closing out the current NBA champion Golden State Warriors in a 5-game Gentleman’s Sweep is not going to be easy and should be an excellent test of just how far the new-look Los Angeles Lakers have come this season.https://t.co/W4G4tloTHG
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 10, 2023
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
He may be a rookie head coach but the Los Angeles Lakers’ Darvin Ham not only outcoached the Golden State Warriors’ Steve Kerr but also forced them into a ‘must win’ Game 4 on Monday night at Crypto.com Arena.
If the Lakers win Game 4 Monday night, it would be the equivalent of a stake in the heart of the Warriors’ dynasty as they know as well as any team in the NBA just how difficult it is to come back from down 1–3 in a series. Since coming back from 1–3 is near impossible, the Warriors will come out even more desperate and determined to win than they did in Game 2. Win Game 4 and they would be at home for 2 of the 3 games left in the series.
There was some concern during the regular season about the age and lack of experience of Ham’s staff, which did not include a proven former NBA head coach and included multiple development oriented assistant coaches. While Darvin was resistant to making changes in the regular season, he and his staff have not hesitated to make major adjustments in the playoffs. His moves to put Vando on Steph and have Davis high drop won Game 1.
While the Warriors prevailed as expected in Game 2 as they iced the Lakers pick-and-roll game and shot lights out from deep, Darvin Ham and his staff made five genius adjustments that led to the Lakers 127–97 Game 3 victory.
1. Davis Guarding Jamychal Green
The move by Darvin Ham to have Anthony Davis guard JaMychal Green rather than Draymond Green was a key factor in freeing up AD to dominate the Warriors’ offense from the rim to the 3-point line as L.A. won Game 3.
Guarding JaMychal instead of Draymond allowed Anthony to extend his defensive range from the rim to the 3-point line without having to deal with guarding Draymond and stopping his elite playmaking and rebounding. Davis is unique among NBA centers in that he has the size, length, and athleticism to challenge shooters at the 3-point line and still recover quick enough to challenge shooter at the rim and block or alter their shots.
Taking Anthony Davis off of Draymond Green and putting him on JaMychal Green was a genius move by Darvin Ham that unleashed AD to defend the entire Warriors team and led to the Lakers taking a commanding 3–1 lead.
2. Vanderbilt Guarding Draymond Green
The other change in defensive assignments that ignited the Lakers’ defense was Darvin Ham’s decision to take Vanderbilt off Curry and instead put him on Draymond Green in an effort to stifle the Curry/Green pick-and-roll.
Vanderbilt not only has the defensive chops to guard Draymond but he can then simply switch whenever Green tries to set a pick for Steph Curry. By the end of the game, the Dubs had stopped running that play entirely. Having Vando guard Draymond killed the Curry/Green pick-and-roll. Steph finished Game 3 with 23 points on 9–21 shooting, 4 rebounds, and just 3 assists in 32 minutes. Draymond had just 2 point, 2 boards, and 4 assists.
Darvin Ham’s adjustment to have Jarred Vanderbilt guard Draymond Green not only resulted in shutting down Green offensively but also eliminating the Curry/Green pick-and-roll from the Warriors’ offensive repertoire.
3. Davis Returning to High-Drop
The Warriors made 21 threes and shot 40% from deep in Game 1, forcing the Lakers to abandon their high-drop pick-and-roll coverage for low drop traps, which was a disaster as Golden State made 21 threes and shot 50%.
After continuing to play low drop coverage in the first quarter and falling behind by 7 points, the Lakers suddenly returned to the high drop coverage where AD would extend enough to challenge 3-point shooters but not trap. Unlike in Game 1 where the Warriors demolished the Lakers’ high drop, this time Davis and the Lakers figured it out and were able not only to stifle the Warriors pick-and-roll attacks but also their lethal 3-point shooting.
Anthony Davis is the perfect defensive center to play high drop coverage against opposing pick-and-rolls. Golden State may have to go back to playing big because th Warriors’ small ball is not going to beat the Lakers.
4. Walker Replacing Brown, Jr.
Darvin Ham’s move to give Lonnie Walker IV an opportunity to replace Troy Brown, Jr. in the rotation for Game 3 paid off big as as Lonnie scored 12 points on 2–4 from deep and 4 rebounds and 2 steals in 24 minutes.
Walker had been starting early in the year before losing his role to injuries and then finding a completely remade roster when he was ready to return. He stayed ready, played well in Game 2, and answered when the bell rang. Walker gave the Lakers a 3-point scoring to keep up with the Dubs. Unlike Games 1 and 2 when they were outscored from deep, the Lakers hit 15 of 31 from deep for 48.4% against the Warriors’ 13 for 44 for 29.5% in Game 3.
Walker’s addition to the rotation was a genius move by Ham and a tribute to Lonnie’s hard work and staying ready for opportunity. He adds needed 3-point gravity to the Lakers’ backcourt for the rest of the playoffs.
5. Getting James Ball At Elbow
The last genius move by Darvin Ham in Game 3 was moving LeBron James to the post to close the game and make sure the Lakers’ offense didn’t stall like Game 2. Moving James to the elbow freed his scoring and playmaking.
Getting the ball to James at the elbow rather than outside the 3-point line changes the nature of the Lakers offensive game. At the elbow, LeBron is just one quick dribble or pass from an easy dunk or wide-open three. Strategically, it was as if Darvin Ham wanted Steve Kerr to know before Game 4 that if the Warriors continue to play small, they can expect the Lakers to play LeBron more and more at the elbow and in the low post.
Like all of the Game 3 adjustments the Lakers made, getting LeBron the ball below the free throw line could be the weapon that forces the Warriors to go back to two bigs for Monday night’s big showdown at Crypto.com.
-
Agree 100%. Darvin has been making some great adjustments in both series and he hasn’t over-adjusted once, which is another common error. The Grizz never figured out Vando on Ja, not really. We stuck with it. The Warriors figured out Curry on Steph after one game. We changed it up. Sounds simple but it’s anything but.
Having the right players has helped him a lot. I love how he went to the mat for Russell Westbrook, it’s what a coach needs and should do. Once it was obvious it wasn’t working or gonna work, off the bench or starting, a trade was (finally) made. Still had praise for the dude.
Solid job so far, curious to see what wrinkles Steve comes up with, though.
-
Lakers’ Darwin Ham May Be A Rookie But These 5 Adjustments Were Genius
1. Davis Guarding Jamychal Green
2. Vanderbilt Guarding Draymond Green
3. Davis Returning to High-Drop
4. Walker Replacing Brown, Jr.
5. Getting James Ball At Elbowhttps://t.co/SPOpWfAiK0— LakerTom (@LakerTom) May 8, 2023
-
Coach Ham has done great job in the playoffs. This will be the 8th time we have played the Warriors this year. I doubt if either coach has an adjustment left that would surprise the other. Moving forward it will about execution and playing with force. Considering the Warriors have played together for years and we are still learning each other, the Warriors may have a leg up on execution. But they can’t play with the same force that we can. I think that is where we will win the game.
-
-
It will be interesting seeing what adjustments the Warriors make and whether Ham changes anything from Game 3. My guess is Ham will stand pat with same defensive assignments and wait to see what Kerr does, which is the big question.
I think Michael is correct that the two teams have seen what each other have and who wins will come down to execution. The Warriors know this is a ‘must win’ game for them and the Lakers know the last thing they want is to lose home court and be stuck in a 2-2 series with 2 of the 3 remaining games in SF. Both teams should come out equally desperate and determined.
Revert back to Looney or go all-in on small ball with Poole. Those seem to be the two adjustments analysts are predicting Kerr might turn to. For the Lakers, I think we will see the Lakers move LeBron into the high and low post and look to pound the Warriors like they did in Game 3. It will be Bully Ball vs. Small Ball.
- Load More Posts
TOM WONG
Founder and Publisher
“Welcome to the new Lakerholics website. We wanted to create a place that would become the favorite online home for informed and passionate Lakers fans.
Please click ‘CONTACT US’ and let us know how we did, ‘JOIN US’ to become a member, or ‘SUBSCRIBE’ to receive our newsletter.
We promise to open your eyes, ears, and mind to brand-new purple and gold world.”
-LakerTom
FEATURED POST

5 Things: Luka
Luka Dončić had his best game as a Laker at just the right moment. In Denver against a healthy, streaking (had won 9 in a row) Denver Nuggets Luka had, for him, a really solid game. This opened up the game on offense for the rest of the team and the Lakers did something that […]
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
LAKERHOLICS LINKS
Library of Links to Everything Lakers
LAKERHOLICS MEMBERS
A Los Angeles Lakers Community
ABOUT LAKERHOLICS
Dedicated to Kobe and Gigi Bryant
Recent Comments








WHO’S ONLINE
[who-is-online-now]
It’s hard to compare 20 years of LeBron James’ supporting casts since the King’s career has spanned multiple generations of stars.
For sure, this supporting cast is one of the deepest, youngest, and most diverse rosters LeBron has ever had.
Should they win #18, I think that would make James the GOAT and this supporting cast the best LeBron has ever had in his 20 years in the NBA.