Redick's vision for LeBron James, Anthony Davis and other Lakers can solve LA's biggest problems https://t.co/NJoEpzUEl7
— LakerTom (@LakerTom) September 25, 2024
The Lakers hope that swapping coaches is enough to change their fortunes from last season, where they finished with the eighth-best record in the West and lost in the first round.
JJ Redick is taking over mostly the same roster as his predecessor, Darvin Ham, but plans to change a few things.
Redick gave some insights into how the Lakers can play better in an offseason appearance on ESPN’s “The Lowe Post,” sharing how he wants to use LeBron James and shift points of emphasis heading into the 2024-25 season.
Here’s what we learned about Redick’s plan, and how it may be a difference-maker for the team.
What JJ Redick’s vision means for the Lakers
JJ Redick’s starting lineup makes more sense than Darvin Ham’s
The Lakers tried 19 different starting lineups last season, wasting time at the beginning of the year by starting Taurean Prince before finally settling back into the D’Angelo Russell, Austin Reaves, Rui Hachimua, LeBron James and Anthony Davis group that led them to the Western Conference Finals in 2023.
That lineup went 22-10 after Hachimura was inserted into the starting lineup on Feb. 3. That is equivalent to a 56-win pace, just one behind the No. 1-seeded Thunder and nine more than the 47 that Los Angeles actually finished with.
Redick cited that closing record to Zach Lowe, noting that the Lakers are going to play that starting lineup right off the bat in Game 1. That change alone should immediately have Los Angeles improving its seeding from last year.
JJ Redick wants to use LeBron James more as a screener
James is deadly with the ball in his hands, but Redick doesn’t necessarily want him starting with it. Instead, Redick hopes to utilize James away from the ball through screening actions.
“It’s funny because I think when people hear that in regards to LeBron playing off the ball, it doesn’t mean he’s not gonna have the ball,” Redick explained to Lowe. “LeBron is one of the smartest players, and I think using him as a screener and finding ways to get him the ball in specific spots on the floor where he can be a facilitator and scorer, that’s what I mean by being off the ball.”
One of those specific spots that James will be utilized is at the elbow. James has said before that when he catches the ball at the elbow, “it’s not for me to score — I see everything.”
James has been a terrific passer from that elbow area in previous years. It gives him the angles to throw a pass anywhere on the floor.
Getting James the ball at the elbows could also lead to more split cuts, which Redick has said is one of his favorite actions. That could lead to the Lakers playing a more motion-heavy Warriors style of offense, with cutters diving to the basket and shooters popping open for more 3s while James and Davis facilitate from the high post.
JJ Redick is going to create more analytically sound advantages
The Lakers had an average offense last season. They ranked No. 15 in offensive rating, 29th in offensive rebounding and 28th in 3-point attempts. Expect all of those to climb under Redick.
“There will be a decent amount of movement,” Redick told Lowe. “The shot profile will hopefully improve. We’ve talked about ways to get more paint touches. We’ve talked about ways to shoot more 3s. We’ve talked about some of the leeway you have to give certain players with midrange shots, whether that’s in the post or isolation.”
Redick does have an additional 3-point threat in rookie Dalton Knecht, who he called “in the one percent of shooters” and would “have a chance to earn a spot in the rotation.”
Aside from playing Knecht, it sounds like Redick plans to replace many of those midrange looks with 3s. Playing Hachimura more, who hit 42.2 percent of his 3s last season, should help significantly.
The Lakers will also focus more on offensive rebounding. “We’re really gonna emphasize offensive rebounding and corner crashes,” Redick noted.
The corner crash is a philosophy wherein shooters from the corners dive to the basket to pursue offensive rebounds. Hachimura should be the main beneficiary of that strategy change — he was a decent offensive rebounder with the Wizards and has good athleticism to grab contested boards. He saw his numbers fall under Ham, but he should see them tick back up with more freedom to corner crash.
Redick noted that these strategies would look a lot different from last year’s team.
“I’m not comparing that to a previous coach or system, but those are some of the things that will look like a team that I coach,” he told Lowe.
Those changes make a lot of sense. The Lakers have talent, and getting them to play a more modern style of basketball should usher in more wins this season.
LakerTom says
JJ: Coaching Lakers is a ‘once in a lifetime opportunity.’
https://x.com/Klutch_23/status/1838752926875128213
Jamie Sweet says
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Everything sounds great now. I don’t much care about the stuff to fill the news cycle. I’ll be waiting for how we look at the end of camp. Even the first few preseason games, of which I feel there are too few, won’t matter as we’ll see more of the G League guys. As always, especially with LeBron, I don’t know that we’ll have an honest grasp of this team until 15-20 games into the regular season.