Rather than trading D’Angelo Russell, the Lakers would be smart to instead keep, re-sign, and slot him to be the team’s starting shooting guard next to Dejounte Murray to solve the Lakers negative 3-point shooting differential.
D’Angelo Russell’s transformation into a legitimate third star and volume 3-point shooter in the 7 games since he won back his starting point guard role should make the Lakers seriously reconsider the idea of trading him.
Frankly, it’s ludicrous to think a Lakers team desperately in need of a lethal volume 3-point shooter to offset their 10 points per game negative 3-point shooting differential would consider trading away exactly what they covet.
Russell has not only shown the Lakers he can generate the higher number of 3-point shot attempts needed to become a legitimate volume 3-point shooter but also that he can make those shots at a very high percentage.
For 7 games, D’Angelo averaged a team best 4.9 3PM out of a team best 9.1 3PA, helping the Lakers average 12.7 3PM (18th) during the 7 games, a big increase over their average of just 11.2 3PM (28th) for the full season.
The concern about a Murray and Russell backcourt would be the same that apparently doomed the Young and Murray backcourt, not enough touches, shots, or opportunities for two very ball dominant point guards to thrive.
The difference in my opinion is that Murray like Young needs the ball in his hands whereas Russell’s elite off-ball volume catch-and-shoot shot-making ability from deep is exactly what the Lakers have desperately needed.
Let’s take a look at why keeping D’Angelo Russell as the team’s starting shooting guard and pairing him in the backcourt with Dejounte Murray could be a pipe dream or nightmare depending on your point of view.
How D’Angelo Russell Reinvented Himself
After losing his starting point guard job and going to the bench, Russell reconsidered his role and decided the best way to complement James and Davis was to aggressively play off of them rather than deferring to them.
The result was Russell upping his normal 13.1 FGA per game to 18.9 FGA per game during last 7 games, second to LeBron James 19.2 FGA per game. D’Angelo essentially showed Lakers what they could get from a third star.
Since returning to the starting lineup 7 games ago, D’Angelo Russell has averaged 27.4 points, 2.3 rebounds, 6.6 assists, 0.7 steals, 1.0 blocks while shooting 53.8% from the field, 53.1% from deep, and 88.9% from the line.
Most importantly, Russell showed the Lakers during this 7-game stretch he could be the lethal high-volume 3-point shooter they’re desperately looking for to reduce their normal 10 points per game negative 3-point differential.
For 7 games, D’Angelo averaged a team best 4.9 3PM out of a team best 9.1 3PA, helping the Lakers average 12.7 3PM (18th) during the 7 games, a big increase over their average of just 11.2 3PM (28th) for the full season.
While it’s unreasonable to expect Russell to be able sustain this production, the Lakers cannot ignore how D’Angelo has elevated his game and how trading him could end up being a bigger mistake than letting Caruso walk. D’Angelo has a great rapport with LeBron, Anthony, Austin, and the rest of the Lakers roster and has handled his demotion and return to the bench with admirable class and professionalism. Trading him would be foolish.
D’Angelo Russell is the starting shooting guard and desperately needed high-volume 3-point specialist the Lakers need to keep and pair with new point guard Dejounte Murray in a modern Lakers’ backcourt of the future.
Doubling Down On Chemistry and Continuity
The way teams build championship chemistry and continuity is by keeping their best players and selectively adding new candidates to that core until the roster has the talent, experience, character, and balance to win it all.
The smartest moves the Lakers can make is to keep the core from last year’s conference finals team and add one legitimate All-Star quality player and two elite role players to upgrade the roster to championship caliber.
The star the Lakers need to add is Dejounte Murray, who will become the team’s point guard of the future. Additionally, the Lakers need to add a second championship caliber big and another legitimate 3&D wing.
While the Lakers’ strategy was to trade Russell, other filler, and draft capital for Murray and a volume 3-point shooter like Bogdanovic, Russell taking and making more threes than Bogdan has changed everything.
Trading away a player who just showed you he can almost single-handedly reduce the team’s 10 points per game negative 3-point shooting differential in a search for some unproven 3-point shooting solution would be stupid.
While the Hawks want Reaves, the Lakers should hold firm. While some would like to see Austin start next to Dejounte, Reaves is better suited to come off bench as the Lakers’ Sixth Man. Russell should start at two guard.
The issues with Russell’s and Reaves’ values as players is partly due to the Lakers not slotting them in the correct roles with the complementary lineups. Both should be kept and optimized rather than lost like Caruso.
Ideally, the Lakers need to sit down with D’Angelo Russell and sell him on being the team’s starting shooting guard and 3-point specialist. Once they resolve that, they can proceed on trading for Murray and other tweaks.