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LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreIn a league where traditional centers have been devalued and the Lakers’ tag team of JaVale McGee and Dwight Howard has been the exception, the time may have finally come for Frank Vogel to embrace the modern center.
In today’s NBA, traditional centers whose only job is to protect the rim and dunk the ball have become dinosaurs who can be played off the court by modern centers who’re more mobile and athletic and can shoot the three. Frank Vogel’s been on a mission to prove the Lakers can still win with a traditional center anchoring his defense and protecting the rim and he’s been able to pull it off for the most part up until he got to the playoffs.
Vogel’s conviction defense starts with protecting the rim and Anthony Davis’ preference to play the four to avoid the physical banging of playing the five have definitely been major factors in the Lakers playing traditional centers. But these playoffs have taught the Lakers playing a quicker and faster power forward who can defend and shoot the three like Markieff Morris alongside Davis at center can work and make them better offensively and defensively.
The playoffs have exposed traditional centers as liabilities on both ends of the court. Offensively, their presence in the paint and lack of gravity on the perimeter make it easy for defenses to pack the paint and protect the rim. Defensively, their inability to guard the perimeter makes them vulnerable against teams with centers who can stretch the floor and their lack of speed and mobility makes them easy prey for smaller players hunting switches.
While the Lakers played JaVale McGee or Dwight Howard at center 74% of the time during the regular season, those numbers dropped dramatically to 52% for the first three rounds of the playoffs and to only 29% for the Finals. Since McGee did not play and Howard posted a team worst defensive rating of 135.7 in last night’s game, it’s highly likely the Lakers will opt not to play either of their traditional centers in tomorrow night’s Finals Game 6.
In many ways, the evolution of the center position for Frank Vogel and the Lakers this season has been a microcosm of the center revolution that has taken over the modern NBA in the wake of the ascension of the 3-point shot. The Lakers are fortunate that they have the perfect prototype of the modern NBA center in Anthony Davis. What they need to figure out going forward is who would be the ideal front court partner to optimize and protect Davis.
Re-signing Morris is going to be important and there are matchups like Jokic where a physical defender like Dwight Howard could be critical, although he may be offered more as a free agent than the Lakers could be willing to pay. The Lakers may prefer to re-sign DeMarcus Cousins, who would give the Lakers a true stretch five and whom Anthony Davis loved playing with when both were on the Pelicans, than bringing back Dwight Howard.
The Lakers might also prioritize pursuing a young power forward/center like Christian Wood or Myles Turner, who would better complement Anthony Davis and catapult the Lakers’ offense and defense into the modern NBA. Wood or Turner would not only give the Lakers a starting lineup with five players who can shoot the three ball and defend the perimeter but also the two bigs Vogel’s alway preferred to anchor the defense and protect the rim.
Despite the need for a playmaker, the Lakers’ priority this offseason should be to replace their traditional centers with modern centers who would complement Anthony Davis and revolutionize their offense and defense.
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So I really liked this line of thinking because it stresses exactly what should be said and how the NBA woulkd be smart to adapt to. That there is a time and place for traditional centers. They can do yoeman’s work in the regular season, they get spot duty based on match ups in the playoffs and Finals.
But if they have other skills. Aye, there’s the rub. If they can pass, defend, and have range you’ve got a unique NBA weapon. Having AD save that for the post season made it fresh and deasly. That’s the goal of the regular season. Meant so very little this season, unfortunately.
Off season should be fun.
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Excellent comment, Jamie. While the evolution of the center was driven by the rise of the 3-point shot, I think there is a second evolution that is going to balance the first evolution, which is the center who can defend against the 3-point shot. The epitome of that second evolution is Anthony Davis.
Up to now, many traditional centers have been able to adjust and become ‘modern’ centers by adding the 3-point shot. Examples include Boogie, Marc Gasol, Brook Lopez, Serge Ibaka, etc. They all have been able to save their careers by adapting.
But the next evolution will be more difficult and is the kind of change that can force the Cousins, Gasols, and Lopezes to the bench because they can’t physically defend on the perimeter the way Davis can. The result is going to be more and more power forward playing center, which makes sense since they have a better chance at defending on the perimeter.
Of course, that is going to lead to an evolution in what teams are looking for in power forwards and the league is going to continue to devalue traditional bigs whether centers or power forwards. Only difference is shooting won’t be enough to save many from becoming extinct.
What could though might be the next Shaq or totally unstoppable big man. But you know wherever he is right now, he’s working on his 3-point shot and ability to defend on the perimeter. Just saw a video of a young French player working out against Rudy Gobert who was 7′ 3″ with an 8′ length torching Rudy. AD is now the prototype and we’re going to see a wave of them coming down the pike.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreThe long and winding road leading to the NBA championship has never been longer or more winding than it was this in this crazy unprecedented year, which will make it that much sweeter when the Lakers win it all.
Never has winning the championship been more of a challenge than this year with the China controversy, the tragic death of Kobe Bryant, the season suspension for coronavirus, and seeding games and playoffs in the bubble. Never has the league been forced to play games in empty arenas without fans, run a special play-in tournament for the 8th playoff slot, or schedule a full slate of playoff games at a neutral site with no home court advantage.
This will be a championship that will catapult LeBron James back into the GOAT conversation, Anthony Davis into the lead as the Best Player on the Planet, and the Lakers past the Celtics as the greatest franchise in the NBA. It’ll also be the championship that celebrates the greatness of Kobe Bryant, launches the beginning of the LeBron James and Anthony Davis era, and sets the stage for the Los Angeles Lakers to build their next dynasty.
It will be the title that confirms LeBron James was the ‘real’ Most Valuable Player, Anthony Davis the ‘real’ Defensive Player of the Year, Frank Vogel the ‘real’ Coach of the Year, and Rob Pelinka the ‘real’ Executive of the Year. It will be redemption for Jeanie Buss as the Lakers’ owner and for Rajon Rondo, Kyle Kuzma, Dwight Howard, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Alex Caruso, Markieff Morris, Danny Green, and Avery Bradley as players.
It will be the championship we will never ever forget, that restores the Lakers back to the pinnacle of the NBA and positions them once again to be the premier franchise for whom every player in the league wants to play. It’ll open doors for the Lakers to become an even better team next year and the opportunity to build a sustainable championship dynasty with the NBA’s leading players competing to be signed by or traded to Los Angeles.
Winning this championship will be the greatest achievement in LeBron James’ career and the most important championship in the Lakers’ storied history. It’s the championship that will change everything for the Lakers.
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Ten years in the making, this will be the sweetest of all of the Lakers’ 17 championships in my opinion for many reasons, not the least of which is to honor and celebrate Kobe ‘Bean’ Bryant.
It’s a shame we can’t have our usual celebration and parade but maybe Lakers fans can have an automobile parade through the streets of Los Angeles with honking horns and Mamba signs and everybody staying safe and enjoying again the high of winning and being the best in the world. I’m thinking of making some Lakers and Kobe signs and cruising the freeways of NorCal and honking back at every NBA and Lakers fan to blinks their lights or honks to acknowledge my vehicular statement.
Not sure what Gerald has planned for the Championship podcast. I do know Sean has written a fabulous personal ode to this wild and crazy Lakers season that has inspired Jamie, Gerald, and Rafael to create similar articles that we will be publishing on Lakerholics after the initial celebration and wave of joy passes so look forward to that. No doubt this has been a season we will never forget. Lakers forever. Purple and gold love to everybody. Go, Lakers. Go, Lakerholics. Let’s win #17 for Bean.
1, 2, 3, Mamba!
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreThe Lakers’ march to the NBA championship has seen an evolution in Frank Vogel’s coaching philosophy as he’s embraced small ball lineups not only to create better spacing on offense but also speed and quickness on defense.
For a veteran coach who started and played two bigs the entire regular season, the transformation has been remarkable and one of the big reasons why the Lakers are on the verge of winning their 17th NBA championship. The metamorphosis has turned the Lakers into a juggernaut that’s rolled through the playoffs without losing more than a single game in any series and dramatically changed the team’s offseason roster building priorities.
Vogel’s embrace of small ball in these playoffs has shown the Lakers why a traditional defensive oriented shot-blocking center is not the only way to protect the rim and keep superstar Anthony Davis from getting beaten up. The speed, quickness, mobility, and athleticism of small ball lineups allows the Lakers to fight through pick-and-rolls, rotate faster after double teams, and more aggressively challenge shots on the perimeter and at the rim.
The time the Lakers played small ball can easily be measured by the time traditional centers McGee or Howard were not on the floor. During the regular season, the Lakers played small ball for just 12.5 minutes per game. That number has jumped dramatically in the playoffs where the Lakers played small ball for 21.7 minutes per game. In the Finals, the Lakers have almost abandoned going big, played small ball for 34.4 minutes per game.
To put those numbers in perspective, the more important the games have became, the more small ball the Lakers have played, averaging 26% of the time in the regular season, 45% in the playoffs, and finally 72% in the Finals. While matchups and McGee’s poor play certainly influenced Vogel’s decision on how much small ball to play, there’s also no question the elite play of the Lakers’ small ball lineups has forced coach Vogel to rethink the issue.
Ironically, the 34.4 minutes per game and 72% of the time the Lakers have played small ball in the NBA Finals is even greater than the 32.7 minutes and 68% of the time they played small against the diminutive Houston Rockets. Playing small ball 72% of the time against a Heat team with an All-Star and All-Defensive center Bam Adebayo, who was guarded by LeBron James and Markieff Morris as Anthony Davis defended Jimmy Butler, is remarkable.
The transformation from two traditional bigs to small ball lineups with Anthony Davis at the five is likely to continue this offseason. Re-signing Markieff Morris may be more important than re-signing Dwight Howard. McGee’s tenure with the Lakers may be over. We may see renewed interest by the Lakers in modern centers like DeMarcus Cousins, Serge Ibaka and Myles Turner and who can both stretch the floor and protect the rim
As the Lakers take the court in their Black Mamba jerseys this Friday night looking to close out the Miami Heat and the NBA Finals in five games, Frank Vogel may go all-in on small ball by starting Morris instead of Howard.
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One thing that’s important about Frank Vogel’s embrace of small ball is the change is still all about defense. Having five mobile and athletic players who can defend multiple positions and who can still protect the rim is still more important to Frank than the benefits of small ball offensively.
That’s why McGee has become irrelevant to the Lakers’ future plans. It could also be a major factor in whether the Lakers bring back Demarcus Cousins. While Boogie can probably do a good job protecting the rim and stretching defense with his 3-point shooting, can he defend five-out sets on the perimeter? I do think we will bring him back but it’s not a sure thing and could depend on re-signing Morris and what the Laker do in free agency.
Players who might be better fits would include Serge Ibaka, Myles Turner, or even Christian Wood. Going to be fun seeing what Pelinka does during the offseason. Lakers could be even more formidable next season but first things first. Need to close out the Finals and send the Heat fishing.
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I hope Dwight stays. He’s not a great perimeter defender although he’s not bad but still fouls too much. But I love his passion and don’t want to see him on the Warriors or Celtics. So I would be happy with Boogie and Dwight at the five.
Ideally though, I would love to see us trade for a young athltetic center to pair with AD like Myles Turner or Christian Wood who be great fits in a small ball juggernaut defense. Both of those guys can also shoot the three at a high percentage.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreNo disrespect to the Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo or the Toronto Raptors’ Nick Nurse for great regular season performances but the ‘Real’ MVP, DPOY, and COY are always determined in the NBA playoffs.
While LeBron James or Anthony Davis will win Finals MVP, the dubious logic that enables biased media prematurely crown the best defensive player and best coach before the games that really matter happen should be changed. Were the votes for the NBA’s best defender and coach taken after their championship caliber performances in the playoffs, there’s no question Anthony Davis would have easily won as DPOY and Frank Vogel as COY.
There’s something inherently dishonest and unfair about awarding defensive player of the year and coach of the year awards that didn’t include the most important part of the year, which is the second season or playoffs. What’s even more frustrating is the voting for the awards is completely the prerogative of the media, many of whom are fundamentally biased, inherently unqualified, and often don’t even watch games.
Most objective experts who closely watched and followed the regular NBA season didn’t need to watch the Lakers’ dominant playoff performances to know LeBron James was the ‘real’ MVP and Anthony Davis the ‘real’ DPOY. They could have just listened to the players and coaches themselves, who clearly understood, while Giannis Antetokounmpo may have had a great season, LeBron James and Anthony Davis deserved to win the awards.
While the playoffs showed James and Davis deserved the MVP and DPOY awards, Vogel did need four playoff rounds of brilliant defensive coaching moves shutting down superstars to prove he deserved the COY award. There’s no question Nick Nurse is an elite NBA head coach but, like Mike Budenholzer last year, his winning ignored the savvy decision making and adjustments needed to win in the intense pressure of the playoffs.
The NBA playoffs are where regular season pretenders are separated from the legitimate contenders, where it became crystal clear LeBron James was the ‘real’ MVP, Anthony Davis the ‘real’ DPOY, and Frank Vogel the ‘real’ COY. The league either needs to postpone voting on DPOY and COY until after the playoffs or create a seperate awards for best defender and coach in the playoffs. They also need to include players and coaches in the voting.
While the bubble exposed Giannis Antetokounmpo and Kawhi Leonard as MVP and DPOY candidates and Mike Budenholzer and Nick Nurse as COY candidates, LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Frank Vogel shone bright. When the chips were down and legacies on the line, it was LeBron rallying the Lakers, Anthony Davis shutting down Miami’s Jimmy Butler, and the Lakers’ Frank Vogel out coaching the Heat’s strategic genius Erik Spoelstra.
The sad and unfortunate reality in today’s NBA is LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and Frank Vogel have a major disadvantage in the NBA awards competition because they’re on the same team and that team is the Lakers. The NBA’s not going to change the requirements for MVP, DPOY, or COY, allow players and coaches to vote, or reward the best defender or coach in the playoffs but that’s not going to stop me from expressing my opinion.
The Lakerholics.Com Most Valuable Player is LeBron James, Defensive Player of the Year is Anthony Davis, and Coach of the Year is Frank Vogel. The trophy for their accomplishments will be the 2020 NBA Championship.
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One theme that’s come out of these NBA playoffs for me has been confirmation of my opinions that LeBron James deserved the MVP award, Anthony Davis deserved the DPOY award, and Frank Vogel deserved the COY award. Of course, none of them won those awards in my opinion because there are a lot of LeBron haters out there, LeBron and AD split votes, Frank had LeBron and AD on his team, and all three were on the Lakers.
Am I biased? Probably but anybody who thinks the media who vote for these award are objective is kidding themselves. I also realize omitting the playoffs is not something the NBA is going to do. Nor is adding players and coaches to the vote going to happen. Of course, I think LeBron, AD, and Vogel will all be satisfied with the Larry O’Brien trophy and how it’s going to change the legacies of LeBron James, Anthony Davis, and the Los Angeles Lakers.
That’s why I decided to create Lakerholics.Com Awards for MVP, DPOY, and COY. I’m also going to put up some polls on those three awards as well as several other awards like 6MOY, MIP, and EOY with the bubble games and playoffs included in the results because frankly the regular season awards are overrated and inflate the value of the resumes of many supposed superstars in this league who earned their awards in games that didn’t count.
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I will say that the awards were based off of pre-Bubble play. Not that it changes my opinion (I still think Davis should have won DPOY but I do think Giannis and LeBron are closer than some think and it’s likely that it came down to the fact that LeBron has AD and GA doesn’t have a worthy cohort.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreWith a cocky Jimmy Butler telling LeBron James and the Lakers “You’re in trouble” and a taunting Tyler Herro sneering after a late three to clinch the win, the Miami Heat have suddenly brought the 2020 Finals back to life.
While you couldn’t blame the Heat for a little strutting and swaggering after losing the first two games in the Finals to the favored Lakers and then being written off by everybody, it might have been smarter not to poke the bear. You could see the storyline already developing as an angry LeBron James and Lakers team walked off the court with 10 seconds still left on the clock, setting the stage to approach Tuesday night’s Game 5 as a revenge game.
Forget LeBron allegedly telling Jimmy the Heat were in trouble earlier in the game or the Lakers completely disrespecting Miami by coming out flat, James has a long history of grasping anything possible for extra motivation. LeBron, AD, and the Lakers’ starters have no one to blame for losing Game 3 than themselves. They were passive, complacent, and ineffective. The only thing that kept them in the game was the outstanding play of their bench.
In addition to being outplayed, the Lakers were also outcoached. After a failed attempt to contain James and Davis by playing zone in Game 2, Erik Spoelstra went back to man defense in Game 3 but with key adjustments. Defensively, the goal was the same as playing zone in Game 2: prevent LeBron James from hunting and forcing switches on Duncan Robinson and Tyler Herro by doubling, hedging, stunting, and fighting through screens.
Offensively, the Heat wanted to turn the tables on the Lakers and unleash Butler to relentlessly hunt and force switches to take advantage of Green, Kuzma, and Caldwell-Pope just as James had done to Robinson and Herro. While Frank Vogel has always been a strong opponent of switching, it was LeBron James’ unwillingness to fight through screens and willingness to allow switches that ended up making Spoelstra’s adjustments successful.
Overall, Jimmy Butler enjoyed a career best playoff game, posting a triple double with 40 points, 11 rebounds, and 13 assists in 45 minutes without taking a single 3-point shot, which reveals how teams need to defend him. The Lakers need to go under those screens and force Jimmy, who is average at best from deep on less than two attempts per game, to make his threes rather than letting him to go 14–20 from the field and 10–12 from the line.
On offense, the Lakers simply need LeBron James and Anthony Davis to play like superstars. James cannot turn the ball over 8 times and Davis cannot get into foul trouble and put up just 15 points and 5 rebounds with zero blocks. The Lakers’ other starters also need to show up. 5, 4, and 2 points and -26, -15, and -15 +/- from Caldwell-Pope, Green, and Howard in a Finals close out game won’t cut it. Frank Vogel clearly needs to make some adjustments.
While it may sound to some like a broken record, the time may be here for Vogel to sit Dwight Howard, move Anthony Davis to the five, and start Markieff Morris at the four to turbo charge the Lakers’ offense and defense. Whether Adebayo plays or not, that’s an offensive lineup with the 3-point shooting to offset the Heat doubling LeBron and AD and a defensive lineup to match up and defend the five-out sets that have been killing the Lakers.
In the end, the Lakers just need to come ready to play. Down 1–2, this is essentially another elimination game for the Miami Heat. Lose and they’re in a 1–3 hole from which only one team in NBA history has ever come back. While great coaching trumped talent in Game 3, LeBron, AD, and the Lakers will be looking to avenge their loss and will come out gunning for revenge. Game 4 should be a wire-to-wire blowout with the Lakers dominating.
Despite Jimmy’s heroics and Strolestra’s genius, it’s still Lakers in Five!
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I rewatched much of the game again this morning. Not much fun but when you consider all of the things that went wrong for the Lakers — LeBron have the same number of turnovers as assists, AD scoring just 15 point and 5 boards and zero blocks, the other three starters combining for a -56 plus/minus, the Lakers having only 6 second chance points and a season low 34 points in the paint, Butler having the best game of his career — and the Lakers still having several shots at winning the game at the end, I’m not worried at all.
This is exactly how a 200 to 1 shot wins a game. Lakers came out flat, overconfident, and uninspired and it bit them is the ass. Replay the game 199 more times and the Finals are 3-zip. Could it happen again? Anythings possible. Like hitting double zero twice on 2 out of 3 spins of the ball. The truth is the Laers are so much better and more talented than the Heat that this is one of the greatest Finals mismatches ever.
Can Bam and Goran playing change things? Unlikely. You can even argue that the Heat lineup and schemes right now are a better matchup against the Lakers than the Game 1 lineup. Playing a stretch five center and putting the ball in Jimmy Butler’s hands is part of what allowed the Heat to win Game 3. Getting back Bam and Goran is no guarantee they would do better. The key is the Heat have nobody to match LeBron and AD, provided they show up.
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I really thought Frank’s loyalty and preference to play a traditional center was a big reason we lost Game 5. Howard played poorly, had a team worst defensive rating of 135.7 which derailed the Lakers at the start of the first and third quarters. We lost this game because we were always playing from behind, which saps energy and kills momentum.
Nothing the Heat players loved more than seeing Dwight trying to defend them out at the 3-point line. There were three easy threes they got off Dwight when he was in the game. I ended up screaming at the TV for Frank to bench Dwight. If he starts him in Game 6, I may have to turn off the TV to prevent a heart attack. Enough with the idea that JaVale or Dwight can be effective in the modern NBA where opposing teams consistently hunt switches.
And that’s the lesson for last night’s game, these playoffs, and the future for the center position on these Lakers. The illusion that playing traditional centers who can only dunk and protect the rim is a formula to win in the playoffs or against smart modern teams has hopefully been dropped in the dumpster as well as the future of McGee and Howard with the Lakers.
The Lakers top priority this offseason has to be to replace their tradtional centers with modern counterparts who shoot the three, defend on the perimeter, and make their free throws. With Rondo’s resurrection, our greatest need is to work a trade for a young, mobile, and athletic center like Christian Wood or Myles Turner and to replace Dwight Howard with DeMarcus Cousins.