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LakerTom wrote a new post
Would being able pay Chris Paul just $23.1 million instead of $38.5 million for a shortened 50-game 2021 NBA season be enough to motivate the Los Angeles Lakers to trade with the OKC Thunder for the veteran point guard?
It’s an question that shines a harsh light on how the financial fallout from the coronavirus pandemic on the 2020 and 2021 NBA seasons is likely to alter the economic landscape between big market and small market teams. We already know that the difference in revenues between a big market team like the Los Angeles Lakers and a small market team like the OKC Thunder is in many ways the difference between real dollars and Monopoly dollars.
The NBA estimates a coronavirus afflicted 2021 Season with only 50 games could lead to having 40% of players’ salaries held in escrow and eventually lost due to the decline in their share of league basketball related income. While the owners would also lose 40% of their BRI or basketball related income, they would also not have to pay 40% of their player salaries, which to an extent ameliorates or minimizes their bottom line losses.
The Lakers are worth over $2 billion dollars, second only to the Knicks, with most of that value not subject to taxes until the franchise is sold. The Lakers could easily absorb short term losses to win another NBA championship. Small market teams like the Thunder have to rely on franchise appreciation rather than operating income to assess value and don’t have the resources or liquidity to weather difficult economic conditions like the Lakers do.
Just as wealthy investors become buyers and less secure investors become sellers when times are tough, now could be the perfect time for the Lakers to take advantage and trade for Chris Paul while his salaries are discounted. With the NBA looking at a 40% reduction in BRI for the 2021 season due to fewer games and the likely lack of live fans, Chris’ 3-year contract obligation could drop from $124.1 million to $108.7 million, a 12.5% discount.
Add to the equation the possibility the new CBA negotiated after this season could easily include another amnesty clause, there could be a legitimate opportunity for the Lakers to take advantage of the league’s financial crisis. There may be no team in the NBA who’s more willing to spend money or even pay luxury taxes to win championships than the Los Angeles Lakers. That motivation to win is not likely to wane just because times are tough.
Finally, there’s the reality that highly profitable teams like the Lakers have significant advantages over less profitable franchises when it comes to taking advantages of losses to shield profits and reduce income taxes. Losses by highly profitable teams like the Lakers can be carried forward and backward to dramatically reduce federal and state income taxes for past and future years with the net result of even cutting the losses in half.
Chris Paul would be a perfect fit on the Lakers as the third superstar alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis. He would be the second playmaker, third scorer, and elite defender the Lakers desperately need. While he wouldn’t be the young superstar the Lakers want to keep their championship window open after LeBron retires, Chris would make the Lakers odds on favorites to repeat and threepeat the next two seasons.
The looming reduced player salaries for the 2021 NBA season can provide the Los Angeles Lakers with a unique opportunity to add a future HOF point guard who can help them win two more championships at a discount. It’s an opportunity of which the Lakers cannot afford not to take advantage.
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Tom, you spend far too much time on these trades with no chance of happening. You should take up golf or something.
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That’s funny, Stan, because I would have expected you as a business owner to fully understand how a profitable enterprise like the Lakers could take advantage of short term losses to save on taxes and make a discounted investment on a player like CP3 a smart move.
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As a business owner, I know all too well that a deal with too many moving parts has little chance of going through.
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Draft picks don’t count against salary cap, BTW. You’ll need more raw $$$’s to make the cap issue resolve. Picks are sweetners, nothing more.
I don’t like giving out that much controlled cost in return for a player that will be a Laker for 2 more seasons. Furthermore you;re conflating two very separate issues: the cap and profit are two completely different things. BRI does not calculate based off of team profits but league-wide revenue. It’s one of the long-standing issues between the NBA and the NBPA. So, yes, the Lakers could still profit as a business the team itself would suffer from such a high volume salary.
Basically, I don’t see this as a ‘win-now’ move but rather an abandonment of cap smarts. You’re commuting over $80 million in salary to 2 players (James and CP3) and we haven’t extended Davis, yet. That’s going to cap you out right there (the one and one we all agree he is likely to take will be for $34 million, there will be no pay cut) at $114 million. 3 players does not a team make. Let CP3 over-perform somewhere else and flame out in the early playoff rounds without him taking us with him say I.
Didn’t all those guys you’re trading off the team just win an NBA championship…I could have sworn they did…weird…lol.
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Pincus covered the pick issue: you draft the player, sign him to a contract, and then trade him a month later.
This is the kind of trade LeBron might want and if he does, the Lakers will do it.
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One change I would make in my argument is taking on CP3’s salary would make it impossible for the Lakers to bring back Rondo, KCP, Morris, and Howard AND still have the $9.6M MLE. They could bring everybody back with almost no limit but could not do hard cap, meaning only $5.6M taxpayer MLE. CP3 would be worth it if the Thunder were willing to trade him to Lakers.
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Still playing at All-Star level and is future HOFer.
Will be cheaper because of the pandemic and income tax savings and will only cost expiring contrats.
Will give us a great 1-2 point guard punch
And almost guarantees another one or two rings.
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The players you’re shipping out have greater team value than a single Chris Paul. To equal his mammoth $41.3 million dollar deal you’ll have to trade 2/5ths of the roster. Green, Bradley, McGee, Caruso, Kuzma and likely KCP along with draft picks? For a guy who’s just going to take the ball out of LeBron’s hands? Who himself hasn’t been able to take a team even to a conference finals? AND he has an even more expensive player option the following year that he will certainly opt into? 100% pass.
Every time I pass on that deal. I thought we overpaid for him in the nixed CP3 for Odom and Gasol deal, this would be doubling down on the folly we lucked out on missing back then.
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CP3 makes $41.3M, which means Lakers need to send out $33.1M.
$5.0M Bradley – Didn’t need him to win it all
$4.2M McGee – Didn’t need him to win it all
$3.0M Cook – Didn’t need him to win it all
$3.5M Kuzma
$15.3M Green
$2.1M #28 pick – Didn’t need him to win it all
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33.1 TOTALTruth is we’re only giving up Kuzma and Green!
For a HOF point guard who is Rondo on Steroids.-
And look at what you have left:
PG: Paul, Rondo
SG: KCP, Caruso
SF: LeBron, THT
PF: Davis, Morris
CE: Howard, BoogiePlus the $9.3M MLE to use for in order of preference:
Wood, Baynes, Harkness, Grant, Bertans, or Gallinari.
That’s a roster that could win two more championships. -
This means giving up on any younger superstar, you’re locked into an old team. You’re giving up any and all future cap flexibility and we can all but guarantee the cap will be lowered in 2021. The only way I would ever do this is we had a way to amnesty him. That’s it. I don’t need to watch 19.8 seconds of CP3 dribbling before dishing to LeBron on most possessions.
We don’t need ball-dominant players if we keep Rondo. We have LeBron. He will have the ball in his hands. This is not theory, this is fact. You’re basically advocating for a $41.3 million dollar spot up shooter/back up PG. Just not on board with this notion, there are players of close to equal impact for a fraction of the cost.
Now if we lose Rondo we can have a chat about this, but I feel like this trade will be there all season long. There will not be a long line to wait in to trade for CP3. I haven’t even gotten into the concerns about his injury history and age. We’re not talking someone bionic like LBJ but a guy who is often injured at crucial moments in a season.
Pass.
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CP3 would start and Rondo would come off the bench. And CP3 would do all of the same great things Rondo did when playing with LeBron, allow LeBron to play off the ball, stretch the floor because he’s a much better 3-point shooter, create easy shots for other players, and play tough gritty man-to-man defense. Chris is a better playmaker, 3-point shooter, and defender than Rondo. And maybe less prone to injury
I do agree that trading for Chris would eliminate the opportunity to land a younger stud guard to go with AD, which is why trading for him is not my first option but my fallback option if we can’t land a deal for Oladipo or another elite young guard. I would prefer a trade for Oladipo, Turner, or Wood before CP3 but I think the odds of CP3 trade happening are much higher. I also think there’s a good chance an amnesty will be part of the new CBA.
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Last time the Lakers “upgraded” from a winner to a HOFr was when Horry was replaced by Karl Malone. Didn’t go well. Horry continued winning rings while Karl gets injured in the Playoffs.
Imagine this nightmare: Rondo winning a ring with the Clippers while CP3 gets injured again in the POs.
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There’s always a chance that could happen, Stan, but the other side is you get a steroids version of Rondo who’s just as good a playmaker and better defender and 3-point shooter.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
In the wake of the 2020 Championship and the stifling reality of a pandemic afflicted 2021 season, the pieces are there for a potential blockbuster trade just waiting to be made between the Indiana Pacers and Los Angeles Lakers.
The Lakers need a stud guard to be their third superstar to complement LeBron James and Anthony Davis in their quest for more championships and then to take the baton from LeBron when he retires as Davis’ co-superstar. They also need a true modern center whose 3-point shooting can stretch defenses and create spacing to free up James and Davis while protecting the rim and defending the perimeter to allow Anthony Davis to play the four.
The Pacers need to move on from both Victor Oladipo and Myles Turner this offseason as neither play key roles in their future plans. Oladipo wants a max contract he’s not going to get and Turner’s been supplanted by Sabonis. Waiting to move Oladipo will only further diminish what they could get in return as trading for him at the deadline will only yield rental value while keeping Turner will only stifle Sabonis’ emergence as the team’s future.
The Lakers are willing to risk swinging to hit a home run while the Pacers would prefer to patiently wait out the pandemic so there’s a middle ground where both teams can get want they want in a blockbuster trade.
WHAT ARE THE TERMS OF THE PROPOSED TRADE?
Ironically, the more coveted player in the trade is the Pacer’s undervalued center Myles Turner and not guard Victor Oladipo, whose lingering injury and looming free agent status have dramatically lowered his trade value. Considering there’s more interest in Turner rather than Oladipo, it makes sense to break the mega trade down into two separate trades to better be able to judge the merits of the specific offers for each of the Pacers’ players.
Rumors have suggested a Myles Turner trade could even yield the Pacers a borderline star like Gordon Hayward from the Boston Celtics or Andrew Wiggins and the second pick in the draft from the Golden State Warriors. While Hayward’s dubious injury history and Wiggin’s specious resume raise major questions, there’s no doubt that there’s serious interest in trading for Myles Turner by several of the Lakers’ major competitors in the NBA.
That’s why the Lakers are going to have make an offer that includes players whom they would normally consider untouchable in trade discussions if they have any hope of interesting the Pacers in trading Turner and Oladipo.
Here’s the proposed trade for Pacers’ center Myles Turner:
Here’s the proposed trade for Pacers’ guard Victor Oladipo:
WHY WOULD THE LAKERS AGREE TO THE TRADE?
There will be a large number of Lakers’ fans who will understandably be dead set against trading Caldwell-Pope and Caruso, two of the team’s top contributors responsible for the team winning their 17th championship. Realistically, the Lakers cannot expect to trade for two impact players like Turner and Oladipo, who could transform the team into a juggernaut, without giving up serious talent in return. That’s what trades are all about.
The centerpiece in the trade is 24-year old Myles Turner, who would give the Lakers a true modern center to provide 3-point shooting and spacing on offense and rim protection and perimeter speed and quickness on defense. Turner’s a proven 3-point shooter and elite shot blocker, who would be the Lakers’ starting center, replacing traditional low post centers JaVale McGee and Dwight Howard and allowing Anthony Davis to play power forward.
Trading for Oladipo is a gamble that he’ll recover completely to return to be the player he was before the injury and will re-sign with the Lakers but the risk is worth the reward as he could be the superstar guard the Lakers need. Victor is only 28-years old and a former 3rd team All-NBA and 1st team All-Defensive player. That’s the the kind of storied resume that enticed the Lakers to sign Avery Bradley, Rajon Rondo, and Dwight Howard.
Imagine Turner and Oladipo replacing McGee and Green next season and the Lakers starting a lineup that would be taller, longer, faster, quicker, and more mobile and athletic at both ends of the court than last year’s squad. Turner and Oladipo would fill the Lakers’ needs for a third scorer, second playmaker, wing defender, and modern center and their version of ‘small ball’ that dominated the playoffs would become their ‘48-minutes’ lineup.
WHY WOULD THE PACERS AGREE TO THE TRADE?
The Pacers have a new coach in Nate Bjorkgren and are on a new course that does not include Myles Turner, who has unfortunately been supplanted by Domantas Sabonis, or Victor Oladipo, who looking to sign a max contract. While the Pacers should receive attractive offers for Turner, Oladipo’s trade value has cratered due to his lackluster play after returning from injury and his looming free agency and continued demand for a max contract.
While Myles Turner has been a mainstay of the Pacers defense, he’s struggled to be productive when paired on the court with Sabonis, who has become the star around whom Indiana is planning on building their team. That’s become common knowledge around the league resulting in Turner becoming a coveted trade target, which is why the Lakers are willing to offer two of their top role players in Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Alex Caruso.
The Victor Oladipo side of the trade also gives the Pacers great young talent to help them compete for a playoff spot while rebuilding by adding talented Kyle Kuzma, veteran Danny Green, and the Lakers 2020 first round pick. That’s more than any of the trades being proposed in the media for Oladipo and guarantees the Pacers won’t end up losing him at the trade deadline as a short term rental or next offseason for nothing as a free agent.
Imagine a Pacers’ starting lineup with Brogdon, Caldwell-Pope, Warren, Kuzma, and Sabonis that is better offensively and defensively and a deeper and more diverse bench with Caruso, Green, Holiday, Leaf, and McGee. Pacers’ new head coach Bjorkgren will be able to focus on a set roster with elite young defenders like KCP, Kuzma, and Caruso and veteran leaders and mentors like Green and McGee to help build a strong culture and chemistry.
WHAT ARE THE CHANCES THE TRADE HAPPENS?
Mega trades are always difficult to predict, especially with coronavirus pandemic still raging and the coming offseason and next season slated to be shorter than normal with unprecedented conditions and expectations. Chances are likely small market teams like the Pacers will be seeking to slash expenses by trading Myle Turner to get out of the 3-years left on his contract and Victor Oladipo to avoid having to give him a new max contract.
So the question is not whether the Indiana Pacers are going to trade Turner and Oladipo but what they’re going to be able to get in return for them in a difficult market where there are likely to be a lot more sellers than buyers. The willingness of the Lakers to actually include two of their championship core in Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Alex Caruso is also no sure thing. While neither is a legitimate star player, they are proven elite role players.
When you add Kuzma, Mcgee, Green, and a 2020 first round pick, the Lakers’ offer is a substantive offer and the trade machine projections predict the Pacers will end up with a net gain of 15 wins if they complete the trade. Alternatively, adding a modern center like Turner and healthy superstar like Oladipo could transform the Lakers into a championship dynasty. That raises the possibility this trade could be one of those rare win-win trades.
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This is probably one of the most controversial trades I could conceivably propose and I’m sure there will be lots of naysayers who reject the idea of trading KCP or AC for anybody. Even the trade machine seems to say the trade is a bad idea and would help the Pacers win 15 more games and the Lakers lose 15 more games. But what those fans and the trade machine ignore are trades are usually won by the team who gets the best players and what those best players do to improve that team’s roster.
But please at least keep an open mind and think about how adding Turner and Oladipo could transform the Lakers into a legitimate championship juggernaut and dynasty in a way that goes well beyond the LeBron James era. Turner is only 24-years old and has already been in DPOY discussions and at 6’11” and 250 pounds has the height and size to be a better rim protector and low post defender than McGee or Howard. And unlike either of them, he has enough lateral quickness and speed to defend stretch centers on the perimeter. He’s a better fit than DeMarcus Cousins to play center alongside Anthony Davis. He’s a better 3-point shooter ( career 35.7%) and defender.
Right now, the Lakers are playing their version of ‘small ball’ around 40% of the time. If they were to trade for Turner and then sign Boogie, they would be able to play that same deadly version of ‘small ball’ for 48 minutes per game, which would be devastating. While Morris did a great job at the four next to Davis at the five, he’s not the rim protector or perimeter defender that Turner is. There’s a reason the Celtics and Warriors want to trade for Myles and it’s specificially to add a player who can matchup with Davis. Adding him to the Lakers doubles down on the ‘small ball’ defense that powered the Lakers to their 17th championship and suddenly makes them younger at the five without forcing AD to play there all the time.
As for Oladipo, yes, he’s a gamble and would have to pass a physical by the Lakers medical team but a torn quad is not like a torn Achilles or knee and Victor should regain the athteticism that made him an All-NBA and All-Defensive player and he is still only 28-years old. Every NBA dynasty has had a superstar guard (LeBron is really that for these Lakers) and the third superstar the Lakers need to take over from LeBron and be the co-superstar with AD going forward is Oladipo. Trading for him will give us his Bird rights so if he recovers we can exceed the cap and sign him to a max deal, something we can’t do with a free agent like Giannis or if we sign-and-trade for a star. Trading for a young stud and then maxing him is the only way for the Lakers to get a third superstar. That’s why trading for Oladip is worth the risk.
Land them both and the Lakers suddenly are a team in its prime with a huge championship window that lasts way past when LeBron retires. It’s worth trading Kuz, KCP, AC, Green, McGee, and the pick because it creates a Lakers dynasty that could last for another five to six years.
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Lakers Fast Break wrote a new post
This is the second of a series of articles from each member of the Lakerholics editorial team recounting how this crazy and unprecedented year and NBA season personally impacted and affected them. Thanks to Blog Editor Sean Grice for suggesting and inspiring the series. We invite every Lakerholic to comment and let us know how this wacky year hit you and yours.
As I sit back in my chair exhaling a deep breath after the last Lakers Fast Break podcast of the NBA season, I find myself reflective of how far we’ve come. I spent the last few months listening to Rafael Barlowe’s deep insight, LakerTom’s engaging (and sometimes outlandish) rants, and Jamie Sweet and Sean Grice pointed comments on just how the Lakers pulled through to earn their 17th World Championship (Sorry Bill Simmons, it’s seventeen for the Lakers, deal with it). I’ve had on guests from the outside looking in, some who backed the Lakers and some who were very direct in predicting the team’s demise. The many Laker podcasts hosts that have come onto the program have shared their beliefs and blinding love for the team on what LeBron, AD, and the rest of the team have accomplished so far. And yes, I have had the opportunity to be an invited guest on many other programs and had to sit there and endure the opinions of others who thought mistakenly (or was it through just a blinding hatred of the Lakers or LeBron) that there would be no chance the team could find a way to thrive in this bubble format.
But as I look back on it now, a Lakers fan seemingly destined for me since my birth in Inglewood, California just a block and a half away from the Fabulous Forum, I am filled with a sense of satisfaction. That I could enjoy this moment with my girls, who weren’t old enough to remember their last title victory in 2010, is truly something I will cherish for the rest of my life. But it is also what the team has gone through in this roller coaster of a season that will have me say (as I have done repeatedly on the show) that this has been the toughest season that an NBA team has ever endured. Culminating in my definitive statement that this championship brings along with it the opinion this is the greatest title victory ever.
Oh, I know the nay-sayers will be out there seemingly forever. Miami didn’t have Bam Adebayo for two games, and Goran Dragic for virtually all of the series. The Lakers also didn’t have to match up against the Clippers, the Bucks, or the Raptors, due to those teams’ own (depending on the team) ineptitude, lack of chemistry, or underperforming at just the wrong time. Also, the team (read in -between the lines: LeBron) had months to rest heading into the bubble, and that the only extended travel was the bus trips from the arena back to their extended-stay hotel rooms.
But the Lakers 2020 World Championship needs to be thought of above all the rest the team has accomplished, due to the tremendous circumstances the team has had to endure and persevere through during the course of the last twelve months. A new superstar brought in with a blockbuster trade in Anthony Davis, left many questioning whether or not the Lakers gave up too much. The fallout of the Magic Johnson and Luke Walton departures left the team looking for a new head coach. That search finally ended up turning over to Frank Vogel, who was considered an afterthought for the position, with Jason Kidd brought on as an assistant coach seemingly destined to take over his job. Even the pursuit of Kawhi Leonard in free agency left the Lakers scrambling for talent, leaving the optimism with the Davis and LeBron pairing being high, but many questions about the talent around them being just as prevalent.
The 2019-2020 season started out innocently enough, with Anthony Davis coming into the fold and expectations for competing for a championship, all looked well for the team as they took a preseason trip to China. But with one tweet from (and now former) Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey in support of Hong Kong, the Lakers and the NBA (and also the Brooklyn Nets who were traveling with the Lakers) found themselves embroiled in a controversy that turned tense, nasty, and ultimately damaging for the league as a whole losing hundreds of millions of dollars in potential revenue.
Lakers highlights through Mid-December Despite the issues overseas and an opening night loss to the rival Los Angels Clippers, the Lakers got off to a great start zooming off to a 24-3 record by mid-December. Their focus on defense and challenges to one another to commit to Coach Frank Vogel’s defensive schemes proved to be an early formula for their success, their growing team chemistry, and a message to the league the Lakers would be thought of as a serious contender to the NBA title. All seemed bright for Lakers fans that the team had indeed turned things around. The positive buzz was as high as it had been in a long time for Laker Nation until the morning of January 26, 2020.
It still hits me every now and then like it was yesterday. I know where I was when I heard the news, I was driving in my car along Maryland Parkway in Las Vegas when my wife had called me from work. “I think you should check the news,” she said. “Why?” I answered. “Because Kobe Bryant was just in a helicopter crash”. “What!” I yelled. And almost immediately upon saying those words, the updates from TMZ and other news sources started leaking out the words I was extremely reluctant to see. Yes, the world had lost #24, and such a tragic event had never before impacted the NBA and its fans before such as the one that killed Kobe Bryant, his daughter Gigi and seven others. I was stunned, deeply saddened, and grieving along with millions of others. It’s something even to this day many of us have yet to recover from fully, as the loss will resonate for quite some time.
However bad this loss affected fans from all over the world who had adored Kobe Bryant, the Lakers dare I say were affected even more. Even a week of mourning and a res-scheduling of games did very little to extinguish the sadness the entire Lakers community felt. But that sense of loss and sadness eventually turned into determination, one that propelled the team going forward. Even a symbolic tribute with the donning of the “Black Mamba” jerseys that Kobe helped design and a patch with Gigi’s #2 she wore on her own team gave the Lakers an added confidence that they would be a force to reckoned with throughout the season. Alas, new challenges would soon come into play in the not too distant future, but not before the Lakers solidified themselves as a championship contender with a pair of convincing back-to-back wins over the rival Clippers and the NBA’s best record-leading Milwaukee Bucks.
The Coronavirus would become a worldwide pandemic, and bring the entire sports world (and life as we knew it) to a screeching halt. For months, we weren’t sure if we would get a continuation of the season, and in what form. Compound that with the continual issues with systemic racism in our society including the murder of George Floyd, and other African-Americans at the hands of law enforcement bringing about a worldwide movement to remind everyone that Black Lives Matter. With the world on lockdown, and racial division in America being at the forefront, it seemed like there would be some truly despondent days ahead.
But with the great desire of the NBA to bring some semblance of their game back to their fans, the decision was made to create a “bubble” after weeks of speculation at Disney’s ESPN Sports Complex in Orlando. The questions arose from coaches, players, the press, and the fans in regards to how safe would this be, and could the league really put this off? Some 100-plus days later and we have our answer and it’s a resounding yes. Months of preparation, following regulations, and confinement, and some initial bad meals did lead to a lot of hardships for everyone there, but zero positive tests out of the thousands taken during that span and the ultimate goal of the Coronavirus not ending the season was ultimately achieved.
https://youtu.be/cA21kGtqWokFor Pure Comedy Gold Lakers Fans Check Out The Video Above… Life inside the bubble still had its issues and complications, including a stoppage of play due to the death of Jacob Blake at the hands of law enforcement. Even the Lakers struggled with the bubble concept and were among the teams ready to pull out amidst the walkout. Cooler heads prevailed and despite a horrible performance in the eight-game bubble season, the Lakers headed into the postseason as the top seed in the west, even though many were looking to discount the team’s chances of earning the ultimate prize. I heard it, and I know you did too, all the so-called analysts, social media, and former players who favored the Clippers (see below), the Bucks, or any team facing off against the Lakers as they convincingly made their way through each and every round. Just before the playoffs began it seemed like #Fakers was trending more on Twitter than #Lakers.
Through all the adversity, both internal and external, the team pushed through under circumstances that proved to be more of a mental test than anyone would have imagined. But seeing LeBron knife his way through defenses for layups and dunks, Anthony Davis providing heroics and domination on both ends of the floor, Alex Caruso giving the team grit and hustle the team could not do without, Kantevious Caldwell-Pope chime in with (dare I say it?) “clutch” basket after basket, and yes even Rajon Rondo donning his cape and allowing his “Playoff Rondo” superhero alter ego come to life at just the right time was a sight to behold. Everyone in the rotation had their moments to shine and without the contributions of Dwight Howard, Kyle Kuzma, Danny Green, and Markieff Morris, the team may have not reached the top of the mountain so easily.
2020 has been a rough year for everyone. It’s been almost eleven months struggling with a worldwide pandemic, systemic racism, natural disasters, and an economy hit hard by all of those issues that have led to millions dealing with unexpected unemployment. But for one brief moment in time on October 11, as the Lakers grouped together in celebration on that court in Orlando with Finals MVP LeBron and AD holding the trophies, all the negative elements out there got pushed to the side, and Lakers fans like myself could rejoice in a championship ten years in the making. The Lakers earning their 17th championship is a lining for 2020 that isn’t made of silver, it’s paved with purple and gold.
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Thank you. What a fabulous article, Gerald. It’s easy to forget when we listen to you orchestrate the Lakers Fast Break podcasts as our ‘host extraordinaire’ that you could be an even better writer than talker. Written and documented like the true professional journalist you are.
Thanks for the heartfelt and detailed recounting of the wonderful journey that buoyed the broken hearts and battered souls of Lakerholics everywhere in this toughest of all seasons with the unfortunate death of Kobe, Gigi, and their friends. Like you so eloquently said, the Lakers 2020 NBA Championship wasn’t lined with silver but “paved with purple and gold.”
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Thanks so much, LakerTom. Truly appreciated. Does this mean I can stay on the “Playoff Rondo” train?
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Awesome article Gerald, thank you! The only asterisk that need be added would be the one for this season being the toughest ever, I don’t care what Scottie Pippin thinks. You hit every nail squarely on the head and I think a lot of Laker fans would do well to write about how this entire year has affected them. From having to live a different way, to losing people close to us (that includes Kobe and Gigi) to not really seeing a light at the end of the tunnel, self-expression and creative output are 2 great ways to start the healing.
The Lakers won it all!!!! It’s still exciting to type!
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Thank you for your kind words. Professor LakerTom better not assign us a “what did we do on summer vacation” essay or I might break 2,000 words…
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What an expertly written article. The article really moved me and it is most refreshing with such a clear depiction of the journey the Lakers embarked on from day one to the very last day of the season culminating in championship #17. It is as if you took me along for a ride through the whole journey witnessing all the ups and downs. Great job, man.
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Thank you for the kind words Buba. It took me through the whole gambit of emotions writing it. So I am glad you enjoyed it.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
With the salary cap likely to remain flat for next season, it’s going to take creative cap management for the Lakers to re-sign all five of their core free agents and still be able to sign other free agents to upgrade their roster.
While the Lakers would like another reliable scorer, capable playmaker, elite wing defender, or stretch big, they also need to re-sign their own five top free agents to maintain their continuity and win another NBA championship. While Davis is a lock to re-sign a $32.7 million max contract, the Lakers will face a challenge re-signing Caldwell-Pope, Rondo, Morris, and Howard, all of whom will be highly coveted free agents deserving of pay raises.
Since the Lakers are over the cap but below the tax threshold, they will not have cap space to spend on free agents and will have to rely on salary cap exceptions to re-sign their own free agents plus other teams’ free agents. That means the Lakers will be forced to choose between two options with different advantages and disadvantages to sign free agents this offseason. For simplicity, we’ll call the two options the soft cap and hard cap.
If the Lakers choose the soft cap, they can use their Bird rights to re-sign AD, KCP, and Rondo and give them maximum raises but will only have $5.7 million to re-sign Morris and Howard as well as other teams’ free agents. This means the Lakers can pay AD or KCP as much as $32.7 million and Rondo as much as $10.1 million but will only have $5.7 million left to keep Morris and Howard and upgrade their roster with other free agents.
The soft cap is the conservative option since it would allow the Lakers to go over the cap to pay Davis and Caldwell-Pope whatever they need to up to $32.7 million and pay Rondo as much as $10.1 million for the next season. While the Lakers would have no problem paying AD the $32.7 million max salary, they only need to give KCP a raise to $11 million, and Rondo a raise to $6 million to pay them more than what competing teams will likely offer.
That means the Lakers should be able to limit the raises they give AD, KCP, and Rondo to $3.9 million, $2.5 million, and $3.3 million respectively for a total of $9.7 million, which is not enough to justify choosing the soft cap. More problematic is the $5.6 million taxpayer MLE is not enough to re-sign Morris and Howard and upgrade the roster with a key free agent, which means not being able to field a better team to defend their championship.
But if the Lakers choose the hard cap, they’ll have up to $12.9 million to sign Morris, Howard, and other free agents but will be limited to a hard cap limit of $138.9 million for all their player salaries, including AD, KCP, and Rondo. With $119.5 million in current salaries, the Lakers will have $19.4 million available, which by coincidence will leave $9.7 million for Morris, Howard, and other free agents after $9.7 million in raises for AD, KCP, and Rondo.
The Lakers can still make another roster move to increase the $9.7 million for Morris, Howard, and other free agents to $12.4 million by waiving and stretching the guaranteed $1 million of Quinn Cook’s $3 million contract. That will get them close to being able to utilize the full $12.9 million that is available in the form of the $9.3 million non-taxpayer MLE and the $3.6 million BAE allowable to teams who choose the hard cap option.
That $12.4 million should enable the Lakers to keep Morris and Howard in addition to AD, KCP, and Rondo as well as being able to add one or two key free agents from other teams to significantly upgrade next season’s roster. The other advantage the hard cap allows is sign-and-trades, which could enable the Lakers to pursue free agents like Fred VanVleet, Christian Wood, and Maurice Harkless who will demand higher offers than the MLE.
Unless the NBA surprises everybody and raises the salary cap, the Lakers will be forced to become hard capped if they want to re-sign their key free agents and build a better team to defend their championship next season.
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Lakers 2021 Dream Depth Chart
PG: Oladipo, Bradley
SG: KCP, Caruso,
SF: James, THT
PF: Davis, Wood
CE: Howard, McGeeTraded: Kuzma, Green
Waived: CookFrom:
TRADE – Oladipo, VanVleet, Paul
MLE – Wood, Harkness, Gallinari -
I spent a couple of hours watching Eric Pincus new salary cap streams on YouTube and highly recommend them. Eric does a great job of explaining everything and all of the numbers and details in this article match the math that he’s done. Here’s a link to his first stream, which is a great beginning salary cap lesson for this unprecedented season.
It’s going to be interesting to see what the NBA and the NBPA agree to with respect to the salary cap, luxury tax, and tax apron (which is the hard cap number) for next season. As it stands right now, there are only going to be a few teams – Hawks, Nicks, Pistons, Hornets, and Heat – who will be able to offer more than the $9.3M non-taxpayer MLE or the $5.6M taxpayer MLE for free agents, which means the Lakers should have a good shot signing a great player for their $9.3M non-taxpayer MLE should they opt to accept the hard cap and are able to re-sign KCP to for $11M per year (more than the teams with the nontaxpayer MLE can offer) and Rondo for $6M per year (more than the teams with taxpayer MLE can offer). Both might even be willing to accept 1-year deals since the big payday for free agents will be next season, when everybody, including the Lakers, will have loads of cap space.
The other thing is we may see the few players who are slated to get more than the $9.3M non-taxpayer MLE decide to take that amount in a 1-year deal with a winning team and wait to cash in next season rather than spending a year with a losing team, especially considering the year will be another Covid-19 affected year with only 72 games and possibly even a bubble or two. That means the Lakers might have a shot at signing somebody like Gallinari, VanVleet, or Christian Wood with their MLE or of being able to work out at sign and trade of Kuzma and Green for one of those three. Lakers have a real shot at keeping AD, KCP, Rondo, Morris, and Howard and adding two new players via the MLE and a sign-and-trade. I also think a trade for Oladipo is not out of the question. Lakers have a chance to make a big move this offseason to bring back the championship team on steroids. It’s going to be another STAR or Asterisk season but who cares.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
With Anthony Davis committing to re-signing with the Los Angeles Lakers, Christian Wood becomes the preeminent free agent big man this offseason, which means there’s a good chance there will be a bidding war to land him.
While some free agent pundits established Wood’s market value around $10 million per year, other analysts have suggested he could command as much as $15 to $17 million per year based on his breakout year with the Pistons. Right now, there are six NBA teams who currently have the cap space to make an offer that high for Christian Wood: the Atlanta Hawks, New York Knicks, Detroit Pistons, Charlotte Hornets, Miami Heat, and Phoenix Suns.
But other NBA teams could also make roster moves to create the cap space to add their names to the list and teams like the Lakers without cap space could expand the competition by proposing sign-and-trade offers for Wood. If the Lakers are serious about trading for Wood, the two big questions are who will be their competitors for him and what should be their ceiling in terms of dollars and assets offered when it comes to consummating a deal?
One thing that still haunts me is how Wood has the same unique skill set to play offense and defense at all three levels like Davis, which also makes him exactly the type of player teams need to match AD at both ends of the court. Davis’ ascension as a unicorn and the best big man in the game today has not gone unnoticed by the rest of the NBA. League GM’s now know the road to the NBA championship now runs through the Lakers and Anthony Davis.
We know the Celtics and Warriors have expressed interest in trading for the Pacers Myles Turner, whose another modern center who can protect the rim and defend in space on the perimeter. Perfect defender for Anthony Davis. Christian Wood falls into the same category and the Lakers should pursue him both to create a juggernaut team and prevent competitors from adding a player to counter the ultimate weapon they have in Anthony Davis.
Players like Christian Wood and Myles Turner are going to ignite an arms race between the elite teams looking for an answer for Anthony Davis and a way to derail what they fear will be another Lakers’ championship dynasty. The Lakers’ likely competition for Christian Wood is not going to come from the Hawks, Nicks, Pistons, and Suns; it’s going to come from teams looking for ways to pass the Lakers: the Heat, Clippers, Warriors, Celtics, and Bucks.
Unfortunately, that levels the playing field to acquire Wood more than if it were just a contest betweens teams offering only the MLE or money instead of an opportunity to win but the Lakers still have one significant advantage. They are the NBA Champions and Christian would be joining the team with the best two players in the world and a better opportunity to win a ring. The only question is how much would the Lakers be willing to pay to sign him?
Besides first year salary, the Lakers need to offer Wood a three-year deal so they will have his Bird rights and be able to go over the cap to keep him once the contract expires, which means compromising their 2021 plans. Since the Lakers will still want to have the option to pursue a third superstar after next season, they need to make sure Wood and his contract are easily tradable if necessary to create cap space to sign that superstar in 2021.
The maximum contract the Lakers should offer Christian Wood is a three-year $45 million deal starting at $15 million per year. Combined with a chance to win a championship, that should be an offer he just can’t refuse. Other teams could offer a few million more but the chance to join the champs and play with LeBron and AD in L.A. should be irresistible for a 25-year old who played for 4 teams in 5 years with a top salary of $1.6 million.
Assuming the Lakers can come to an agreement with Christian Wood on a contract, all that remains is working out an acceptable sign-and-trade deal the Detroit Pistons will accept as equitable compensation for trading him. The obvious centerpiece to the sign-and-trade deal is Lakers forward and Flint, Michigan native Kyle Kuzma, about whom the Lakers and Pistons had already had trade discussions before the trade deadline last winter.
The Pistons are in a difficult position. They would love to re-sign Wood and have the cap space to do it but he has announced that he’s going to leave via Instagram and they don’t want to lose him in free agency for nothing. While they Pistons have over $30 million in cap space, Detroit is not a top destination for free agents, which makes using their cap space to take on salary in a sign-and-trade a resourceful strategy to acquire quality players.
With Wood having agreed to a contract with the Lakers eliminating other potential trade partners, the Pistons would still have leverage knowing the Lakers don’t have cap space and need Detroit to agree to a sign-and-trade. But an offer from the Lakers of Kyle Kuzma, Danny Green, JaVale McGee, Quinn Cook, and their 2020 first round pick should give the Pistons more than fair compensation for agreeing to sign-and-trade Christian Wood.
The drawback for the Lakers adding a player via a sign-and-trade deal is it would limit their total payroll costs for the 2021 season to a hard cap of $138.9 million, meaning the Lakers could not exceed that for any reason. Right now, the Lakers have committed $119.6 million to 11 players in 2021. Bradley and McGee are not expected to exercise their player options but Davis, Caldwell-Pope, and Rondo are expected to opt out looking for raises.
Assuming the Lakers re-sign AD to a 1+1 max contract for $32.7 million and give both KCP and Rondo raises to $12 and $6 million using their Bird and Early Bird rights, they would then have $130.3 million committed for 2021. That would leave they with just $8.6 million left to add 4 more players to their roster, making it impossible to use the full $9.6 million MLE and challenging to use the $3.6 million BAE or even sign their first round pick.
But a sign-and-trade of Kuzma, Green, McGee, and Cook’s $26.1 million for Wood’s $15 million would free up $11.1 million in cap space and give the Lakers $119.2 million in salaries for 2021, $19.7 million under the hard cap. That would enable the Lakers to pursue free agents like Dragic, Gallinari, Harkness, and Baynes with their MLE, re-sign Morris or Howard with their BAE, and add other minimum salary players like Cousins or Dudley.
A sign-and-trade between the Detroit Pistons and the Los Angeles Lakers of Christian Wood for Kyle Kuzma, Danny Green, JaVale McGee, Quinn Cook, and the 28th pick in the 2020 NBA draft should be a win-win for both teams. The Lakers get a player who could transform their team and clear cap space to give raises to AD, KCP, and Rondo and use their MLE and BAE to further upgrade their roster despite being limited by the $138.9 million hard cap.
Detroit avoids losing a player who could have left in free agency and, instead of nothing, receives four championship-tested players they could not have attracted in free agency plus a first round draft pick from a sign-and-trade. The Pistons get the home town star they wanted in Kuzma, two quality defenders who are great roster fits in Green and McGee, a deadeye shooter whose contract is only partially guaranteed in Cook, and a first round pick.
While deals proposed by bloggers never happen, the approach outlined is a perfect blueprint for how the Lakers can take advantage of a trade or sign-and-trade to acquire a high impact player while increasing their cap space. The Lakers will need to figure out how to navigate a hard cap to reward key contributors like KCP and Rondo, use their full non-taxpayer MLE or BAE to upgrade the roster, or go after an elite prospect via a sign-and-trade.
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I had to revisit my original article on Christian Wood as Eric Pincus pointed out to me that some of my assumptions contradicted the hard cap the Lakers would be subject to if they (1) used the full MLE, (2) used the BAE, or (3) did a sign-and-trade. The hard cap is $139M and does limit what we can give players with Bird, Early Bird, or other rights. Hard means you can’t exceed it even if you have less than 15 players.
At any rate, one thing that came out of this is the Lakers need more cap space, which is why they applied to get rid of Deng’s $5M. The best way to get more cap space is to trade away contracts to a team like the Pistons who are way under the cap. It’s actually a process many of those teams use to get players since they’re not a top free agent destination. So take a look at the deal I’ve proposed. It’s a good blueprint for the kind of deal the Lakers could be looking to pull off this offseason.
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From the article:
“The maximum contract the Lakers should offer Christian Wood is a three-year $45 million deal starting at $15 million per year. Combined with a chance to win a championship, that should be an offer he just can’t refuse.”
“A sign-and-trade between the Detroit Pistons and the Los Angeles Lakers of Christian Wood for Kyle Kuzma, Danny Green, JaVale McGee, Quinn Cook, and the 28th pick in the 2020 NBA draft should be a win-win for both teams.”
“The Lakers get a player who could transform their team and clear cap space to give raises to AD, KCP, and Rondo and use their MLE and BAE to further upgrade their roster despite being limited by the $138.9 million hard cap.”
“Detroit avoids losing a player who could have left in free agency and, instead of nothing, receives four championship-tested players they could not have attracted in free agency plus a first round draft pick from a sign-and-trade.”
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Aloha Tom, let’s see if the site will let me respond this time. Lol. I’m all in on wood for the MLE, but not for a trade. First the NBA history is littered with one year wonders. In this case less than one year. He has already played for 5 teams in 4 years. And as you mentioned he is still raw, in many ways. I also don’t know if he’s going to see the kind of offers you imagine because of this. We are in a win now situation and I don’t see us giving up important pieces of our championship team to gamble on one guy who may or may not pan out. I really don’t think we trade for him.
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Aloha, Michael.
I have no problem getting Christian for the MLE if we can but I suspect he will get bigger offers than that because he could be the type of player teams need to defend AD.
The trade is also about more than just about getting Wood. It’s about creating cap space since using the full MLE or the BAE or a sign-and-trade all are going to hard cap us at $139M, which is going to mean we may not be able to match offers for KCP or Rondo or Morris even though we have their Bird and Early Bird rights and the BAE.
It’s why we’re trying to get rid of Deng’s $5M. We need cap space and trading with a team like the Pistons who can take in more salary than they give out is the only way we can open up cap space. It’s also the only way they can get quality players since they’re not a free agent destination.
That’s why the Wood trade or a similar trade is going to be key not only for keeping the core of the team together but having the ability to use the full MLE and BAE to upgrade the roster. You have to look beyond just the trade itself.
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Great and very thoughtful comment, Michael. You said it best when you stated: “I’m all in on Wood for the MLE, but not for a trade. First the NBA history is littered with one year wonders. In this case less than one year. He has already played for 5 teams in 4 years.”
I am not a big fan of premature trades, especially not after having just won a championship. I have always stated my preference for patience on this blog for a while now and I am still sticking to that virtue. Now, that doesn’t mean we should stand pat and watch the rest of the league reload. However, Temptation can lead to lead to a buyer’s remorse. Didn’t we just had a similar situation with Luol deng and Timofey Mozgov recently? So you spent a pile of money or an important piece of your championship puzzle on a player you thought you wanted – only to realize later you could have gone without him? Buyer’s remorse is the worst enemy of any GM and we have seen that happen many times over the years.
I would prefer to trade for a proven player that can get us a home run.
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While I personally would prefer the Lakers traded for Myles Turner and Victor Oladipo for the reasons I stated in my article before this one, I do think the prospect of a shorter 2021 season likely without fans and dramatic cut in player salaries makes a Chris Paul trade more likely and do think it might be the Lakers second best option.
I don’t like including a S&T of KCP, THT, or Caruso but would have to include the pick to have enough salary for the trade to work. Since CP3 makes 38.5M, we have to send $30.8M to make it work, which we could do with Kuzma, Green, Bradley, McGee, Cook, and the player picked #28.
Assming we can resign KCP, Rondo, Morris, and Howard, that would leave us with the following:
PG: Paul, Rondo
SG: KCP, Caruso
SF: LeBron, THT
PF: Davis, Morris
CE: Howard, Boogie
Plus the $9.3M MLE to use for in order of preference:
Wood, Baynes, Harkness, Grant, Bertans, or Gallinari.
That’s a roster that could win two more championships.