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LakerTom wrote a new post
REPORT: The Lakers giving up multiple picks to make Walker Kessler their center of the future is “on the table,” per @andyblarsen"I don't know if the Jazz take it" pic.twitter.com/M5aktbAd7K— Ahn Fire Digital (@AhnFireDigital) June 25, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
PROPOSED LAKERS TRADE FOR WIGGINSLakers Receive:-Andrew WigginsHeat Receives:-Rui Hachimura-Gabe Vincent-2030 First Round Pick SwapIdeally, the Lakers would need to close deal for Walker Kessler as their starting center before committing to trade for Wiggins to be their… https://t.co/CI68F6qBit pic.twitter.com/SRTVGGZUGo— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 25, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
What if Cooper Flagg could play where he wanted? He could … if you abolish the draft https://t.co/pS5Qoqmuxe— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 25, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Jeanie Buss and Mark Walter's first official comments on the sale of the Lakers.In the statement, the sale is expected to close in the third or fourth quarter of this year. pic.twitter.com/46BbPTT4RA— ESPN Los Angeles (@ESPNLosAngeles) June 25, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
LeBron sent Derrick White’s story to his sons, Bronny and Bryce, to keep them motivated 💯(via @mindthegamepod)pic.twitter.com/mCTLQCERwo— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) June 24, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Legends don’t wait. They arrive.Draft day is here 🍿 pic.twitter.com/LdipBioIkB— ESPN (@espn) June 25, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Happy birthday to the leader of the #Lakeshow, head coach JJ Redick 💜💛 pic.twitter.com/TCCn7hImZ6— Spectrum SportsNet (@SpectrumSN) June 24, 2025
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LakerTom wrote a new post
BAM WOULD BE PERFECT CENTER FOR LAKERSThere are rumors Bam may request a trade this summer before his new extension even starts next season. It's been a tough year for the Heat and it's possible they might decide to trade Bam. There are probably offers out there that would beat… https://t.co/OMgLUmwpxE pic.twitter.com/sxaMT8n6Rv— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 25, 2025
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Michael H wrote a new post
Aloha,
Porzingis was just traded to the Hawks with a little help from the Nets. Everyone said this would be a wild year but I didn’t expect this much activity before the draft.
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The Celtics got back Georges Niang and a 2nd round pick. The Nets were clear winners getting the 22nd pick to take on Terrance Mann’s 15 mil salary.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
The New Orleans Pelicans are trading CJ McCollum, Kelly Olynyk and a future second-round pick to the Washington Wizards for Jordan Poole, Saddiq Bey and the No. 40 pick in this year’s draft.
NOLA trying to find the “right guy” to pair with Zion and CJ is too old for that squad. Washington almost done hitting reset after the inexplicable Poole deal they gave out. After next season they’ll have a grip of space. Not sure who will get paid to play there but a least a couple dudes will lol.
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No thanks on Kelly Jamie, in his prime he was a mediocre defender. That’s why he has come off the bench for most of his career. Now he is a traffic cone on defense. You could blow by him. At my advanced age I could blow by him. Yes he can give you 38% from 3 on 1.8 attempts a game but other than that he’s washed.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
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Lakers Make Godfather Offer For Walker Kessler Jazz Cannot Refuse The Lakers make the Jazz a Godfather offer that includes Austin Reaves, Dalton Knecht, and their 2027 and 2031 unprotected first round picks for Walker Kessler, Jordan Clarkson, and Utah two second round picks.… pic.twitter.com/qjpSS7fOpa— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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Lakers Make Godfather Offer For Walker Kessler Jazz Cannot Refuse WHY GO ALL-IN ON WALKER KESSLER?Walker Kessler is not only the ‘right’ player for the Lakers to risk going all-in on and offering Austin Reaves, Dalton Knecht, and two first round picks but his low salary also… pic.twitter.com/gu7RCYqC6u— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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Lakers Make Godfather Offer For Walker Kessler Jazz Cannot Refuse TRADE FOR TWO CHAMPIONSHIP DEFENDERSOnce the Walker Kessler trade is complete, the Lakers will still have $50 million in matching salaries and four first round pick swaps to use to trade for former championship… pic.twitter.com/YRhn0Efp0G— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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That’s a terrible trade Tom. The Bane trade kind of set the bar for an Austin trade. They are the same size, play the same position and their stats are nearly identical. Bane shoots 39% from 3 to Austins 37% but that is about the only difference. Bane is only slightly better defensively. Keep in mind that the Griz defense was one of the worst in the league. The Magic sent KCP and Cole Anthony, two good defensive players and 4 first round picks and a swap. You want to send Austin, Kneckt, and our first for Kessler. I know you believe in over paying but come on man. We have to do better in a Austin trade then that. Try looking for a 3rd team that could use Austin before giving up most of our few assets for one guy.
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LMFAO. You would have to wait until hell freezes over before any team is going to offer what the Grizzlies got for Desmond Bane for Austin Reaves. No team is going to even give the Lakers 2 first round picks for him.
While I would not have given 4 picks and a swap for Bane, he’s a far more valued player than Reaves, a proven high volume, high percentage 2-point shooter with a physicality and strength that Reaves cannot match defensively. There were several writers who proposed Bane as a possible 3&D replacement for Reaves.
If the trade is so horrible, then the Jazz should love it.
The trade is supposed to be a trade the Jazz cannot refuse. My guess is they probably will refuse it. Unless they draft a center in the first round Thursday.-
Of course the Jazz would love it because its a terrible trade that the Lakers would never make.
Austin Bane
20.2 PPG 19.2
2’s % .583 .534
3’s % .377 .392
Assits 5.8 5.3
steals 1.1 1.2
rebounds 4.5 6.1
FT% .877 .89While Bane is a little better defender he’s not a lock down all NBA type defender. Only way the Lakers trade Austin is if they recieve a good return. I don’t see them giving him away. And you want to add a first and Dalton? Danny would love you.
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Tom, he may not be worth 4 1st round because I think the Magic over paid. But he’s worth at least 2 and a foundational player. What makes your trade even worse is giving up our only first and Dalton as well. The Lakers will NEVER do your trade.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Two things the Lakers have zero or very little of, currently. Every trade has seen an expiring contract go to the team unloading the better talent in the name of money management and bottom line stewardship. Holiday for Simmons and 2nd rounders? Almost an insult to one of the best POA players in the game. However, Boston won’t just burn money and with next season being one without Tatum (and a disappointing second round exit to boot) costs will be cut.
Don’t bother asking me if a Porzingis reunion is in the offing, it’s not. We have nothing Boston actually wants (expiring money, draft picks). Couple that with how terribly Porzingis and Luka already showed they are as a tandem and it’s a non-starter on several fronts.
The Lakers have almost no tradeable draft picks, no expiring contracts and players that don’t move the needle all that much to offer in trade. Pick swaps aren’t picks. We can trade one of our 2029 and 2030 first-round picks, as well as a 2025 second-round pick. They also have the ability to swap first-round picks in 2026, 2028, 2030, 2031, and 2032.
So spare us the ESPN-Trade-Machine-clickbait-BS, it’s all just posturing and emptiness. The only real tactic the Lakers are going to embrace is trying to open up as many legal spending tools as they can or watch those go away if LBJ picks up his option. Same goes for DFS, if he picks his option up (almost a guaranteed “no”, I’d say except for that there’s not a ton of money out there this summer).
The real questions is what we do if/when DFS walks. Losing Hayes and DFS would be a severe blow to what defense we have going into the season. They are, at a minimum, both long and, in DFS’ case, skilled. With a shortage of moves it would behoove us to at least lock up DFS Depending on what someone like Capella commands this summer a reunion with Hayes isn’t out of the question, either.
🙂
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LakerTom wrote a new post
WIGGINS SHOULD BE PRIORITY FOR LAKERS!We have long coveted a legitimate small forward who guards other legitimate small forwards and Andrew Wiggins is the perfect fit for the Lakers and Luka.Elite defender who can shoot the three and has championship experience. While Lakers… https://t.co/au6yTOqHxx— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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LAKERS 'NO SETTLE' STRATEGY!First, Identify and prioritize what you need:1-Rim protecting, lob dunking young center2-Point of Attack 3&D 2-Way small forward3-Point of Attack 3&D 2-Way shooting guardSecond, Identify #1 Targets for each need:1-Walker Kessler2-Andrew… https://t.co/w3YX65frpW pic.twitter.com/pLDRmkDHgF— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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Hard pass, too pricey for too little. Next season, when he’s basically an expiring contract, thus more valuable, is a whole other story. He and Rui put up very similar numbers and Rui costs about $10 mil less. Wiggins is better at the rim, probably a better on-ball defender. Rui can switch onto bigger guys better and is more efficient. Especially from three.
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We also have DFS who it sounds like we will resign. He brings the same level of perimeter defense. wiggins hasn’t been the same since the last Warriors championship. I don’t know what happened to him but if you follow the Warriors at all, Wiggins took a lot of heat for the Warrior black slide the last couple of years. He fell off in almost every catigory, including his defense. Rui is our only true PF to give Lebron a rest. Both DFS and Vando our better at defending wings than power forwards and Centers.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Is everything going to change with the Lakers? How is Luka Doncic handling the offseason? What's going on at center? For the Lakers, some of the questions are the same as they ever were https://t.co/yTC4lMZbJO— Dan Woike (@DanWoikeSports) June 24, 2025
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FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE:
Three slammed beers combined with the high from winning a Game 7 led Oklahoma City Thunder guard Alex Caruso to sarcastically proclaim that he’d finally won an NBA championship that could count, that the NBA Bubble jewelry’s new big brother in the family safe had already become his favorite.
Los Angeles Lakers fans, of course, didn’t take this well.
Caruso’s a beloved figure in Los Angeles, the one who got away, the developmental success that helped bridge the bad old days to the 2020 championship in Orlando. The Lakers, sort of infamously now, chose to let Caruso leave in free agency to keep Talen Horton-Tucker — the younger player who they believed had more upside.
They were, of course, wrong.
Why bring all this up now, five years later? This is exactly the kind of situation that Lakers fans think will be avoided once the team is in new owner Mark Walter’s control. And eventually, they could be right. The massive news last week that the team would be under majority control by someone other than a member of the Buss family was viewed as a lifeline. But what does it mean right now?
What changes with the Lakers will fans notice?
Let’s get right into the question I’ve been asked most since Jeanie Buss shockingly agreed to sell the Lakers at a $10 billion evaluation to Walter and his partners. And to be clear, people are shocked, including sources inside the organization and inside the NBA, people who thought this day could eventually come but who didn’t think it would happen so quickly.
The Buss family has had their hands in the Lakers’ biggest successes and wildest failures over the last four-plus decades, and with them taking on minority ownership, their influence will be absent in ways that haven’t been felt in generations. And that’s all over.
Right?
The changes coming for the franchise are sure to be severe, but when those changes actually start is still the big question. It’s reasonable to expect the franchise to operate in functionally the same manner as it has been this offseason, even as it’s set for this massive infusion of cash. The Lakers, of course, won’t be able to retroactively beef up their infrastructure, to build out a modern pro scouting staff, to scour the G League for hidden gems like Caruso. They won’t be able to just fire money at free agents because of the NBA’s second apron essentially functioning as a hard cap.
As the Lakers enter a new era, Walter’s leadership style with the Dodgers offers a glimpse of what to expect.
Some of these decisions, though, haven’t been saving cash. Over the last year or so, the team has focused on sealing off organizational leaks that it felt were detrimental. Tightening the circle around the very top decision-makers allowed the team to pull off a trio of major surprises — their pursuit of UConn coach Dan Hurley, their stunning trade for Luka Dončić and the record-setting $10 billion sale. There’s been an obvious preference to do business more in the shadows, and that has its advantages.
The team has also invested more into developmental and medical technologies, player services and analytics over the past year as they’ve worked to modernize.
The sale might’ve happened overnight; the effects of it will probably move a little slower.
OK, so how are they going to get better?
One, they’re going to have time.
Asked about moving forward with LeBron James and Austin Reaves by his side, Dončić pointed to the gains made in his first offseason with Kyrie Irving, a season that would end with the Dallas Mavericks playing in the NBA Finals.
“It’s tough to get that chemistry on the court without any practices. So I’m really excited to have the preseason with those two, so we can learn about each other on court a lot,” Dončić said after the Lakers were eliminated in late April. “I look back with Kyrie, when he got traded to the Mavs, we didn’t really connect on the court. We didn’t really know each other’s games. Obviously, we see the game, but we don’t see in-game as teammates. So we can see next year, we kind of just had a preseason together. It was just amazing.”
And with Dončić on the court, the Lakers were pretty good — 18-10 in the 28 regular-season games that he played. And when he started with Rui Hachimura, James, Reaves and Jaxson Hayes, the Lakers were 10-3. So, building on that is a good start. Which is good — because the pathways outside of internal growth aren’t all that exciting right now.
Two, Dončić has been incredibly committed to his conditioning this offseason. He’s dropped significant weight and is working on strict diet and cardio training, according to a source with knowledge of the plan. In a shift from his normal offseason, he spent a month away from on-court work to focus more on his body. Dončić has looked visibly slimmer in photos and is now back working out with Slovenia readying for EuroBasket competition later this summer.
Who is going to play center?</B<
The Lakers are absolutely committed to finding a center — the lack of a high-quality big man, along with injuries, was the biggest reason their playoffs ended after just five games. Who that center is, though, is still a big question — and the long-term answer might not even be an option as of right now.
In free agency, the Lakers have limited resources — a $5.7 million taxpayer exception and veteran minimum salaries to offer. In deals, they have one tradable first-round pick, some first-round swaps that got a whole lot less valuable after they landed Dončić. We know Dalton Knecht, a first and a swap was good enough to get a deal done with Mark Williams. And since 29 teams know that’s what the Lakers are willing to pay for a big, you bet that’s where the asking price is going to start. It is also a hint at the kind of play the Lakers prefer — a young center with room to develop alongside Dončić.
Wednesday’s NBA Draft first round — The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie currently has seven bigs mocked in the first 30 picks — could reset the market a little bit and shake free some of the younger centers the Lakers covet. Maybe Duke’s Khaman Maluach lands in a situation where a team is ready to make him a Day 1 starter, and a reliable player suddenly hits the market at a price the Lakers like.
The talk at the start of the Lakers’ offseason was that Dallas’ Daniel Gafford and Brooklyn’s Nic Claxton were the two players who made the most sense. There just remains so much leaguewide skepticism that the Mavericks could optically make another trade with the Lakers after the open revolt of the fan base following the Dončić deal. Claxton isn’t thought of as a shoo-in as the answer at the position, and if he costs you your best trade package, is it a gamble worth doing?
Otherwise, it’s basically the same names that have been out there for months — a list of players who come with red flags, unattainable price tags and poor on-court fits. Still, there’s urgency to find an answer — either short- or long-term.
One thing that won’t happen — another Dončić-Kristaps Porziņģis pairing. There’s no indication that anyone wants to see that sequel.
What else is out there for them?
The template for what works around Dončić is pretty clear. You need an athletic center who can work at the rim on both ends of the court. You need a secondary playmaker who can create on or off the ball. You need shooters who can make open catch-and-shoot opportunities out of rhythm. And you need athletic defenders. The Lakers have the alternate creators — James, at least for a little while longer, and Reaves. Hachimura has shown that he’s got value as a shooter and an improving defender who can guard up in small-ball lineups. Everything else …. needs some work.
Are there lessons from the finals the Lakers should take?
I don’t think there’s real value in the Lakers trying to play like the Thunder or the Indiana Pacers. The lesson of the NBA Finals is the lesson that always exists in modern basketball — you have to accentuate your roster’s strengths while hiding as many weaknesses as you can. Depth was a huge factor for those two teams, and better, more consistent depth will be one for the Lakers.
Simply, they’ll have to do something they did so well when they landed Caruso: find roster upgrades on the margins, smartly and deliberately using roster exceptions in a weak free-agent class to unearth players who would most benefit from new situations and new opportunities.
And while the organization has been undergoing massive change, that need is the same as it ever was.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
THE CHANGE IS PELINKA WILL BE ACCOUNTABLE!ACCOUNTABILITY IS THE BIG DIFFERENCE!While Woike is right this offseason will be run by the same front office, the significant difference will be that Rob Pelinka will be fully accountable for what he does this summer.… https://t.co/VF3CbYBlhh— LakerTom (@LakerTom) June 24, 2025
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One pick and multiple swaps. They can probably do better.
Awesome source lol…