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    TWO LAKERS HAVE MOST STEALS THIS MONTH!

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    LUKA CARRYING 7TH HIGHEST LOAD IN NBA AND IS VERY EFFICIENT!

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    LUKA FIRST TO AVERAGE OVER 40 PPG SINCE MJ!

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    MOST WINS AGAINST .500 TEAMS!

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    JAXSON HAYES' ELITE DEFENSE LAST 2 GAMES!

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    JJ'S STRANGE LINEUP GAMBLE IS ALREADY LOOKING LIKE GENIUS!

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      The 2025-26 season has been a lot of things for the Los Angeles Lakers. Rollercoaster might be the most fitting description.

      In my many years of watching the NBA, I don’t know if I’ve seen a team with contention hopes go through as many identity and rotation changes as this Lakers team has. But it appears now, with 10 games to go in LA’s season, the group has finally found its footing.

      Since the All-Star break, the Lakers are 13-5 and are 9-1 in their last 10 games. A huge reason for this run has obviously been Luka Doncic, who has scored 30 or more points in his last 10 games. But what may actually be the biggest reason is the starting lineup change JJ Redick made.

      The second-year head coach made a risky call to roll with three guards in Luka, Austin Reaves, and Marcus Smart, while having Deandre Ayton and LeBron play in the front court. This decision was a questionable one at first, as the Lakers were going to be undersized in most matchups, and on paper, this five isn’t great defensively.

      However, the original reaction is the complete opposite of reality because this lineup has been incredible.

      JJ Redick’s unorthodox approach is paying off for the Lakers
      All season, there were rumors and reports that the Lakers were searching for a point-of-attack defender or a 3-and-D wing to slot in between Reaves and Luka. Who would’ve thought that this team had that player on their roster the entire time in Smart?

      Since taking on this role, Smart has flourished and is playing the best defense of his post-Boston career.

      As a long-time follower of Smart, the key to unlocking him defensively comes down to challenging him. He’s always been the type of defender who has tools on that end, but his competitive edge and toughness are what make him great on that end.

      By having him guarding opposing teams’ best wings and players much taller than him as a 6-foot-3 guard, he is being challenged and forced to compete extremely hard to have a chance to get a stop. This has maximized everyone else in the starting five defensively.

      Smart taking on these challenges makes life easier for Luka and LeBron on that end. Also, by having him string together stops on the perimeter, it’s limited the amount of work Ayton needs to do as a rim protector.

      A notable stat that highlights Smart’s impact since JJ Redick made this lineup change is that he leads the team in plus-minus since the All-Star break, and it’s not close. Smart is a +154 since the break, and the second closest on that list is Luka as a +137.

      When Redick originally decided to go with a three-guard lineup, many were left puzzled. The gamble has helped unlock the Lakers’ full potential, and the rest of the league is getting nervous about what that could mean come playoff time.

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    LAKERS FIND ANSWERS & CONFIDENCE IN 6-GAME ROAD TRIP!

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    LAKERS IN LAST 15 GAMES!

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    BRONNY HELPS LEBRON AND LAKERS BEAT PACERS!

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      INDIANAPOLIS — The teammates stood, two names on Los Angeles Lakers coach JJ Redick’s substitution matrix, side by side at the scorer’s table in the second half Wednesday night.

      The Laker on the right did his best to stay locked into the game, to try and calm his breaths and focus on the job in front of him: get stops, play hard, be aggressive. The Laker on the left did his best to take the moment in — one that’s been building for years, a shared bond that other teammates in the NBA have never shared.

      Both leaned back against the blue cushion atop the table and waited for the horn to announce their entrance. Each crossed their arms in the exact same way.

      Late in the third quarter, play stopped and the announcer said, “In for the Lakers, Bronny James Jr. and LeBron James.”

      A lot has happened in the 16 months or so since the teammates made NBA history as the first father and son to play in the same game. For Bronny, the novelty has largely worn off as he’s tried to earn a regular spot in the league — even if he noticed the work genetics did as they stood identically Wednesday night in the third quarter of the Lakers’ 137-130 win.

      “I’ve been around him and basketball at the same time for a while now, so it’s not that special,” Bronny said after the game. “The first couple times were, of course, but it’s my second year now. And I’m just trying to prove myself.”

      With Marcus Smart dealing with an ankle injury and the team ready to get the hell back home, the Lakers needed to find energy. And as they looked down the roster, the coaching staff tabbed Bronny to provide it.

      “Felt like this was a game we really needed him,” Redick said. “It was a game that, you know, his athleticism, his defense…. we saw it last year, and we’re seeing it again this year, just his growth as a player.”

      But for the player standing next to Bronny at the scorer’s table, Wednesday was absolutely special. It was no gimmick, the two playing alongside one another. It was another stage in a remarkable comeback that people often forget when talking about the Lakers’ 2024 second-round pick.

      “Especially knowing the path, you know, the road …,” LeBron James told The Athletic. “So, just proud of him. I’m super proud of him. And he belongs. He belongs.”

      That path, of course, changed on July 24, 2023, when Bronny suffered cardiac arrest during a summer workout with the USC basketball team. Trainers and emergency responders helped save his life. Surgery corrected a congenital heart defect.

      In one of their most recent conversations about basketball, LeBron said he saw a look in his oldest son’s eyes — one he hadn’t noticed since before the incident. That look, he said, was his son saying “I’m back to where I was,” — confidence in his game, body and mindset all aligning at once.

      “Physically, mentally, spiritually, emotionally, he’s back,” LeBron said.

      For the Lakers, Wednesday was another moment that reinforced the Lakers’ belief that Bronny is a NBA player, that their investment in his development was wise and that their proclamation that he’s “case study one” for the player development program bodes well for their plans.

      Forget the meager NBA season stats — the eye test, especially when given extended opportunities like Wednesday, has Redick and the Lakers positive they have a real NBA player on their hands.

      Postgame, Redick said Bronny’s first-half defense was terrific. A one-handed dunk along the baseline showcased the athleticism he’s learning to consistently unleash. And a pull-up midrange jumper late in the fourth settled things as the Pacers made their final push.

      All of it came in the context of the Lakers trying to win a basketball game, scratching out enough energy to win for the fifth time on a six-game road trip with the flight home looming.

      Pregame, Lakers coaches were nervous about the 48 minutes ahead. The Pacers, fresh off beating Orlando, were a group they felt were better than their 16-57 record. The Lakers were gassed and ready to get off the road, their guards nearing exhaustion after a stretch against Denver, Houston, Miami, Orlando and Detroit. And they were banged up — Smart, Rui Hachimura, Deandre Ayton and rookie Adou Thiero all unable to play.

      Thanks to another dominant start from Luka Dončić, the Lakers quickly led. They were up 17 when Bronny checked into the game late in the first and led by 22 when he exited in the second. At no point during the shift did he look out of place, at no point did any of it feel orchestrated.

      “Real, meaningful minutes. I couldn’t dream of better. I couldn’t dream of something better than that. Just couldn’t,” LeBron told The Athletic. “For him to go out and, you know, I mean obviously he’s… he’s shown over this — almost two years, year and a half — his progression. And why he belongs in this league. And what he can do in this league.

      “So, for the coaching staff to trust him tonight, and for him to have significant playing time and make … make plays — and for me to be out there on the floor with him — that’s … I couldn’t, I couldn’t dream of a better feeling than that. I could not.”

      Away from the bright lights (as much as he can be), the 20-year-old has made strides, as any rookie would hope: “I see the progress.”

      For those paying attention to the NBA’s G League, Bronny’s improvement shouldn’t come as a surprise. After a slow start during the league’s tip-off tournament, he’s been terrific on assignment, averaging 15.3 points on 54.6/42.1/90.9 shooting splits.

      It’s an example of hard work paying off — something Bronny, like those crossed arms and big vertical, inherited.

      “That’s what he’s cut from. That’s just our household. Our household, we don’t, we don’t do s– half-assed. That’s just how we work. Our whole household. Everybody. Mom, sister, brother, dad, everybody. That’s just how we, that’s how we… that’s where we come from. We come from the Midwest, and we come from Akron, Ohio where ain’t s— really given to you,” LeBron told The Athletic.

      “So, like I said before, like the kid, he doesn’t have to do this. After having the situation that he had, you think he had to really, like, work his way to get back in shape and play basketball? He could have been like ‘Man, f— this s—. Like ‘I’m gonna do anything I want.’”

      Wednesday, Bronny got what he wanted.

      “Feels good,” he said after. “You know, just go out there and play my game, be confident in myself. That’s what I always wanted to do.”

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    IZTOK FRANKO: LAKERS GAME OBSERVATIONS: GAME 73 @ PACERS

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    LAKERS CLOSER TO THUNDER & SPURS THAN NUGGETS, WOLVES, & ROCKETS!

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    LeBron was a plus 24 and Luka was a plus 6. Kinda put to bed this PLUS/MINUS stuff.

    WHEW!

    LeBron was a plus 24 and Luka was a plus 6. Kinda put to bed this PLUS/MINUS stuff.

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    LAKERS - PACERS STARTERS TONIGHT!

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    ARE LAKERS CONTENDERS? WHAT THE NUMBERS SAY!

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    • FROM THE ABOVE ARTICLE:

      ORLANDO, Fla. — They did it again.

      With two seconds left in Orlando on Saturday and trailing by two points, the Los Angeles Lakers managed to find Luke Kennard standing by himself at the 3-point line on a baseline out-of-bounds play, from which point the NBA’s leading 3-point shooter calmly deposited in the go-ahead points to allow his team to leave with a 105-104 win.

      As Lakers fans undoubtedly know, that scene has hardly been uncommon the past two years. While L.A.’s late-game mojo didn’t carry over into Detroit on Monday, the Lakers are an astounding 21-7 in games decided by five points or fewer this season and 22-7 in games NBA.com defines as “clutch” (games that were within five points in the last five minutes) after going 23-16 in similar games a year earlier.

      The Lakers’ recent nine-game winning streak, in particular, got a big narrative boost thanks to a pair of unlikely clutch wins. Look, 7-2 in a tough stretch of schedule is nice, but nine straight is news. Fittingly, the Lakers won one game where they successfully intentionally missed a free throw at the end (Austin Reaves’s perfect plunk off the front rim against Denver that allowed him to make a game-tying shot) and another one where they unsuccessfully intentionally missed a free throw (Deandre Ayton’s line drive caromed straight into the floor and to Orlando seconds before Kennard’s heroics).

      So yes, the Lakers are an odd team, much as they were a year ago. They have an A-list superstar in his prime and an all-time legend who still delivers, and surround it all with another 20-point scorer in Reaves and the pedigree of being one of the league’s marquee franchises.

      On the other hand … they just haven’t been that good for most of the year. The Lakers are 46-26 entering Wednesday’s visit to Indiana, but have the point differential of a team that’s 39-33 — a record that would only be seventh in the West and tied for 14th in the entire NBA.

      Injuries have been part of the story — somehow, some way, Jake LaRavia is second on this team in total minutes — but the Lakers aren’t the only team in the NBA to have a player miss a game. Their three difference makers have missed 69 games between them, but many of their rivals in the standings can tell similar sob stories.

      Despite the meh scoring differential, the Lakers have unquestionably forced us to think of them as a postseason force of late. They are once again tracking to be the third seed in the West, and with better underlying numbers than a year ago, when they won 50 games with the league’s 14th-best net rating at just +1.2 a game.

      Moreover, the recent run of success feels a lot less fluky than some of Los Angeles’ early-season escapes. The Lakers are only 25-19 in “non-crunch-time” games this year, which is usually a better indicator of a team’s quality and thus a not-great one for L.A.’s postseason viability, but nearly half the wins have been since the All-Star break.

      In fact, the recent non-clutch games may be a much better reason to believe in Los Angeles’ legitimacy than the Houdini acts against Denver or Orlando. While the nine-game winning streak was greased by a couple of unlikely, fantastic finishes that may be hard to conjure up on demand, the Lakers are also 10-1 in their last 11 non-crunch time games. What that means, basically, is that they are winning games easily quite often, and rarely losing the same way — the polar opposite of where they were the first half of the season, and the biggest predictive “tell” of a team’s true quality.

      Since getting pummeled by Boston 111-89 in their second game out of the All-Star break, the Lakers have not only won the non-crunch games, but won them against good teams. This is an important distinction, as we’ve seen the last-season schedule distort many other teams’ results (greetings, Hawks fans!), which are padded by routs of the league’s eight shameless tankers.

      The Lakers, however, haven’t been fattening up on the underclass. The Sacramento Kings and the Chicago Bulls are the only two teams they’ve played in this stretch that have given up on the season. L.A.’s stretch of non-clutch wins includes a pair in Houston, one at Miami, and surprisingly easy home wins against the New York Knicks and the Minnesota Timberwolves. Since that game against Boston, they have yet to lose by more than seven points.

      I’m dancing around the real topic here, so let’s take a more direct line: These results are pretty important as far as the “Are they a contender?” question that hangs over the Lakers, for this season and as they plan their future.

      On multiple levels, their recent run of play has turned a hard “no” into a “maybe?”

      Let’s set aside for a minute the fact that the top two teams in the West have been playing at a god level for the last month and look utterly unstoppable, and consider the Lakers against the historic norms required for contention.

      Long-time readers are familiar with me saying this, but I’ll go ahead and say it again: If you aren’t one of the top-three seeds and haven’t won at least 52 games, your odds of winning a championship are infinitesimally small.

      We’ve had only one of the last 48 champions meet that criteria (the 1996 Houston Rockets), and with at least 10 playoff teams in each of those seasons that were below my cut line, it means any individual team in this bucket is about a 1-in-400 proposition historically.

      Thus, the goal for any wannabe contender is to finish the regular season outside that bucket. In fact, three weeks ago, I wrote dismissively of the Lakers’ chances for that very reason.

      The win streak changed that trajectory. Historically, the part about “winning at least 52 games” is important — top-three seeds with fewer than 52 wins have a long, proud history of getting thrashed in the playoffs, including a preponderance of the first-round upsets involving second and third seeds. Astute readers will note that the list includes last year’s L.A. quad, a No. 3 seed but one with just 50 wins, and one that was excused in five games by Minnesota in the first round.

      Welp … after winning nine straight in a tough stretch of schedule, the Lakers have suddenly banked 46 wins, which means six more gets them to the magical 52 threshold. From here, the road to 52 doesn’t seem difficult — the team has five games left against tankers (including the upcoming Murderer’s Row of Indiana-Brooklyn-Washington) and six at home. While it also plays the mighty Oklahoma City Thunder twice, L.A.’s path to 52 is achievable solely by winning the five gimmes and defeating a reeling Golden State team, even if the Lakers lose their other four games.

      With a win total of 52 or above, the Lakers are almost assured of remaining in a top-three seed as well. ESPN BPI projects the Rockets and Wolves to reach 49 or 50 wins, with the Nuggets grabbing 51. Additionally, the Lakers won the tiebreak against all three teams and would win any multi-team tie; a team like Denver has to pass them, not just catch them. (That intentional miss by Reaves two weeks ago looms quite large here!)

      As others have written, the Lakers’ improving chemistry among their three perimeter stars has played a big role in their surge, and the timing doesn’t seem accidental. As I noted a year ago, incorporating an extremely high-usage player such as Luka Dončić is difficult enough in the offseason, let alone mid-stream after the shocking trade from Dallas last February. It seemed like it took a full year before L.A. finally struck the right balance with LeBron James and Reaves. Between that, the Kennard trade and some improved health, their move up the West food chain seems entirely believable.

      Of course, at this point, I should probably discuss the elephant in the room. If we’re going to talk euphorically about the Lakers returning to the NBA’s contender class, we also must include an orca-sized pillar of salt. The Lakers are playing their best basketball of the season, by far, and yet even in that stretch, the two teams they must beat, the Thunder and the San Antonio Spurs, have still been better.

      Oklahoma City has won 12 in a row and gone 15-1 since the break, with the only loss coming at Detroit in a game that Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein and Alex Caruso all missed. San Antonio, meanwhile, is 22-2 in its last 24 games with 16 double-digit wins. Scary.

      Historically, plenty of teams that technically had “contender” metrics were still obliterated in the playoffs because they ran into a buzzsaw like Oklahoma City or San Antonio. Of the six teams that seem likely to meet my contender criteria this season (three in the West, plus Detroit, Boston and New York), only one can win the title. Of those six, the Lakers unquestionably would have the worst odds in the group.

      What this recent run of play does do, however, is at least put the Lakers in the Jim Carrey zone — yes, I’m saying there’s a chance. It didn’t seem that way a few weeks ago.

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    LAKERS WILL BE W/O AYTON, SMART, HACHIMURA, & THIERO!

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