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    Jimmy Butler tears ACL

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    Luka named an All-Star starter as Laker for first time

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    make the All Star Team or there should be an investigation! IMHO

    LeBron better

    make the All Star Team or there should be an investigation! IMHO

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    At the halfway point we’ve seen a lot of different looks from the Lakers. Multiple starting lineups, multiple rotations off the bench, all sorts of injuries and lots more questions than answers. Let’s start with at least one solid answer.

    1) Luka is the future. For all my issues with Luka’s defense and carping to the refs I still make the trade for him 10 out of 10 times. He needs to keep discovering when to empower his teammates vs. getting himself going. He tries on D and needs roster help on that end. There is no over stating his ability to impact the game. He needs players that better compliment him on both ends.

    2) LeBron James is a wonder and also a huge question mark over the next season or two. The last 3-4 games James has looked himself on both ends, making smart athletic plays, timely scoring all while continuing to blaze trails in every NBA record book. The problem here is there is no future for the team with his salary on the roster, at least at this amount. The LeBron question will look over and dominate the summer but now that’s he’s gotten his legs under him he is right back to playing at an All NBA level.

    3) The front office needs to figure out a vision and an identity they’re striving to build. They have a roster built more for Darvin Ham, they have a coach that is more wonky with concepts than charismatic managing personalities and team built for neither of its superstars while mulling retaining a future 3rd superstar. None of it works very well together. The front office needs to truly start building a Luka or Luka/Resves team. If there are current players that don’t fit that mold they need to be aggressively moved simply to open up the space needed to try other players out. I don’t see much action for us on the trade front but if you can move any of these guys simply for some second round picks that needs to strongly be considered. The league is getting younger, we are not. It’s a problem we don’t have an obvious answer to.

    4) If Reaves is the future we can’t keep Rui. I like Rui but he lacks aggression and is too content to lay back and simply do what’s asked. However, if there is indeed a ceiling at which the Lakers aren’t willing to go past to keep Austin then they need to trade him. Losing Rui for cap space to keep Reaves is acceptable, losing both for nothing would be an unmitigated disaster.

    5) We could use some health luck. If guys are sitting with minor aches and bruises they need to stop. We’re on the verge of loaf managing (not a typo, I straight wrote loaf managing) our way into the playin and a difficult summer. Get tough, Lakers, that starts with Luka.

    5er: Tale of Two Teams

    At the halfway point we’ve seen a lot of different looks from the Lakers. Multiple starting lineups, multiple rotations off the bench, all sorts of injuries and lots more questions than answers. Let’s start with at least one solid answer.

    1) Luka is the future. For all my issues with Luka’s defense and carping to the refs I still make the trade for him 10 out of 10 times. He needs to keep discovering when to empower his teammates vs. getting himself going. He tries on D and needs roster help on that end. There is no over stating his ability to impact the game. He needs players that better compliment him on both ends.

    2) LeBron James is a wonder and also a huge question mark over the next season or two. The last 3-4 games James has looked himself on both ends, making smart athletic plays, timely scoring all while continuing to blaze trails in every NBA record book. The problem here is there is no future for the team with his salary on the roster, at least at this amount. The LeBron question will look over and dominate the summer but now that’s he’s gotten his legs under him he is right back to playing at an All NBA level.

    3) The front office needs to figure out a vision and an identity they’re striving to build. They have a roster built more for Darvin Ham, they have a coach that is more wonky with concepts than charismatic managing personalities and team built for neither of its superstars while mulling retaining a future 3rd superstar. None of it works very well together. The front office needs to truly start building a Luka or Luka/Resves team. If there are current players that don’t fit that mold they need to be aggressively moved simply to open up the space needed to try other players out. I don’t see much action for us on the trade front but if you can move any of these guys simply for some second round picks that needs to strongly be considered. The league is getting younger, we are not. It’s a problem we don’t have an obvious answer to.

    4) If Reaves is the future we can’t keep Rui. I like Rui but he lacks aggression and is too content to lay back and simply do what’s asked. However, if there is indeed a ceiling at which the Lakers aren’t willing to go past to keep Austin then they need to trade him. Losing Rui for cap space to keep Reaves is acceptable, losing both for nothing would be an unmitigated disaster.

    5) We could use some health luck. If guys are sitting with minor aches and bruises they need to stop. We’re on the verge of loaf managing (not a typo, I straight wrote loaf managing) our way into the playin and a difficult summer. Get tough, Lakers, that starts with Luka.

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    Iztok Franko: Lakers Game Observations: Game 41 vs Raptors

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Much-needed quality wire-to-wire win
      The Lakers still have some fight left.

      Just like they did after a recent three-game losing streak, when they responded with a quality win against Atlanta, they bounced back again here. This time with a very solid, end-to-end performance against the fourth-best team in the East, the Toronto Raptors (25–19).

      The Lakers haven’t had many double-digit wins this season, especially against above-.500 opposition. So seeing them put their foot on the gas and win decisively was a welcome sight for a team about to head out on the road for the next 15 days, with eight straight away games during the Grammy trip.

      Source: ESPN

      Today’s notes:

      JJ flips the game with zone and super-big lineups

      Ayton thriving inside against another smaller team (🎞️VIDEO)

      Vando thriving in a junked-up, zone-heavy game

      Two-option attack (🎞️VIDEO)

      Gimme Timme (🎞️VIDEO)

      1-JJ flips the game with zone and super-big lineups

      The way the game started, it looked like it might be one of those nights where the Lakers are overmatched by a young, athletic opponent. With Jakob Poeltl sidelined, the Raptors didn’t play a traditional center, instead starting three long wings: Scottie Barnes, Brandon Ingram, and super-active rookie Collin Murray-Boyles. The latter gave the Lakers all kinds of problems early, blocking two Luka Dončić shots (one being an obvious goaltend) and crashing the glass. The Raptors grabbed four offensive rebounds and scored 18 points in the paint in the first quarter, building a seven-point lead.

      JJ Redick had seen enough of the Raptors bullying their way inside and decided to junk up the game. He opened the second quarter with a super-big lineup of Marcus Smart, LeBron James, Jarred Vanderbilt, Drew Timme, and Deandre Ayton, closing the lid on the paint by having the Lakers play mostly zone for the rest of the game and leaning into super-big lineups with Ayton, Timme and Vanderbilt again in the fourth.

      It was a smart strategy against one of the worst shooting teams in the NBA, allowing the Lakers to pack the paint. And the longer the Raptors couldn’t buy a three—they finished the game 7-of-32 from deep—the more confident and persistent the Lakers became with the zone.

      41 zone possessions marked the fifth-highest zone usage frequency in a game this season. Only the Bucks (three times) and the Timberwolves have played more zone in a single game than the Lakers did last night, per Genius Sports tracking data.

      2-Ayton thriving inside against another smaller team (🎞️VIDEO)

      If the defensive recipe was different, the success on the other end looked familiar, echoing what the Lakers did in their previous win against Atlanta. In that game, Deandre Ayton punished the smaller Hawks, who featured Onyeka Okongwu (6’10”) at center, by dominating the glass and consistently scoring against an undersized backline defense.

      Already without Poeltl, the Raptors also lost Murray-Boyles to a hand injury in the second half and had no player taller than 6’9” available in this game. The Lakers looked to feed Ayton inside early, which resulted in a couple of early James turnovers.

      But unlike in some other games, when those mishaps might deter them from going back to Ayton, the Lakers stayed with it. Ayton rewarded that persistence by going a perfect 10-of-10 from the field, scoring 25 points and collecting 13 rebounds for his ninth 20-and-10 game of the season.

      Dončić had four assists finding Ayton inside, while James and Smart added three each. The Smart experience is always a bit of a rodeo. He had some wild passes and a team-high five turnovers in this one. But when it comes to Ayton, he has been one of the most deliberate playmakers all season, consistently trying to get the enigmatic big man going.

      3-Vando thriving in a junked-up, zone-heavy game

      Vanderbilt is another player whose uncontrolled game can swing chaos on both ends, for better or worse. I have written a lot about his limitations as a shooter and how that has affected Lakers spacing during the recent stretch in which he has been getting significant rotation minutes.

      Despite his reputation as an elite defender, his on-ball defense against top wing scorers and his off-ball work, where he is gamble-prone and often undisciplined, have not been impactful enough to consistently compensate for those offensive limitations.

      However, last night’s less predictable environment, with heavy zone usage that allowed him to roam and disrupt passing lanes, was far more suitable for his game. And he delivered one of his better all-around performances, often serving as a key defender in big lineups while collecting nine rebounds, two steals, and two blocks in a vintage, energy-filled 21 minutes.

      Lakers Nation
      @LakersNation
      JJ Redick on Jarred Vanderbilt:

      “When our team is at our best, we have guys that star in their roles without necessarily scoring the basketball… Vando has now had a month-long stretch, outside of a couple games, where he’s starred in his role, and tonight was another example
      9:11 PM · Jan 18, 2026 · 44.7K Views
      6 Replies · 40 Reposts · 913 Likes

      4-Two-option attack (🎞️VIDEO)

      With Austin Reaves out, Redick has leaned more heavily into staggering Luka and LeBron to keep one primary playmaker on the floor at all times. And over the last couple of games, the Lakers have essentially run two different offenses. One look is a Luka-led, big pick-and-roll heavy attack. The other shifts to LeBron as a mismatch hub, operating either on the block or from the elbow.

      Last night, the Lakers were far more successful with the latter option, having Smart initiate empty-side pick actions to get LeBron into mismatch situations and play off that advantage. The Lakers also did a good job using Vanderbilt and others in weakside actions to mitigate the lack of shooting and prevent defenders from sagging off them and collapsing into the paint.

      The Lakers went on two of their biggest runs with Dončić on the bench, leaning into big lineups and running the offense through James. They did create good looks with Dončić at the helm as well, especially in the second quarter, but failed to convert several wide-open attempts from beyond the arc.

      I know the internet and player stans will turn this into another poisonous Luka versus LeBron debate. I would rather appreciate the fact that Redick can throw different looks and attack from different angles over the course of 48 minutes.

      5-Gimme Timme (🎞️VIDEO)

      When the Lakers decided to replace Christian Koloko with the 25-year-old, 6’10 Drew Timme as their end-of-bench backup center option on a two-way deal in late November, it was an intriguing move. Koloko profiles as a lob-catching big in the mold of Jaxson Hayes, while Timme’s skill set is entirely different.

      Timme got the chance to show that he is a uniquely skilled big man, one who can operate and punish mismatches on the block, hit the open three, make a floater on the move, and pass. He did exactly that when he got his first real opportunity, collecting 19 points and three assists in 14 minutes against the Trail Blazers.

      Still, seeing Timme play 16 minutes in this game was a surprise, but also a reminder of the value of a floor-stretching big skill set that we have not seen next to Dončić in a while. Maxi Kleber filled that role during the 2022 Conference Finals run, but has not been a reliable or willing shooter since. Timme hit a pick-and-pop three out of an action with Dončić, showing that a pop threat can be just as lethal and just as important as a vertical lob threat.

      Timme lacks the size and athleticism, and the Lakers lack a long, defensive-minded four to mitigate his defensive limitations, making it difficult for him to carve out a larger role. But if he can continue to fill a situational niche and provide a different pitch in certain matchups, his diverse skill set can be a valuable addition to an otherwise very limited Lakers bench.

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    LeBron James has now scored 51,000 CAREER POINTS

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    Drew Timme Has Another Excellent Game

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    Lakers finish first half of season with big win over Raptors

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    We are not getting loose balls at all. Wide open 3;s for their Big. Luka forcing everything not looking others except stupid passes. If LBJ doesn’t look to score, we toast!

    TO'S and

    We are not getting loose balls at all. Wide open 3;s for their Big. Luka forcing everything not looking others except stupid passes. If LBJ doesn’t look to score, we toast!

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    Starters missing (2 All Stars). No way to win that game with LBJ and the “B” team. Trouble brewing tonite too?

    Basically 4

    Starters missing (2 All Stars). No way to win that game with LBJ and the “B” team. Trouble brewing tonite too?

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    • This part of the season resembles last year. Lost to Charlotte, and then lost to the Jazz. But at least we got surprises from Maxi Kleber and Drew Timme. Marcus Smart was obviously the best player for the Lakers.

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    Iztok Franko: Stats With Context: 40-Game Check

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Forty games in, nearly half a season under the belt, and it’s time for a 40-game check.

      I always try to embed bits of big-picture context and emerging trends into game previews and post-game observations, but these checkpoints are where I step back to track meaningful shifts and evaluate the Lakers’ progress over the course of the season.

      If the 10-game check was about perseverance and overcoming early-season injury woes, the 20-game check came at the high point of the season: an 8–2 run, a 15–5 record, and second place in the West — despite advanced numbers suggesting things looked better on the surface than they did under the hood.

      Since then, those early warning signs on defense have only been reinforced. A new wave of injuries followed, most notably the calf strain to the team’s second-best scorer and key connector, Austin Reaves, and the Lakers now find themselves in free-fall.

      The Lakers are 9–11 since the 20-game check, banged up, and heading into an eight-game road trip. Reinforcements of any kind, whether through health or outside help, feel increasingly necessary.

      digginbasketball is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

      Today’s highlights:

      Quick look at the Western Conference race

      Lakers point differential and Four Factors check

      Still elite at a lot of things on offense

      Defense so bad that even good offense is often not good enough

      Injuries, rotation, and reality check

      Luka and his three-point shooting trend

      Questions and needs heading into the trade deadline

      1-Quick look at the Western Conference race

      Chart context: As always, we’ll start with a big-picture conference view before zooming in on the Lakers. A couple of quick observations:

      The Thunder remain in a league of their own in point differential, though they no longer look quite as unbeatable as they did earlier in the season. The Rockets rank second in point differential and boast a top-five offense and defense, but late-game execution issues have them sitting only sixth in the standings.

      Meanwhile, the Timberwolves, Nuggets, and Spurs are bunched tightly together, both in point differential and in the standings, forming a clear and compact top-five group in the West.

      Unfortunately for the Lakers, what we’ve seen all season and what was partially masked by their still league-best 13–1 clutch record is that they don’t belong in that top-five group. Even more telling, despite still sitting a few wins ahead of the Suns and the Warriors, both teams have a significantly better point differential.

      As the charts show, all of the Lakers’ direct competitors, meaning all of the aforementioned teams except the Nuggets, who have the league’s best offense, rank inside the NBA’s top ten defenses. The defining story of the Lakers over the last 20 games has been the opposite. Their defense has collapsed from roughly league average into bottom-five territory since our last check.

      2-Lakers point differential and Four Factors check

      Stats context: I won’t go deep here, as we’ll dissect the offense and defense in the sections that follow. What matters at a high level is this: the Lakers are the only team above .500 with a negative point differential. Teams you would consider true contenders all sit at +5.0 or better, while the Lakers profile much closer to the average .500 team they have been over the last 20 games.

      Injuries have clearly played a role. Absences for Austin Reaves, Rui Hachimura, and LeBron James earlier in the season, combined with Luka Dončić missing games in between, have taken a real toll. The Lakers simply have not had a fully healthy group for anything resembling a five or ten game stretch. But since James returned in mid-November, even during relatively healthy stretches or when JJ Redick leaned more heavily on defense-minded lineups, the Lakers’ defense has continued to show signs of structural flaws that will be very hard to overcome with the roster as currently constructed.

      3–Still elite at a lot of things on offense

      Stats context: At a glance, many aspects of the Lakers offense still look strong. They rank seventh overall and remain a top-three half-court attack. They have been the most efficient team inside the arc all season and continue to lead the league there, even if that efficiency has begun to trend slightly downward in recent weeks.

      With Dončić and Reaves, the Lakers have consistently lived at the free-throw line. They still lead the league in free-throw rate, but that reliance is becoming riskier as league-wide foul calls continue to decline.

      The problem for the Lakers is that there is not much else beyond that core efficiency. A lack of three-point shooting has been an issue all season, and they rank in the bottom five in three-point accuracy. They also turn the ball over too much and fail to create advantages on the margins, whether by crashing the offensive glass or consistently generating points in transition.

      As a result, the offense tops out closer to good than truly elite. To survive with a defense like this, the Lakers would need an offense operating in the top-three range, closer to the model used by the Nuggets, rather than hovering around seventh.

      4–Defense so bad that even good offense is often not good enough

      Chart context: Why include an offensive trend chart in a section focused on defense? Because the story of the first half of the season was that when the offense clicked, everything else became survivable. Taking care of the ball and scoring efficiently allowed the Lakers to get set on defense and be just good enough on that end to win games. That formula held for a long stretch. Until the recent losses against the Hornets and Kings, the Lakers had won every game in which their offense performed above league average.

      But the Lakers have run into two problems lately. First, they have struggled to generate good offense against strong defensive teams like the Rockets, Pistons, Spurs, and the Suns. Second, even against lesser opponents, the defense has degraded to a point where it cannot survive hot stretches. Teams like the Kings and the Hornets did not just get hot. They consistently created clean looks and turned DeMar DeRozan, LaMelo Ball, and Miles Bridges into unstoppable forces.

      Since December 1st, the Lakers have been the second-worst defense in the NBA, trailing only the Jazz, a team clearly in a rebuilding phase and not prioritizing defense.

      The Lakers currently lack both a defensive identity and identifiable defensive talent. They switch frequently, but do not have the foot speed to contain the ball, nor the awareness, length, or quickness to consistently provide help in the gaps. Once opponents beat the first line of defense, there is little resistance behind it. The Lakers are the worst rim-protecting team in the league, allowing 74 percent shooting on non-transition attempts at the rim, and they also rank bottom five in opponent field goal percentage in the paint.

      5–Injuries, rotation, and reality check

      Chart context: If we split the season into two 20-game segments, the most notable takeaway from the rotation is availability. Two of the three key players missed significant time, with James sidelined for much of the first stretch and Reaves absent for large portions of the second.

      Hachimura was another rotation player who missed a key stretch recently, as did Jaxson Hayes. Beyond reinforcing how important Reaves is as the team’s clear second-most important player, those absences also exposed a roster reality. Hachimura’s shooting and Hayes’ athleticism are two skill sets that simply have no replacement on the current roster. Jarred Vanderbilt saw his minutes increase after falling out of the rotation earlier in the season, but his defensive impact was not nearly significant enough to change the overall makeup of the team. Nor was it enough to offset his shooting limitations, which often reduced the offense to a four-on-five uphill battle.

      The other notable rotation development in recent games has been a decrease in trust in Deandre Ayton after his strong start to the season. Ayton had several games where his engagement on the defensive end and on the boards was hard to predict, and his involvement on offense also became a recurring storyline. That shift showed up late in games. JJ Redick notably closed a couple of fourth quarters with Hayes, while also praising his backup center for his effort and play. After his strong play earlier in the year, I mentioned that this season would be a referendum on Ayton. With a larger sample of games, it is becoming clearer that he is not the high-impact, high-effort defensive anchor this team desperately needs. At the same time, Dončić has looked noticeably more comfortable playing with Hayes as his lob-catching partner on the other end.

      6–Luka and his three-point shooting trend

      Chart context: Dončić opened the season hot with three consecutive 40-point games, but then had up-and-down stretches in December. The biggest problem for him offensively has been going through one of the longest three-point shooting slumps of the last couple of seasons, which became an issue as he was taking step-back threes at a league-leading rate early in the season.

      Dončić has decreased his three-point volume, but has also recently regained trust in his outside shot. He is still at just 33.4 percent for the season, but has shot 43.2 percent over his last five games and 40.6 percent over his last seven. The way this team is currently built, Dončić and Reaves, once he returns, will have to shoot above 35 percent from three, preferably in the 38 to 40 percent range, for the Lakers to avoid being among the worst three-point shooting teams in the league and move closer to top-five offensive territory.

      7–Questions and needs heading into the trade deadline

      Stats context: I won’t go deep into the deadline here. I laid out my high-level expectations in the season-opening column, and I plan to dive deeper into specific archetypes and potential names as we get closer to the deadline.

      From Transition to Vision: What 2026 Should Look Like for the Lakers
      Iztok Franko
      ·
      Jan 2
      From Transition to Vision: What 2026 Should Look Like for the Lakers
      I’m not a big New Year’s resolutions or wish list guy. But when my pal Marc Stein asked me to contribute to an initiative he is doing with Royce Webb, bringing together 12 NBA voices on Substack to share what we are looking forward to NBA-wise in 2026, I actually appreciated the challenge. It forced me to zoom out, an…

      Read full story
      A question I get often is whether the trade deadline can save this Lakers season and turn them into a contender. While I do think the Lakers should make a move, that would represent more of a first step toward building a team around Dončić and making them incrementally more competitive rather than a true fix.

      Watching this team closely, the way they defend, the lack of connection, and even the loss of the early-season vibes that once carried them do not make me optimistic that a single deadline move can change the structural makeup of this roster or build a capable defense around Dončić and James. As the numbers show, the team has a minus-2.3 net rating in nearly 500 minutes with Dončić and James on the floor together this season, along with an alarming defensive rating of 121.5.

      They have both put up strong numbers and played well enough individually, but the overlap in their strengths and weaknesses on both ends of the floor is simply too large. At this stage of their careers, neither looks capable or willing to make the kind of significant sacrifice required to meaningfully change that dynamic, nor does there appear to be real belief that such a sacrifice would materially alter the outcome given the current roster construction.

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    sign CP3 if the price is right for rest of this season. True PG. Allow LBJ and Luka at wings!

    Have to

    sign CP3 if the price is right for rest of this season. True PG. Allow LBJ and Luka at wings!

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    • At this point, I don’t mind any player who can help save our season. Second in the west a few weeks ago, now sixth and dropping. I know I can count on CP3’s deadly midrange jumpers. This team needs a trade really badly.

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    Chris Paul shoots his shot with the Lakers

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    how many games have LBJ, Luka and Reavsy played together?

    I wonder

    how many games have LBJ, Luka and Reavsy played together?

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    Lakers finally have a way out of the Deandre Ayton experiment

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Jakob Poeltl is reportedly available for the Los Angeles Lakers to steal from the Toronto Raptors.

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