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LakerTom wrote a new post
Game-winner. 50-piece. Averaged a triple-double.A well-deserved Player of the Week award for Luka
pic.twitter.com/xDINW0Py25— Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) March 16, 2026 -
LakerTom wrote a new post
Lembram sobre o Lakers não conseguir vencer times com bons recordes?!Pois bem… após essa sequência de 8 vitórias nos últimos 9 jogos, agora o Los Angeles Lakers tem um recorde de 20 vitórias e 17 derrotas contra times com mais de 50% de aproveitamento!Animador, de fato. pic.twitter.com/vSvA5DAbnY— AD Brasil 🇧🇷 (@BrasilAD) March 16, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
2 Comments-
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Tonight, LeBron and KD will matchup for the 31st time in the regular season.LeBron is 19-11 in the head-to-head. pic.twitter.com/CjqyQMgEqz— Witness King James (@WITNESSKJ) March 16, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
GAME. WINNING. PLAYS.@LAIreland and Lakers fans were fired up after the monster win vs Denver on the @JacobEmrani Call of the Game pic.twitter.com/HH8a8hIVGq— ESPN Los Angeles (@ESPNLosAngeles) March 16, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
BREAKING: The NBA will vote next week to expand the league and add 2 franchises in Las Vegas & Seattle for the 2028-29 season(via @ShamsCharania) pic.twitter.com/tsYAQnaWV4— LakeShowYo (@LakeShowYo) March 16, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Power Rankings, Week 22: Sizzling Thunder head back to No. 1 https://t.co/aua1XTYHY9— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 16, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
#6
Los Angeles LakersLast Week:10↑
Record: 42-25OffRtg: 116.9 (8)
DefRtg: 115.9 (20)
NetRtg: +1.1 (15)
Pace: 99.4 (20)The Lakers are playing their best basketball of the season and have won eight of their last nine games. They are alone in third place in the Western Conference.
Three takeaways:
Nine days ago, the Lakers had lost 12 of their last 13 games against the top 10 teams in the league. But they’ve now won three straight, holding the Knicks, Wolves and Nuggets (offenses that rank third, 12th and first, respectively) to just 107.5 points per 100 possessions over those three games. That has them, finally, out of the bottom 10 on defense for the season.
Luka Dončić leads the league in usage rate (36.4%), and it’s been higher (38.5%) as he’s averaged 38.2 points, 9.8 rebounds and 8.4 assists over the Lakers’ five-game winning streak. He’s shot 41.4% from 3-point range over his last 27 games, up from just 31.6% through his first 28, though he went inside the arc for the overtime game-winner against the Nuggets on Saturday. That was just his first field goal attempt to tie or take the lead in the final minute of the fourth quarter or overtime this season.
The context with the Lakers’ improvement over the last few weeks is that they’ve played 15 of their last 18 games at home, and they’ll now embark on a six-game road trip. They don’t have nearly as big a home-road differential as they did last season (the biggest in the league), but they are just 7-10 on the road since mid-December.
Coming up: The trip begins with two huge games in Houston, with the Lakers having been clobbered by the Rockets in the first meeting (on Christmas). Then it’s on to Miami, where LeBron James is just 6-17 (2-4 with the Lakers) as a visitor.
Week 22: @ HOU, @ HOU, @ MIA, @ ORL
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LakerTom wrote a new post
HUGE GAME IN HOUSTON TONIGHT
The Lakers will most likely face Minny, Denver, or Houston in the first round. They have already secured tiebreakers over Minny/Denver, but need to win the next 2 games in Houston to secure it against them. LOCK IN! pic.twitter.com/YnOvnI1H0u— Lakers All Day Everyday (@LADEig) March 16, 2026 -
LakerTom wrote a new post
New feature for ESPN: Marcus Smart’s right hand is the instrument he wields for his menacing defense. He nearly lost use of it eight years ago. And later lost his way in the NBA. Now he’s changing his fortunes, and the Lakers’, in L.A. https://t.co/P1dYfjFqJS— Dave McMenamin (@mcten) March 16, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
MARCUS SMART WAS scanning Anthony Edwards’ shooting line in the box score as he slumped in a chair in front of his locker. It was March 10, moments after the Los Angeles Lakers had defeated the Minnesota Timberwolves 120-106, jumping from fifth in the Western Conference playoff race to third.
As Smart reviewed it line by line, he suddenly perked up, his exhaustion turning to something else: a sparkle of satisfaction.
Edwards, the Minnesota Timberwolves’ 24-year-old superstar, had scored just 14 points and went 2-for-15 from the floor — including 0-for-5 in the 23 possessions Smart guarded him.
The same Edwards who tormented the Lakers’ wing defenders last spring on his way to averaging 26.8 points in the lower-seeded Wolves’ five-game gentleman’s sweep of L.A. had been stifled by Smart, the former Defensive Player of the Year who joined the purple and gold on a discount deal months after that first-round upset.
While the win represented a glimmer of hope for this year’s Lakers squad that so far has displayed too much inconsistency on both ends to be feared as a top contender in the coming playoffs, it meant so much more for Smart.
He wasn’t supposed to still be locking up All-Stars at age 32.
Not after his last two injury-riddled, irrelevant seasons in Basketball Siberia.
He played 20 games for a 27-win Memphis Grizzlies team in 2023-2024 and 15 games for an 18-win Washington Wizards squad a year ago, while his former team, the Boston Celtics, soared to a title without him.
And he certainly wasn’t supposed to be holding on to the stat sheet with his right hand, which he had come dangerously close to losing eight years ago.
All of which set up Smart’s attitude for this season — one he has pushed the Lakers’ star trio of LeBron James, Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves, and the rest of the roster, to adopt: If he can change the trajectory at this stage of his career, after what he has been through, who is to say the Lakers can’t change theirs for the last couple months of the season?
“We’re tired of hearing people talk s—, basically,” Smart told ESPN. “I know I am. And if you’re a competitor, if you have any type of competitor in you, you’re going to be tired of that too. So you want to try to prove ’em wrong.”
DESPITE PLAYING 56 games for the Lakers so far, and leading them with a team-best plus-minus of plus-209, the most consequential shot of Smart’s career in L.A. still came as a visitor.
It was Jan. 23, 2018, and the Celtics, then the No. 1 team in the East, were on the road to play the Lakers, then the No. 11 team in the West.
Former Lakers guard Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had gone to the line with 5.7 seconds remaining and L.A. up by one and missed both free throws, with the second clanking off the rim and into Smart’s hands.
Smart, who already had 22 points in the game, took the rebound and dribbled frantically up the court until he got to the 3-point line, where he pulled up for 3 at the buzzer.
His shot hit the front iron and rimmed out, and the Celtics lost the game 108-107.
Later that night, at the team hotel, he replayed the shot in his mind and frustration boiled over.
He punched at a picture frame in his room and, this time, he didn’t miss, shattering the glass and leaving a 5-inch shard wedged inside the flesh of his palm.
“I got rushed to the ER and lost a lot of blood,” Smart told ESPN. “I passed out. … That’s how much I lost.”
When he regained consciousness, after receiving 20 stitches, Smart realized the severity of his wound.
“The doctor looked at me in my eye and told me, ‘I don’t know how you still have use of your right hand,'” Smart said. “‘You should honestly be thanking God every day.'” The piece of glass that had sliced into his hand was just millimeters from severing its use entirely. “They said it laid perfectly in between every tendon in my hand without damaging anything,” Smart said. “And they had to leave the extra piece in, because they said it will cause more damage if we go get it out.”
Smart missed 11 games before he was back on the court, helping Boston reach Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals that season before losing to James and the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The Celtics reached the postseason in all nine seasons Smart was there, including a run to the 2022 NBA Finals to cap his DPOY campaign, before they lost in six games to the final glory run of the Golden State Warriors’ dynasty.
That next year, Boston lost to the eighth-seeded Miami Heat in the 2023 conference finals, and the team retooled, sending Smart to Memphis in a three-team deal that landed Kristaps Porzingis on the Celtics.
It was there, in Memphis, that Smart began to lose his grip — figuratively and literally — on his career.
In January 2024, he ruptured a tendon in his proximal interphalangeal joint — where the finger bends — ending his season.
“I’ve had two dislocations with torn ligaments in two of the fingers,” Smart said. “I’ve had glass in my hand. I’ve torn ligaments on my right thumb and had surgery there. I dislocated four out of my five fingers in total … my whole right hand just has been through a lot. So to be honest, I’m blessed to even have my right hand.
“For six years after the incident with the glass, I still had glass in my hand and I played with it. And there would be times where because of that, my hand would go numb. A lot of times, a lot of games, I couldn’t control it. I had to play and there were a lot of times when I’m shooting the ball and just, I had no feeling in the arm, the hand.”
Meanwhile, Memphis had bigger problems. Ja Morant, suspended for the first 25 games of 2023-24, went on to play just nine games, leading a roster so riddled with injuries that 33 different players suited up for the team at some point that season.
The Grizzlies missed the playoffs — the first time in Smart’s career he was on a team that failed to qualify for the postseason — while his former team went back to the Finals to face Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks. “I was watching every bit of it,” Smart said. “Does it hurt? Of course it hurts because you were the one there from the start before 2014, when Avery Bradley was still there, you guys were in the rebuild and so you watched everything grow. You were there when the seed was planted and everything. So it definitely hurt.”
The start to his next season in Memphis was even harder.
Over the team’s first five games, Smart averaged just 5.6 points on 23.5% shooting (16.7% from 3), and the Grizzlies stumbled out to a 2-3 start.
After an ankle injury sidelined him for two weeks, Smart returned and Memphis went 10-2 in its next 12 games before he suffered a partial tear of the proximal extensor hood of his right index finger.
Around this time, Smart says, he felt a shift in how the Grizzlies organization treated him.
He says he felt pressured to play through it.
“I wanted to be 100%, to give everything I got,” Smart said. “As I’m still working out and getting ready, they’re just like, ‘No, your doctor said you’re ready now.’ And I’m like, ‘I hear what my doctor said, but … it’s how I feel. Yes, surgically the finger is fine. But physically, no. The finger is still weak. I’m still strengthening it. This is my dominant hand.’ So, they didn’t want to hear it and they just kept saying, ‘You need to play.'”
Furthermore, during his rehab, Smart heard “a rumor going around that people said I don’t want to be here,” he said, despite actions that would suggest the contrary — from giving customized boxing gloves to his teammates, to his wife inviting the roster to his birthday party, to writing personalized holiday cards and stuffing them with gift cards for all the staff.
After a 21-game absence, he returned to the lineup Feb. 5, 2025, on the road against the Toronto Raptors.
His hand still didn’t feel right — he went 0-for-6 — but Memphis outscored Toronto by five points in the 18 minutes he was on the floor in the win.
What happened next made him feel like the “scapegoat” for a franchise in flux, Smart said. The following day, he was traded to Washington.
When reached by ESPN about Smart’s claims, the Grizzlies had no comment.
The deal was part of a three-team trade with the Sacramento Kings. Memphis had to include a first-round pick in what essentially became a salary dump, to get off the remainder of Smart’s $20.2 million contract for 2024-25 and $21.3 million for the following season.
The maneuver allowed Memphis to avoid luxury tax implications with its planned extension for Jaren Jackson Jr.
“The Marcus that you got intel on from Memphis was probably not as consistent with the Marcus that he was in Boston and in his entire career,” a Wizards source told ESPN.
“I think a lot of things went into that. But at the core, we knew who he was as a person and felt really comfortable adding him to a group. And he exceeded expectations in the short amount of time he was with us.”
Smart credits the Wizards for how accommodating they were to him during the 2½ months he spent with the team.
“Washington was great,” Smart said. “I just had to get healthy. … That was my main thing.”
Smart reached a buyout agreement with the Wizards in July to become a free agent, giving back $6.5 million of his 2025-26 contract according to ESPN’s NBA front office insider Bobby Marks.
And then the Lakers came calling.
L.A. HAD LIMITED options to upgrade its roster coming off that playoff loss to the Wolves.
Outside of trading a future first-round pick, the Lakers’ only avenue to reshape their roster was opening up the $14.1 million non-taxpayer midlevel exception by not re-signing Dorian Finney-Smith, plus the biannual exception.
Deandre Ayton and Jake LaRavia split the MLE, and Smart — who was recruited with a phone call by Doncic — got the biannual, agreeing to a two-year, $11 million deal, with a player option on the second year.
He says he wanted to prove that despite being 12 years into his career, his last two seasons were anomalies, not a downward trend.
When he arrived in L.A., he had a conversation with coach JJ Redick about the role he hoped to occupy.
Redick recalls the conversation.
He was at a Fini Pizza in Amagansett, in the Hamptons, and left the restaurant to take the call.
“I told JJ, ‘I’m going to go out here and give you everything I got,'” Smart said. “‘I just ask that if I do earn it, then let me have it. Don’t play too many politics.’ And that’s all I asked, and that’s all you can ask.”
Redick said there were three things he wanted to get across to Smart, now that he had cleared waivers from Washington and was deciding on his next destination. “It was, ‘We need you. We need your defense. We need your voice,'” Redick said. “The second part of that was, ‘I know you because I’ve played against you and I’ve competed against you. … You’re at your best when you’re playing for something. If you come here, we can be playing for something.’ And he agreed with that.”
And the third? “‘You’re going to play,'” Redick said he told Smart. “‘I don’t know exactly what that looks like, but I’m very confident that if you’re at your best, you’re going to play a lot.'”
Redick kept his word, starting him 49 games as Smart has averaged 9.6 points, 2.8 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.4 steals per game, and living with his 40.3% shooting from the floor and 34.0% from 3 in large part because of the Lakers’ 111.1 defensive efficiency with Smart on the floor. It’s 117.7 with him off this season.
Smart has drawn 19 charges this season, tied for the second most in the NBA, which is already more than the 16 he drew during his DPOY campaign — and there’s still a month to go in the regular season.
“He competes every night,” Reaves told ESPN. “It’s not always pretty, but his competitive level’s going to be at an all-time high every single night. And you need guys like that. I think he’s the one that sets the example for us on the court to go out there and play as hard as we possibly can, because you know he’s going to do that.
“When he’s doing that, every single night flying around, it makes you be accountable to the effort that you bring.”
On Saturday, moments after the Lakers had defeated the Denver Nuggets 127-125 in overtime, Smart didn’t want to talk about his strip of Aaron Gordon that set up a crucial layup with less than a minute to go in the fourth quarter, one of his five steals.
He didn’t want to discuss the go-ahead 3 he hit with 30 seconds to go in OT that put the Lakers up two.
He didn’t even want to yap about his part in holding a notorious Lakers killer, Jamal Murray, to five points on 1-for-14 shooting.
What had Smart excited was his part in the strategy, suggesting to Reaves that, when he went to the foul line for two shots with 5.2 seconds left in the fourth and the Lakers trailing by three, he intentionally miss the second one.
Reaves ended up executing the miss to perfection and L.A. held on in the extra session to sustain its late-season inertia.
“I feel like every game,” Doncic said of Smart after the Denver victory, “he does something different to help us win.”
And his defensive commitment has remained a constant.
Smart has held 2026 All-Stars, like Murray and Edwards, to a 44.3% effective field goal percentage when he has guarded them, fifth best among 75 players to defend 100-plus shots this season, according to ESPN Research.
“He brings a grittiness and a point-of-attack defender that maybe they didn’t have a year ago,” said Wolves coach Chris Finch. “A guy that can mark somebody all by himself, without a ton of help. Which really is huge, particularly in the playoffs.”
And on a team with Reaves, Doncic and James staying in the headlines, Smart has made his noise in the locker room, as a needed voice.
“On this team, we got a lot of egos, which isn’t saying that these egos are out of control or bad. It’s just everybody’s different,” Smart said of his approach. “We have different personalities and sometimes they just don’t mix at the right time. It’s all about timing with everything.
“And sometimes you might not feel good this day or you might be having a bad game or bad couple games and it just doesn’t feel right. So for me, my leadership was to just make sure I can keep the guys together, keep the positivity and not really let us go into that sunken place that you see most teams do when they’re in a drought.”
There have been some tough stretches for Smart this season, too — just like for the team. He has missed games with back spasms. He went 1-for-12 in a loss to the LA Clippers, 2-for-9 in a loss to the New York Knicks, 0-for-7 in a loss to Boston.
Still, he has kept at it. On March 3, with L.A. clinging to a four-point lead in the final minutes of the fourth against the New Orleans Pelicans, Smart received a pass from Doncic in the corner and hit the 3 to go up seven with 1:34 to go, sealing it — in a game in which he also had seven assists, four steals and three blocks.
“To have the trust to say, ‘You know what? I’m going to give it to this guy in the corner right here,’ I definitely think that it stems from the blocks, the steals, the energy that I bring,” Smart said. “Knowing that this guy’s working. And let’s reward him.”
He has had the third-most starts, fifth-most minutes and sixth-most shot attempts this season for the Lakers. He has had a hand in everything they do.
“He’s made an impact on winning,” Redick said. “And I think that ultimately is … that’s how you rewrite the narrative of your career, is if you’re on a winning team.”
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Lakers Game Preview: Games 68 and 69 @ Rockets https://t.co/eFBYJYQs4s— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 16, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
Two games in Houston that could decide the race for the third seed
The Lakers aced the first part of their schedule loaded with tough opponents, beating the Knicks, the Timberwolves, and the Nuggets after an overtime thriller that was decided by Luka Dončić’s game-winning jumper on Sunday. Now they move from Crypto.com Arena to Houston for a two-game stop against a team built to test their physicality and resilience: the Rockets.
With only 15 games left on the schedule and the standings tightly packed, it almost goes without saying that every remaining game carries implications. But with the Lakers and Rockets both sitting on 25 losses, this two-game set could go a long way toward deciding which team finishes higher in the standings. For the Lakers, that probably means at least one win, but even that might not be enough. If the teams split the two games, the Rockets would win the tiebreaker 2–1 and still hold the edge with a slightly easier remaining schedule.
Remaining schedule strength (source: tankathon.com)
The good news for the Lakers is that they are heading into this matchup in a much better place than they were the last time around, when the Rockets demolished them in a high-profile Christmas matchup, prompting me to call for changes, even a system reset. Looking back, that game now feels like a season low point for the Lakers. It was their third straight blowout loss and a night in which they also lost Austin Reaves at halftime, an injury that kept him out for 18 of the next games.
Much has changed since. The Lakers are playing their best basketball of the season, winning five straight games and eight of their last nine, proving they can hang with and even beat the best teams in the NBA. A group that the Rockets, despite some recent struggles, still belong to.
Lakers (42-25) @ Rockets (41-25) game facts
Rest: LAL on 1 day of rest; HOU on 2 days of rest
Ranking: LAL 13th in Point Diff (+1.6), HOU 6th in Point Diff (+5.5)
LAL vs HOU 2025-26 record: 0-1 (see Game 29 observations here)
LAL injuries: Maxi Kleber (OUT)
HOU injuries: Fred VanVleet (OUT), Steven Adams (OUT), Jae’Sean Tate (OUT), Alperen Sengun (questionable)
LAL projected starting five: Luka Dončić (G), Marcus Smart (G), Austin Reaves (G), LeBron James (F), Deandre Ayton (C)
LAL key reserves: Rui Hachimura, Luke Kennard, Jake LaRavia, Jaxson Hayes, Jarred Vanderbilt
HOU projected starting five: Amen Thompson (G), Tari Eason (F), Kevin Durant (F), Jabari Smith (F), Alperen Sengun (C)
HOU key reserves: Reed Shepard, Dorian Finney-Smith, Clint Capela, Josh Okogie, Aaron Holiday
Key storyline: can the Lakers withstand the Rockets’ physicality while staying disciplined?
This will be a clear clash of styles, the Lakers’ skill on one side matched against the Rockets’ size, athleticism, and physicality. Houston with a huge starting five with all players 6-7 or taller, including three at 6-11, versus the Lakers with their playmaking and three on-ball creators. Dončić against the best set of wing defenders that frustrated him into four early turnovers in the first five minutes of the first matchup. Another test for Austin Reaves against length and athleticism. Deandre Ayton and Rui Hachimura against force and physicality on the glass.
The Lakers hold a clear edge in half-court offensive efficiency: they rank second in the NBA, scoring 103.8 points per 100 half-court plays. Compared to the Rockets, who rank 23rd at 95.8, that’s a huge eight-point edge. But the Rockets overcome that by winning the possession battle and creating more chances. So the Lakers will have to limit turnovers and protect the glass. They did neither in the first game, when the Rockets destroyed them with a 52.5% offensive rebound rate, by far the worst mark allowed by the Lakers this season.
The Rockets set the tone in the first game with their physicality from the opening possession, and the Lakers just couldn’t handle it and lost their composure. Tonight they need to stay disciplined when the Rockets hit and be ready to strike back.
Lakers on offense | Rockets on defense
The Rockets are a rare team that has enough length and defensive talent in the starting lineup to cover all three Lakers offensive engines. In the first game, Tari Eason started as the primary defender on Dončić, Amen Thompson defended Reaves, while Kevin Durant was matched up with LeBron James. Individually, these are all difficult matchups, which is why the Lakers, like in their last game when they attacked Nikola Jokić and Jamal Murray, need to be very deliberate and disciplined in attacking the weakest links. In this case, those will be the two big men Alperen Sengun and Clint Capela, and the key sixth man Reed Sheppard.
Ime Udoka protected his big men by blitzing Dončić pick actions and forced early turnovers as Dončić threw some risky and off-target passes against the on-ball press of Eason and Thompson. Dončić cannot repeat that in this game. The Rockets have too much length to disrupt passing lanes, so discipline and patience will be key, at times making the simple pass and trusting the next man to make the right play.
The Lakers got plenty of reps attacking Jokić and the Nuggets’ blitzes, and Reaves especially had a great game attacking closeouts with his speed. With a similar slower target in Sengun, this might be the game to lean even more into that, or even increase the volume of actions with Reaves as the primary ballhandler.
Iztok Franko
@iztok_franko
Austin Reaves last 4 games, wins vs DEN,CHI,MIN, NYK:29.5 ppg, 6.5 ast, 5.8 reb, 1.3 stl
56% FG%, shot above 50% in all 4 games
45% from 3Scored 30 or more in last three games. And had some awesome defensive plays.
12:37 AM · Mar 16, 2026 · 4.31K Views
2 Replies · 23 Reposts · 152 LikesLimiting turnovers will be key, and to their credit Dončić and the Lakers have been much better at that lately. After spending much of the year in the bottom third of the league in turnover rate, the Lakers have been one of the best, ranking fourth in the NBA since the All-Star break.
Rockets on offense | Lakers on defense
The Rockets’ key weakness on this end of the floor is the lack of a true floor general, which results in a high turnover rate, where they currently rank 28th, the third worst mark in the NBA. The Lakers have shown that, when locked in, defensive playmaking and generating steals is one of their strengths, with players following Marcus Smart’s lead.
We will see if JJ Redick opts for a similar tactic he used against Jokić on Durant, with aggressive double-teaming, forcing the pass and challenging the supporting cast to make enough plays. Doubling would make sense, as the Lakers do not have an elite wing defender with enough length to bother Durant (Jarred Vanderbilt’s minutes have been very limited recently), and KD is not nearly the passer that Jokić is. The other offensive hub for the Rockets is Sengun, and the key for the Lakers would be for Deandre Ayton to play with the same physicality he showed in overtime against Jokić. Thompson is the third scorer and playmaker in the starting lineup. He is a great finisher at the rim, but unreliable from the mid-range and three, so closing his driving lanes in rotations will be key. Easier said than done against one of the best, if not the best, athletes in the NBA.
The Rockets’ superpower, of course, is crashing the glass. They are the best team in the NBA in offensive rebound rate and putbacks, winning the math by getting more opportunities than their opponents. However, their superpower took a significant hit when they lost Steven Adams to a season-ending ankle injury on January 18. Before that, they were the fourth-best offense in the NBA with a historic offensive rebound rate of almost 40%. Since then, they rank as the 19th-best offense with a still very good, but not juggernaut-level, offensive rebound rate of 34.5%. Controlling the boards will be easier without Adams, who grabbed four offensive rebounds in the first matchup, but the Lakers will still need to collectively battle Sengun and Capela, two great rebounders, and watch for Thompson, Eason, and Okogie crashing from the wings.
Final thoughts
The Lakers have flipped the script with their recent play. For most of the season, matchups against athletic teams felt like a problem waiting to happen, with the same limitations likely to be exposed. Lately, however, the Lakers have shown they can match that physicality while still leaning on their skill and shotmaking. This two-game stop in Houston is another opportunity to prove that the recent surge is real, against one of the toughest and most physical teams in the league. If they do that, these games could be another step forward. If not, the Rockets will gladly drag them back into the kind of game they want to play, and back into the debates that were so demoralizing just a couple of weeks ago.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
I like 3-6 matchup:>Minnesota >San Antonio >OKC>Boston https://t.co/XhDfiPwNvj— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 16, 2026
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1st round: Lakers in 6 vs WolvesWCSF: Lakers in 6 vs Spurs WCF: Lakers in 7 vs OKC Finals: Lakers in 6 vs KnicksLet’s work pic.twitter.com/mG7lrGd6dp— ⁷⁷ 🪄 (@NotLikeLuka) March 16, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
“He made the good read to the single side.”Marcus Smart on Austin Reaves executing the late-game free throw play that helped tie the game. pic.twitter.com/DRIhxEvtl3— Spectrum SportsNet (@SpectrumSN) March 15, 2026
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THE LAST LAKER TO WEAR NO. 15 🐐 pic.twitter.com/Wv3rhCO7LX— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 15, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
LAKERS HAVE 1.5 GAME LEAD AND TIE BREAKEROVER B0TH NUGGETS AND TIMBERWOLVES!Win the next two games vs. the Rockets and the #3 Lakers will have 2 game lead plus tiebreakers over #4 Rockets, #5 Nuggets, and #6 Timberwolves! https://t.co/yAlMmJJEMQ— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 15, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Possible regular season game of the year candidate
The last minute was magic
Breakdown in reply pic.twitter.com/QILznO3S9V— React Live (@ReactLive) March 15, 2026 -
LakerTom wrote a new post
Lakers Becoming Ideal Free Agent Home For Popular Knicks Name https://t.co/zy3BuNQaqJ via @heavysan— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 15, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
The Los Angeles Lakers will apparently look at free agent center Mitchell Robinson during free agency. General Manager Rob Pelinka is expected to be aggressive on the free agent market with the contracts of LeBron James and multiple other players coming off the books to open cap space. Austin Reaves getting a massive extension is the top priority, but the Lakers will have enough money to add a few more rotation players.
Robinson is entering free agency after his contract with the New York Knicks ends. Fansided’s Maxwell Ogden said the following about the Lakers’ interest in Robinson:
“As the Los Angeles Lakers survey the 2026 free agency market for the ideal center, Mitchell Robinson will inevitably surface on their radar. He’s an explosive athlete with elite defensive range, unrivaled offensive rebounding proficiency, and the perfect skill set to thrive as the lob threat Luka Doncic needs.”
DeAndre Ayton has been a general disappointment for the Lakers after they added him last offseason with the hopes of finding their future center. Despite having youth and athleticism on his side, Ayton has struggled to provide consistency. Robinson stands out as one of the best free agent options at the center with an affordable price tag.
Why Mitchell Robinson Makes Perfect Sense
The Lakers lack a defensive big man to grab rebounds and present a threat to opposing star centers. Robinson is a flawed offensive center and one of the worst free throw shooters in the NBA, but no one will argue against him providing defensive toughness.
The source article cited that Robinson stands out as the kind of center who typically thrives with Doncic. Comparisons are there for Robinson to fit a similar role to Daniel Gafford or Dereck Lively on the Dallas Mavericks when Luka led the franchise to the NBA Finals just two seasons ago.
Reaves and Doncic need a center who can do the dirty work and make up for their flaws. Other options will be available, but Robinson will be quite affordable due to coming off injury concerns and having a lower ceiling. Time will tell if they find a better value or if they will offer Robinson the best deal.
Negative Side To Signing Mitchell Robinson
The affordable price tag for Robinson will come with his other flaws since he’s not a perfect player. Robinson has been the worst free throw shooter in the league over the past few seasons and is currently shooting 39.5% from the free throw line this year.
Injury concerns will also scare Lakers fans since Robinson missed 65 games last season and has dealt with some injuries this season. New York only plays Robinson 20 minutes per game, so the Lakers starting him would require more playing time.
Another center would be necessary to split minutes in close games when Robinson is struggling or getting intentionally fouled. Ayton currently has a player option to return one more season, and current reserve Jaxson Hayes will also be a free agent. Robinson would be a strong addition to the roster, but a trusted reserve is important as well.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Lakers have a colossal playoff weapon that could alter the West https://t.co/4FXJC4F3GO— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 15, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
Has everyone forgotten about Playoff Luka? He’s not a myth.
Luka Doncic’s 51-point masterclass on Thursday night was another reminder that Doncic is the most effortless scorer in the NBA. The offensive explosion from Luka powered the Los Angeles Lakers to their fourth-straight victory, and LA was tied for the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference entering Saturday.With the playoffs fast approaching, and with Doncic flaunting top form, it’s worth acknowledging to Lakers doubters that Luka has a history of elevating his play in the postseason. This means LA could be in for a surprise run at a title.
Luka’s tendency for playoff heroics gives the Lakers contention hopes
If you’re looking at Luka’s 26-29 playoff record as an indication of his postseason performance, you’re missing the point, which is this: Doncic led multiple Dallas Mavericks teams to unexpected playoff success, due to his postseason scoring prowess and natural flair for clutch play.
In the 2020 bubble playoffs, a 21-year-old Luka hit a game-winning, step-back three in overtime against the Los Angeles Clippers to stave off a 3-1 series deficit. In case you’ve forgotten how epic this was, take a look below.
That wasn’t Luka’s only game-clinching 3 in a playoff game. In 2024, in Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals, Luka hit a dagger 3 over Rudy Gobert and the Minnesota Timberwolves to give the Mavs a 2-0 series lead.
What made the shot even more cold-blooded was that it was on the road in Minnesota. (Gobert fans, maybe skip the video below for your mental health).
Moreover, Luka’s playoff history isn’t the tale of a couple of huge moments surrounded by status quo production. He levels up in the postseason, in general. Luka’s 30.9 points per game in the playoffs exceeds his career scoring average in the regular season (29.1).
A 22-year-old Doncic averaged 35.7 points per game in a 7-game bloodbath with the Clippers in the first round of the 2021 playoffs, with Doncic dropping 46 points in the Game 7 loss.
The following postseason, Luka led a No. 4-seed Mavs squad to the Western Conference Finals with a 31.7 PPG playoffs. This was pre-Kyrie Irving, by the way. Dallas had no business getting to the WCF, but they did have Playoff Luka.
When Luka Doncic is healthy, he’s unstoppable in the playoffs
“But Luka lost in the 2024 NBA Finals! And he lost in the first round of the 2025 playoffs!” Such are the arguments of passionate Luka haters who are ignoring the fact that Doncic’s body wasn’t close to 100 percent in either of the aforementioned series.
In the 2024 Finals, Luka was suffering from multiple lower body ailments that had accrued over the course of the season and had become more acutely painful during Dallas’ playoff run. He was basically mummified in ice bags every time he came out of the game.
And last season, in his debut playoffs with the Lake Show, Doncic was infamously out of shape and still getting used to his new team. LA didn’t stand a chance against the Wolves, and for what it’s worth, Luka still averaged 30.2 points per game in the 5-contest series loss.
All of this isn’t to say that Luka deserves a free pass for his conditioning and durability problems. The point here is that, if and when Luka is healthy, he’s absolutely a playoff riser, with the big moments and overall massive production to show for it.
As such, Luka’s habit of taking his game to another level in the postseason is something that could alter the Western Conference landscape in this coming playoffs. A lot of people have discarded the 2025-26 Lakers as an assumed first or second round exit. Fair enough. Doncic will need some help if LA is going to make a surprising run.
But if we’re about to see the Playoff Luka that’s emerged in multiple postseasons before, the Lakers’ ceiling is much higher than most people realize. Playoff Luka is an entity that no one can stop, not even the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs of the present.
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Uh, 10-26 as Shania sings “that don’t impress me much!” Need to be a better shooter to complete the deal, IMHO. Super game to watch! Marcus and Austin saved the day.
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