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    Lakers’ New Team Building Strategy Adopts Modern ‘Ten Deep’ Rotation

    The OKC Thunder made it totally clear last season that a modern ‘Ten Deep’ team of talented tall, long, athletic, physical players has now surpassed a superstar ‘Big Three’ as the smartest team building strategy in the NBA.

    While it’s foolish to count the Lakers out of any competition for an NBA superstar player, the financial and competitive restrictions of the new CBA have made max contact ‘Big Three’ teams almost impossible to build. Unless a superstar falls in the draft like Flagg did for the Mavs or signs a bargain contract due to injury risk like Curry did for the Warriors, there’s simply just not enough cap space to build championship ‘Big Three’ teams.

    Injuries have also become a growing factor every season not only on who competes for and wins the NBA title but also on how deep and diverse a legitimate championship rotation has to be in today’s parity-driven NBA.
    With injuries becoming an inevitable major factor, teams are beginning to realize they need much deeper and more diverse rosters not only to cover for players who get injured but also to reduce wear and tear on everybody.

    Today’s NBA regular season has become an elimination gauntlet that teams must survive in order to make the playoffs. The Play-In Tournament has made it almost impossible for a good team to miss making the playoffs.
    Combined with the emergence of a new wave of young uber-athletic teams overtaking the long-time traditional playoff teams, the upcoming season should see the NBA’s changing of the guard in its full force and fury.

    So let’s take a closer look at what constitutes a modern ‘Ten Deep’ team building strategy and why it is a smarter solution to embrace depth and diversity rather than teams spending all their cap space on 3 superstars.


    What Is A Modern ‘Ten Deep’ Rotation?

    A modern ‘Ten Deep’ rotation is a smart team building strategy specifically designed to address the growing injury and availability issues that NBA teams are facing as players get bigger, longer, more athletic and physical.

    Since the NBA is never going to reduce their 82 game season, savvy teams are starting to realize that embracing deeper and more diverse rosters is the only way to solve the league’s growing injury and availability issues.
    Injuries to star players seem to be increasing exponentially as the players get bigger and stronger and the game becomes even more athletic and physical. Winning increasingly has gone to the team that avoids injuries.

    A modern ‘Ten Deep’ rotation is simply a 10-man rotation where every starter has a high quality backup good enough to replace the starter if he gets injured or needs load management to stay healthy for the playoffs.
    It’s anticipating and accounting for injuries with more depth and diversity. It’s a commitment to smartly using the team’s cap space to acquire 10 high quality players rather than spending all of it on 5 starters or 3 superstars.

    The driving force behind the modern ‘Ten Deep’ rotation is building a rotation that not only can handle injuries to starters and backups but also embraces active load management and more matchup starting lineups.
    Financially, committing to a modern ‘Ten Deep’ rotation demands a front office that can make the right decisions about what a player is worth, a standard the Lakers’ front office still must prove it’s capable of meeting.

    A modern ‘Ten Deep’ rotation has now replaced the ‘Big Three’ as the smart team building solution for NBA teams looking to solve the growing injury and availability challenges facing the NBA as the game gets more physical.


    Building a Modern ‘Ten Deep’ Rotation

    Right now, the Lakers have 8 potential rotation players: 3 starters and 1 backup from last year’s roster, 1 starter and 2 backups from this summer’s free agency and buyout markets and 1 backup from this year’s draft.

    That gives the Lakers 4 projected starters in point guard Luka Doncic, shooting guard Austin Reaves, power forward LeBron James, and center De’Andre Ayton, plus one open starting role for a 3&D small forward.
    The Lakers’ 4 projected backups include point guard Marcus Smart, shooting guard Bronny James, small forward Jake LaRavia, and power forward Adou Thiero, plus one open backup role for a defensive center.

    The Lakers have 5 one-way players whom they’d like to swap or move, including Rui Hachimura, Gabe Vincent, and Maxi Kleber on expiring contracts and Jarred Vanderbilt and Dalton Knecht on longer term deals.
    Ideally, the Lakers need to turn those $40 million in expiring contracts and $15 million in long-term contracts into a championship starting small forward like Andrew Wiggins and backup center like Robert Williams III.

    Ideally, the Lakers could begin season starting Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Andrew Wiggins, LeBron James, and De’Andre Ayton backed up by Marcus Smart, Bronny James, Jake LaRavia, Adou Thiero, and Robert Williams.
    The starting lineup would be outstanding as would Smart, LaRivia, and Williams as backups. The big questions would be whether Bronny James or Adou Thiero were good enough to step in and replace an injured starter.

    Bottom line, the Lakers would be smart to go all-in on building a ‘Ten Deep’ rotation before the start of the season so they could focus on upgrading their backup shooting guard and power forward before the trade deadline.

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    Lakers Preseason Schedule

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    Luka Doncic wants his jersey retired as a Laker

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    Mark Walter and Jeannie Buss take Luka and Lakers to Vegas

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    Lakers welcome Luka Doncic extension!

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    The Luka Extension

    My main take is: not surprising. I wasn’t sure if Luka valued locking up years or recouping lost wages. The 3 year extension will allow him to, eventually, recover the money lost in the trade.

    The other thing I’ve been happy to see is how active he’s been in recruiting free agents. LeBron took a “I like that guy who’s also my pal!” approach. On the Lakers it hasn’t worked. So, while the jury will be out on how astute he is in the type of players he tries to recruit, he definitely helped us bring the most talented (which does not always mean impactful…) available players
    in free agency.

    All in all this is what both sides wanted and dare I say needed. Luka probably was not super excited to lose millions of dollars. The Lakers would not have been happy if this dragged on past August, bad look all around. So both sides won.

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    • The Lakers will also have ample cap space to help build a Luka-empowering team next summer. That will almost certainly include retaining Reaves, possibly LeBron and Rui and maybe even Ayton and Smart, depending on how the team performs.

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    LUKA MAGIC!

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    • The recoup the cash path, solid. I’m not super familiar with Lila’s mindset or thinking when it comes to his value and earning power. Max money equates to a level of respect. He lost a lot of money et in the trade, This allows him to, essentially and eventually, earn that back. He doesn’t strike me as much if a diva, LeBron can be a diva (simply watch his social media) and he’s earned that. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea but what is?

      • Glad the deal got done so we can all move on lol

        • The best news is Luka does not want to waste a year and wants to make the Finals this season. That raises the odds of the Lakers making a big trade before the season if not before the trade deadline.

          Also, and I hope this becomes clearer as we move on, it seems like the Lakers may be sold on building a deep and diverse roster with a lot of stars in their roles rather than chasing big names and Big Threes. Time will tell if this is just a passing phase or a new direction.

          How about spend like crazy for the best 10-man balanced roster we can build. That’s what I would like to go all-in on if I were the Lakers’ owner. In a league with what is essentially a hard cap, that could be the smartest strategy imo.

          • I’m really not sure where the narrative that anyone in the Lakers organization thought this would be a gap year in terms of being competitive came from but they’re not too bright. Lakers didn’t trade AD to watch other teams win lol. If it’s all just from the Rich Paul press release sport media really has gotten vapid and not worth the time for the reading…

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    LAKERS' STRATEGY IS CAP FLEXIBILITY, NOT CHASING ANOTHER SUPERSTAR!

    FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

    The Dallas Mavericks have fired Nico Harrison, the general manager who drove the decision to trade Luka Dončić to the Los Angeles Lakers in February, league sources said Tuesday.

    Mavericks governor Patrick Dumont signed off on firing the 52-year-old former Nike executive with two seasons remaining on his contract amid the Mavericks’ disappointing start to the season. The Mavericks are 3-8 and in 14th place in the Western Conference. Dallas ranks 29th in the NBA in scoring, unfamiliar territory for a franchise that finished in the top 10 in offense four times in six years under Dončic.

    Anthony Davis was the centerpiece of the package the Mavericks got back in the deal from the Lakers on Feb. 1. Even though Davis was six years older than Dončic at the time of the trade and had a more extensive injury history, Harrison defended his decision amid overwhelming backlash and puzzlement from Mavs fans as the deal rippled throughout the sport.

    “If you pair him with Kyrie and the rest of the guys, he fits with our time frame to win now and in the future,” Harrison said in February. “The future to me is three, four years from now. Ten years from now, I don’t know. They’ll probably bury me and J(ason Kidd) by then. Or we bury ourselves.”

    The decision to trade Dončić remains viewed as irrational and impulsive. But those who know the Mavs’ GM best paint a far different picture.

    The morning after the trade, Mavericks fans protested the decision outside the American Airlines Center, with a small group of fans holding a mock funeral. Fans inside the building called for Harrison’s firing. “Fire Nico” chants at the American Airlines Center began in February, and they kept up even after the Mavericks miraculously won the NBA draft lottery, which allowed them to take Cooper Flagg at No. 1. There were more “Fire Nico” chants at the team draft party in June.

    The Mavericks’ loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday was a tipping point. Fans continued their “Fire Nico” chants during the fourth quarter, even as P.J. Washington was at the free-throw line with 1.2 seconds left with a chance to tie the game. Washington missed his second free throw, and Dallas lost. By Tuesday morning, word began to circulate that Harrison would be terminated.

    Dallas fans have chanted “Fire Nico” since the Luka Dončić trade in February. They may soon get their wish, according to league sources.

    Back in February, at the time of the Dončić trade, Davis was recovering from an abdominal strain. In his first game with the team on Feb. 8, he suffered a left adductor strain, which kept him out for six weeks. Roughly three weeks later, Kyrie Irving tore the ACL in his left knee, which left the Mavericks without a reliable shot-creating guard.

    In July, the Mavericks signed D’Angelo Russell as a stopgap solution in the backcourt. Harrison seemed happy with the signing, telling Russell, “I like you with a chip on your shoulder” in a video Russell released on his YouTube channel. However, Harrison and coach Jason Kidd had different opinions about how much Russell could impact games. Kidd brought Russell off the bench in Dallas’ first eight games of the season. The Mavericks only turned to Russell to be a starter after suffering a home loss to the lowly New Orleans Pelicans on Nov. 5 that dropped them to 2-6.

    Making matters worse for Dallas, Davis has been sidelined since Oct. 29, when he suffered a left calf strain in a game against the Indiana Pacers. Davis’ injury occurred after he reported to Mavericks training camp at 268 pounds, according to Dallas’ training camp roster, 15 pounds heavier than his listed weight last season. That was an ironic twist, considering the Mavericks traded Dončic while he was recovering from a left calf strain he suffered on Dec. 25, the last time he ever wore a Dallas uniform.

    Harrison leaves Dallas in a tricky place. The Mavericks have a tentpole player in Flagg but don’t control any of their own first-round picks from 2027 to 2030, the result of trades Harrison made to strengthen the roster around Dončic.

    Those moves worked. The Mavericks had all the makings of a contender after reaching the NBA Finals in 2024. However, Harrison upended everything by trading the person who was most essential to the team’s championship pursuit.

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    LUKA DOES NOT WANT TO WAIT TO WIN!

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    DONCIC FOR DAVIS WAS DESTINED TO HAPPEN!

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    Here’s the breakdown of the Luka Doncic contract

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    Luka is wasting no time to give back to the community

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    LUKA SIGNS 3-YEAR EXTENSION TO REMAIN WITH LAKERS

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    Welcome to the Los Angeles Lakers!

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