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LakerTom wrote a new post
Luka Dončić’s barrage, Darius Garland’s adjustment and more NBA trends I’m watching https://t.co/rn1mjh2wIZ— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 27, 2026
Read MoreLuka Dončić’s barrage, Darius Garland’s adjustment and more NBA trends I’m watching https://t.co/rn1mjh2wIZ— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 27, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
What a great Lakers/Luka/LeBron breakdown by @NekiasNBA and @stevejones20 https://t.co/ne1bgx9RPz— Kevin O'Connor (@KevinOConnor) March 27, 2026
Read MoreWhat a great Lakers/Luka/LeBron breakdown by @NekiasNBA and @stevejones20 https://t.co/ne1bgx9RPz— Kevin O'Connor (@KevinOConnor) March 27, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
The NBA presented three comprehensive anti-tanking concepts to its Board of Governors on Wednesday, with modifications expected to each before a formal vote in May, per ESPN sources.1. 18 teams in draft lottery (seeds 7-15 in each conference) – flattened odds, with bottom 10…— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 27, 2026
Read MoreThe NBA presented three comprehensive anti-tanking concepts to its Board of Governors on Wednesday, with modifications expected to each before a formal vote in May, per ESPN sources.1. 18 teams in draft lottery (seeds 7-15 in each conference) – flattened odds, with bottom 10…— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 27, 2026
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The NBA presented three comprehensive anti-tanking concepts to its Board of Governors on Wednesday, with modifications expected to each before a formal vote in May, per ESPN sources.1. 18 teams in draft lottery (seeds 7-15 in each conference) – flattened odds, with bottom 10…— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 27, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
The NBA presented three comprehensive anti-tanking concepts to its board of governors Wednesday as part of this week’s meetings in New York, with modifications expected to each before a formal vote in May, sources told ESPN’s Shams Charania.
Each of the three proposals would be radical departures from the current setup. They have one thing in common: bringing teams that make the playoffs into the lottery process. From there, they change dramatically.
In the first proposal, sources told Charania, 18 teams — the bottom 10 that miss the play-in tournament, and the eight that qualify for it — all will be part of the draft lottery.
The bottom 10 teams will all have an equal 8% chance of moving up in the lottery, with the remaining 20% of the odds being split among the eight play-in teams in descending order from 11th through 18th.
All 18 spots would be drawn as part of the lottery in that format.
In the second proposal, sources told Charania, 22 teams — the bottom 10 teams that miss the play-in tournament, the eight that qualify for it and the four playoff teams that lose in the first round — will all be included in the lottery, and will be ranked according to their record across two seasons. The last part, weighting teams by their record across the prior two seasons, is how the WNBA weights its lottery system.
Under that system, each team would need to reach a minimum win total floor in each season, to mitigate the need to lose every game possible. For example, if the minimum floor for an individual season was 20 wins, a team that went 14-68 would be 20-62 for lottery purposes. And if a team wins 40 games one season and 20 games the next season, it would go in as 30 wins for the lottery.
In this system, the top four spots would be drawn as part of the lottery, as is currently.
The third proposal is a “five-by-five” method, sources told Charania. In this one, the same 18 teams from the first proposal — the bottom 10 that miss the play-in, plus the eight that make it — would be entered into the lottery. The teams with the five worst records would then all have the same odds, with them descending from there, and there would be a lottery drawing for each of the top five picks in the draft.
After those five picks are selected, there would be another lottery drawing for the remaining 13 teams. If any of the teams with the five worst records didn’t land one of those top five spots — like last season, when the teams with the first (the Utah Jazz), second (Washington Wizards) and fourth (New Orleans Pelicans) worst records all moved back to fifth, sixth and seventh, respectively — the lowest they could wind up in the second lottery drawing would be 10th, preventing a bad team from falling too far down the draft board.
Over the next several weeks, owners are expected to discuss the detailed concepts with their respective team leadership groups in basketball operations to better digest the potential impacts and unintended consequences. Governors, presidents and general managers are expected to continue an open dialogue with the league office on the concepts and modifications to them ahead of May’s vote.
The NBA began brainstorming changes to combat tanking dating back to December. The new concepts don’t include ideas from then, such as limiting pick protections in trades and freezing lottery odds at a certain date.
At his news conference at the conclusion of this week’s meetings in Manhattan on Wednesday, NBA commissioner Adam Silver made it clear that things are going to change after the league has endured significant criticism this season about teams desperately chasing after one of the top spots in what’s considered to be an extremely deep 2026 NBA draft class, and that the incentive structure for teams was “clearly” going to change for next season.
“I do think ultimately this is a decision that needs to be made at the ownership level,” Silver said. “It has business implications, has basketball implications, has integrity, integrity, implications for the league.
“So it’s one that we take very seriously, and we are going to fix it. Full stop.”
To that end, the fact the NBA is holding a special board of governors meeting in May is a sign of how important the league believes it is to get a handle on the problem. There are standard meetings at the end of the regular season in late March or early April, the beginning of the new season in either September or October, and in July in Las Vegas during summer league every year. Holding a separate meeting to get this done is a highly unusual occurrence.
Still, Silver said Wednesday that there isn’t an obvious solution to the problem — and even suggested more changes could come in future collective bargaining discussions with the National Basketball Players Association, though the current CBA runs through the end of the decade.
“There is an aspect of team-building that is called a genuine rebuild, a rebuild with integrity,” Silver said. ”The problem we’re having these days is it’s become almost impossible to distinguish between the tank and rebuild.
“There’s such a subtlety to this when incentives don’t match, when we’re now into it with coaches’ decisions on lineups and when players come in and out of the game, injuries, doctors going back and forth with each other, pain levels of players that my sense is when I say fix now, yes, we need to do something more extreme than we did with those incremental changes the last four times [we’ve made changes].”
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I say this with every round of lottery reform concepts and I’ll reiterate now: any concept that allows Play-In or playoff teams to get the No. 1 pick entirely defeats the purpose of the reverse-order draft as a talent balancing mechanism. The cure is worse than the disease.— Sam Quinn (@SamQuinnCBS) March 27, 2026
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Addressing tanking by creating the most confusing lottery system in the history of sports is not the answer. The NBA has some work to do before any reforms come up for a vote in May.— Chris Mannix (@SIChrisMannix) March 27, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
BREAKING: After shattering every major NBA record, the league is reportedly considering a major update to its iconic logo — with LeBron James emerging as the top candidate to replace Jerry West. pic.twitter.com/8WbldpO4o5— Hoops (@Hoopss) March 26, 2026
Read MoreBREAKING: After shattering every major NBA record, the league is reportedly considering a major update to its iconic logo — with LeBron James emerging as the top candidate to replace Jerry West. pic.twitter.com/8WbldpO4o5— Hoops (@Hoopss) March 26, 2026
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Here’s the thing — the idea of switching the NBA logo from Jerry West to LeBron James is one of those topics that instantly splits the room, and honestly, that’s what makes it fascinating.
–The Case For LeBron as the Logo
There’s no denying LeBron’s impact. Two decades of dominance, longevity we’ve never seen, global influence, and a résumé that touches every corner of the sport. If the NBA ever wanted a logo that represents the modern era — player empowerment, versatility, positionless basketball, global reach — LeBron is the embodiment of all of that.
He’s not just a great player; he’s a cultural force.–The Case For Keeping Jerry West
The current logo is iconic. It’s been around for over 50 years, and it represents the league’s history and tradition. Changing it isn’t just a design tweak — it’s rewriting the league’s identity.
And Jerry West himself has always been humble about it, even saying he doesn’t love being the logo. But the symbol has become bigger than the man.–The Real Question
What does the NBA want the logo to mean going forward?
If they want to honor the roots of the league, they keep West.
If they want to signal a new era — one defined by evolution, empowerment, and global reach — LeBron is the obvious choice.If the NBA ever does it, it won’t just be about basketball. It’ll be about acknowledging that LeBron reshaped the league on and off the court. And honestly, if anyone deserves to be the face of the modern NBA, it’s him.
But they’d better be ready for the debate that follows, because this would shake the entire basketball world. -
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Tim Legler on Luka Doncic for MVP: "I got him as the favorite right now. It's 57.4 points per game, direct offense from Luka scoring or assisting. That is the most by any player in the history of this league in one season. I don't think anybody has grabbed control of the MVP." pic.twitter.com/RuDOSj75xA— FooledByNico 🥀 (@iamkaelandp) March 26, 2026
Read MoreTim Legler on Luka Doncic for MVP: "I got him as the favorite right now. It's 57.4 points per game, direct offense from Luka scoring or assisting. That is the most by any player in the history of this league in one season. I don't think anybody has grabbed control of the MVP." pic.twitter.com/RuDOSj75xA— FooledByNico 🥀 (@iamkaelandp) March 26, 2026
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MICHAEL HINRICH
Blog Editor
Michael Hinrich, AKA Michael H, has been a Lakers fan since his 5th grade basketball coach, who had played with Wilt Chamberlain at Kansas, turned him into a Wilt fan and Lakers fan when Wilt was traded to L.A.
Another expat from the LA Times Lakers Blog, where he met LakerTom and Jamie Sweet, Michael’s stream of consciousness writing style and savvy intelligence is refreshing and invites conversation and response.
As far as day jobs, Michael has been a councilor, truck washer, bank V.P., and semi-professional writer who just published his first novel. He currently works part-time designing greenhouse systems and just enjoying the good life in Hawaii.
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The Dončić twitch
The Indiana Pacers survived 60 seconds until the Luka Dončić they surely dreaded arrived.
The Los Angeles Lakers have won 10 of their last 11 games, a tear that Dončić has fueled. Whatever Dončić wants right now, he’s getting. And what he wants is a stepback 3-pointer.
The Pacers knew that. So did the other four Lakers on the court. It didn’t matter.
On Los Angeles’ second possession of Wednesday’s game, Dončić received a dribble handoff from center Jaxson Hayes. He went one step to the right against Indiana pest Aaron Nesmith, then crossed over to his left hand while above the 3-point arc. Once the crossover came, Nesmith knew where to go next. But he couldn’t reach Dončić.
No one can.
Dončić nailed the 3, spurring another 40-point outburst.
He’s averaging 39.5 points over this 11-game streak, which has vaulted him into the MVP conversation. Dončić may not win the award, but he’s climbing the ladder, just as the third-place Lakers are rising up the standings.
And during this time, he’s revealed a singular focus: Get to that left hand. And once he does, fire off a stepback.
Even by Dončić’s standards, his recent reliance on fadeaway 3-pointers is the stuff of fiction. Since March 6, when this hot streak began, he is chucking 8.5 stepback 3s a game, according to Second Spectrum.
It’s an average so gargantuan that it may be impossible to properly place into context. But let’s try.
James Harden, the king of the stepback, isn’t even averaging 8.5 3-point attempts per game this season, let alone 8.5 stepback 3s. Meanwhile, Dončić isn’t popping them errantly. He’s shooting 37 percent on stepback 3s over these 11 games.
The stepback is the final type of 3-pointer a shooter will develop, behind stand-still ones, off-the-dribble pull-ups and 3s while on the move. At first, the footwork scrambles toes and heels. Lower-body strength is necessary. It’s not easy to catapult a basketball 27 feet in the opposite direction your body is falling.
But Dončić does it. He was averaging 5.9 stepback 3s a game before this stretch began, which nearly doubled the average of the second-place Harden. Now, he’s blowing that number away. And it’s causing mass anxiety for defenses.
For example, only a few minutes after Dončić nailed that jumper over Nesmith, he drove left on Pascal Siakam, the one player on a tanking team who does not seem to know he’s on a tanking team (and props to Siakam for that). After one bounce, Dončić shuffled his feed backward, ducking behind the 3-point arc. Siakam reacted the only way he could. He had no choice but to chase the stepback.
He closed out, but Dončić kept his dribble and headed to the hoop. Siakam stayed true to the scouting report. Forget about cutting off the drive. Instead, press up against Dončić’s right shoulder from his backside. It’s reminiscent of the ways teams would strategize against Harden in his prime. But that created a lane to the paint, where Dončić lofted in a floater.
Dončić is taking 13.9 3-pointers per game during this stretch, most of which are stepbacks. And even the shots that aren’t 3s are coming because defenses are so nervous about preventing Dončić from getting to his old reliable.