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LakerTom wrote a new post
Lakers Game Observations: Game 72 @ Pistons https://t.co/MFb0RaM85V— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 24, 2026
Read MoreLakers Game Observations: Game 72 @ Pistons https://t.co/MFb0RaM85V— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 24, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
Austin Reaves episode is out now 🚨AR joins LeBron and Steve to discuss his journey from an undersized, under-recruited kid in Arkansas to becoming a key piece on a Lakers team with LeBron and Luka Dončić. Tap in! https://t.co/jEtj8WLFJv— Mind the Game (@mindthegamepod) March 24, 2026
Read MoreAustin Reaves episode is out now 🚨AR joins LeBron and Steve to discuss his journey from an undersized, under-recruited kid in Arkansas to becoming a key piece on a Lakers team with LeBron and Luka Dončić. Tap in! https://t.co/jEtj8WLFJv— Mind the Game (@mindthegamepod) March 24, 2026
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Just love how LeBron and Austin like each other so much.
LeBron and two short white guys. What a trio. -
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LeBron James on the first time he saw Austin Reaves play:“After we signed him, I went back and watched a lot of his Wichita State highlights and games and then a lot of his Oklahoma highlights and games as well. The first thing I noticed, it’s kind of funny. We always talk… pic.twitter.com/C3TzrdT0qA— NBA Courtside (@NBA__Courtside) March 24, 2026
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LeBron James on the first time he saw Austin Reaves play 😭“After we signed him, I went back and watched a lot of his Wichita State highlights and games and then a lot of his Oklahoma highlights and games as well. The first thing I noticed, it’s kind of funny. We always talk… pic.twitter.com/2DOKOEXN5Z— Basketball Forever (@bballforever_) March 25, 2026
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LakerTom wrote a new post
LeBron James breaks silence on his new role with the Lakers:https://t.co/3pU8UOdQqV— Ryan Ward (@RyanWardLA) March 24, 2026
Read MoreLeBron James breaks silence on his new role with the Lakers:https://t.co/3pU8UOdQqV— Ryan Ward (@RyanWardLA) March 24, 2026
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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
Throughout much of the season, the focus around the Los Angeles Lakers has been on star forward LeBron James’ offensive role.
In recent weeks, it appears that James is settling into his reduced scoring responsibility as the third option behind Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves. His embracing of that spot has helped the Lakers fine-tune their offense, while it’s seen Doncic and Reaves largely lead the way in the scoring department.
This shift in James’ offensive role was evident during Monday’s 113-110 road loss to the Detroit Pistons, as for the first time since December 2010, he was held scoreless in the first half.
James finished with a near triple-double with 12 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds that helped the Lakers nearly overcome a double-digit deficit.
Lakers Star LeBron James Admits Reality of New Role
“It’s the role that I’m playing for the ballclub. In order for us to win ball games, it’s the role that I’m playing. And that’s just how the game was going” – LeBron James on having a scoreless first half for just the third time of his career and the first time since 2010 pic.twitter.com/W5HK2ThdPH
— Dave McMenamin (@mcten) March 24, 2026
After the game, the 41-year-old underlined the importance of his excelling in his adjusted role in helping Los Angeles contend in the stacked Western Conference, via ESPN’s Dave McMenamin.
“It’s the role that I’m playing for the ballclub,” James said. “In order for us to win ball games, it’s the role that I’m playing. And that’s just how the game was going.”
He remains a key fixture in the Lakers’ offensive identity, but it’s become evidently clear that Doncic and Reaves need to be the top two scoring options. Over the last few weeks, Doncic has been playing at an MVP-caliber level, earning back-to-back Western Conference Player of the Week honors.The 27-year-old is coming off becoming the first player to score at least 30 points in nine straight games while winning all nine contests. It featured him posting a season-high and new personal best as a Laker with 60 points against the Miami Heat last Thursday.
Meanwhile, Reaves has taken the next step in his development this season, becoming a more effective scorer, averaging a career-best 23.5 points while shooting 49.4 percent from the floor and 36.2 percent from beyond the arc.
Before Monday’s game, Doncic and Reaves ranked as the league’s top scoring duo this season with 56.9 combined average points.
James isn’t necessarily taking a back seat, but more so picking and choosing where he fits into the offensive fold. He remains a highly effective scorer and playmaker as a passer in his 23rd season.
If the Lakers want the best chance to compete against the top teams in the league, James will need to firmly entrench himself as the third option.
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As our Leader, this loss is all on Luka’s very poor shooting! Come on man, you the Leader. Cade was even out. Geeze
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I’m not mad at the loss. The team looked tired. But I agree with your opinion.
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I mean Luka gets beat to heck up the floor and so worn he can’t make shots. Surely we can have someone bring up the ball and feed to him. I also think sending LBJ to the rear makes it hard for him to be a real part of things. I mean 10 shots? But, we will only have Luka to whine about if we don’t win the Title.
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Absolutely, DJ.
Luka is getting hammered every trip up the floor, and by the time he crosses half court he’s already spent. Let someone else initiate so he can actually finish plays instead of surviving them. And you’re right about LeBron — pushing him to the back line turns him into a spectator. Ten shots isn’t enough for a guy who still bends defenses just by breathing.But at the end of the day, if we don’t bring home the title, the noise is all going to land on Luka’s shoulders. This team has too much talent to let that happen. Let’s tighten the roles, protect our stars, and go chase the thing we all know is within reach.
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Buba Touray wrote a new post
Read MoreEvery long‑time Lakers fan knows in their bones: the Lakers don’t just play games — they play events. And every opponent treats those events like their personal NBA Finals.
It’s wild how predictable it’s become. A guy averaging 6 points suddenly looks like an All‑Star the moment he sees purple and gold across from him. Dannis Jenkins dropping a career high 30 points lastnight. Donte Exum turning into prime Ginóbili for a night. Random role players hitting step‑backs, floaters, logo threes — shots they wouldn’t even attempt against anyone else. It’s not a coincidence. It’s the Lakers effect.
This franchise is the league’s measuring stick. Always has been. Always will be.
When you’re the Lakers, you’re not just facing the other team — you’re facing their pride, their adrenaline, their “I want to make a name for myself tonight” energy. For young guys, it’s a chance to get noticed. For veterans, it’s a chance to remind the world they still have juice. For coaches, it’s a chance to prove they can out‑scheme the biggest brand in basketball.
And that puts the Lakers in a brutally difficult position every night:
1. They get every team’s best punch — no nights off.
Detroit might be missing DanteCunningham, but against the Lakers? They play like a playoff team. Same with Houston, Charlotte, Orlando — you name it. The Lakers are everyone’s “statement win.”2. Role players play with zero pressure and maximum freedom.
When you’re not expected to dominate, you play loose. And loose players get hot. The Lakers have to absorb those surprise explosions constantly.3. The Lakers’ stars have to match that intensity every single game.
LeBron, Luka, AD — they don’t get to coast. They don’t get to “ease into it.” They have to be locked in from the jump because the other side is treating it like a playoff elimination game.4. The margin for error shrinks.
A random 25–30 point outburst from an unexpected player forces the Lakers to win games the hard way. They can’t just rely on talent; they have to out-execute, out-focus, and out-tough teams that are playing above their normal level.And here’s the truth: the fact that the Lakers are still winning, still climbing, still building momentum despite all that… that’s what makes this run so impressive.
Most teams get to sleepwalk through a few games a month.
The Lakers? They get ambushed nightly — and they’re still standing.That’s why this team is becoming dangerous.
That’s why nobody wants to see them in a seven‑game series.
Because if you can survive 82 nights of everyone’s best shot, you’re built for the postseason.The Lakers aren’t just beating teams.
They’re beating teams playing at their absolute peak.And that’s the mark of a contender.
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Great post, Buba. Loved how we fought back in the second half. Luka missed that shot that would have sealed win. Great close by the Pistons. I thought they were the toughest team we have faced, even tougher than Spurs.
I also loved how Jake finally hit a three and Adou finally got a chance to get his feet wet in a real game. Good to see Kleber return. Hayes and Ayton did a fine job at center. Team still showed they are for real. Let’s win out the season.
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Tom, I truly appreciate the kind words — means a lot coming from you. And you’re spot‑on about how this game played out. Detroit didn’t just show up; they came at us like a team with something to prove. In a weird way, that’s the ultimate compliment. When every opponent treats you like their Super Bowl, it tells you exactly where you stand in this league.
And man, that second‑half fight was everything. Luka had that dagger look in his eyes on that late possession — nine times out of ten he buries that shot and we’re all celebrating. But credit to the Pistons for making every inch a battle. Like you said, they were tougher than the Spurs, and that’s saying something.
I loved your point about the young guys too. Jake finally seeing one drop felt like a weight lifting off the whole bench. And Adou getting real minutes? That’s how you build a playoff‑ready roster — not just stars, but a second unit that’s confident, tested, and ready when their number is called. Kleber’s return was another quiet but important boost. And Hayes and Ayton holding down the center spot the way they did… that’s the kind of depth that wins you games in April and May.
What I keep coming back to is this: even on nights where the rhythm is off, the legs are heavy, or the shots aren’t falling, this team still shows you something real. They compete. They adjust. They refuse to fold. That’s not luck — that’s identity.
If we keep stacking performances like this, even in tough losses, the rest of the league is going to have a real problem on their hands. Winning out the season isn’t just a dream — it’s a statement waiting to be made.
Here’s to the Lakers finishing strong.
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Can’t take their foot off the gas. Three tanking teams are next on schedule. Run them out of the gym and rest the Big Three in fourth quarters. Just don’t take foot off gas.
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LakerTom wrote a new post
LAKERS WIN STREAK ENDS AT 9
pic.twitter.com/tHCrJMceDQ— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 24, 2026-
When Cade gets back, this is the team that’s going to come out of the East. Tough gritty defense and surprising finesse. Best team we’ve played so far during this streak and missing Cade.
Game we could have won but one that still showed our tenacity and toughness. Couldn’t count how many times we fought hard and came back. Couple of bounces and we could have won.
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LUKA DONCIC TONIGHT 🪄 39 minutes 🪄 32 points 🪄 7 rebounds 🪄 6 assists 🪄 11/29 FGOFF SHOOTING NIGHT
pic.twitter.com/01zpwG3IRp— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 24, 2026 -
DEANDRE AYTON TONIGHT
27 minutes
13 points
10 rebounds
1 steal
5/6 FGGRADE DA’S PERFORMANCE
pic.twitter.com/KzT8f8Jy1p— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 24, 2026 -
Lakers come up just short against Detroit to snap their winning streak pic.twitter.com/CrAGAiGFnD— Trevor Lane (@TrevorLane) March 24, 2026
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JAXSON HAYES TONIGHT
21 minutes
11 points
3 rebounds
6 STOCKS
5/5 FGINSTANT IMPACT
pic.twitter.com/RkW4cQuMJU— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 24, 2026 -
AUSTIN REAVES TONIGHT
40 minutes
24 points
5 assists
2 rebounds
7/15 FGPLAYS LIKE A GLOBETROTTER
pic.twitter.com/FDGzv96aPn— Lakers Lead (@LakersLead) March 24, 2026 -
Final: Pistons 113, Lakers 110LA's 9-game win streak is snapped. They lose for the first time since March 5 in Denver. They drop to 46-26. Luka had 32/7/6. AR had 24 and 5. LeBron had 12/9/10. LA just couldn't consistently get stops down the stretch.Up next: at IND on Weds.— Jovan Buha (@jovanbuha) March 24, 2026
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Tom, thank you for the post!
Nine straight wins in this league is no joke, and tonight you could feel the miles on our guys. Back‑to‑back road games against tough teams will drain anybody, and the Lakers looked like a group running on fumes. No Marcus Smart, no Rui, LeBron scoreless in the first half — that’s a lot of firepower and leadership missing early. The body language told the story: heavy legs, slow closeouts, just a half‑step behind on the 50/50 balls.
And yet… they fought. They absolutely fought.
Luka still put up 32/7/6 and kept us in striking distance possession after possession. Austin Reaves played like he had a Harlem Globetrotter mixtape running in his veins — 24 points, 5 assists, big shot after big shot. And Jaxson Hayes? That man came off the bench like he was plugged into a power outlet. Eleven points, perfect from the field, and four blocks, two steals. Instant impact is right.
This wasn’t a team that quit. This was a team that was exhausted, undermanned, and still clawed back to make it a one‑possession game in the final seconds. That says something about their character. That says something about their togetherness. That says something about why they ripped off nine straight in the first place.
An 82‑game season will humble every contender. You’re going to have nights where the legs aren’t there, where the shots fall short, where the rotations are patchwork. Tonight was one of those nights. But losing by three on the road, on tired legs, without key contributors? I tip my hat to this group.
The streak ends at nine — but the belief doesn’t. The fight doesn’t. The ceiling doesn’t.
On to the next one.
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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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FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
Lakers finally beaten.
The win streak stops at nine. The Lakers finally lost, falling 113–110 in Detroit after another hard-fought, physical battle.
This six-game road trip has still been a clear success, filled with big wins and exciting moments, but the last couple of games are starting to show the toll. The Lakers look like a tired, banged-up team that needs a break. And in this one, short-handed without key rotation players in Marcus Smart and Rui Hachimura, the clutch luck that carried them through the streak finally ran out.
Luckily for the Lakers, their direct competitor, the Rockets, lost as well. That means they still hold a two-game lead for the third spot and have a relatively favorable schedule ahead, by some metrics even the easiest among all contending teams in the West, with six of their last 10 games at home.
Source: tankathon.com
The Lakers need to forget this game quickly, recover as best they can, and finish the job by winning the final game of this road trip before finally returning home for a three-game homestand.
Today’s notes:
Tired legs stuck in Pistons mud
Turnovers, the ghost of games past
Marcus Smart is irreplaceable (
VIDEO)
Jaxson Hayes activity and rim protection (
VIDEO)
Kennard’s miss hurt, but the ones he doesn’t take are more problematic (
VIDEO)
1-Tired legs stuck in Pistons mud
All teams are banged up and battling something at this stage of the season, and the team in yellow is no exception. This was their 13th game in 23 days in March, their fifth in the last eight days, all on the road and all hard battles against playoff-level teams.
And you could see J.B. Bickerstaff and his team knew this. Detroit is one of the most physical teams in the league, and they went right at the Lakers from the first possession. Full-court pressure, grabbing, holding, pushing, hitting… the OKC strategy of refs can’t call every foul, so keep fouling until they do. And in this game, they didn’t. I don’t want to say bad calls decided this one, my point is that the criteria and the lack of calls made it a game played on the Pistons’ terms. Luka Dončić, LeBron James, and Austin Reaves were all frustrated by the hits and lack of calls they received in this game.
Dončić also looked less spry, hobbled at times during the game, and maybe that was one of the reasons for his far from ideal night in terms of shot selection and shot-making. He still finished with 32 points, but used 29 shots to get there and was just 3 of 13 from three. A rare off night for a player we saw dominate on this trip, earning him another Player of the Week selection.
The Lakers, as a team, had an overall poor shooting night. They shot 17 of 53, or just 32 percent, on non-rim shots beyond four feet from the basket. A byproduct of the Pistons’ pressure, but also tired legs.
Source: Cleaning the Glass
2-Turnovers, the ghost of games past
Maybe I jinxed it. Yesterday, in my 70-game check, I highlighted the Lakers’ much improved ball control and ability to limit turnovers as one of the key trends behind their recent turnaround.
Last night, the Lakers, despite their poor shot-making, did enough to give themselves a chance. Despite some costly collapses, they battled on defense. They made another second-half run after falling behind by as much as 16. They took care of the ball, which kept the much more athletic Pistons in check in transition. Well, they did that last part until the fourth quarter.
The Lakers had 7, by my count even 8, of their 12 turnovers in the fourth quarter. Six of those, including two on the first two possessions, came in the first four and a half minutes during the stretch when Dončić was resting and Reaves and James were running the offense.
Reaves, who scored 24 points on 7 of 15 shooting, was the most efficient Lakers creator and probably could have gotten more opportunities down the stretch with Dončić struggling. But the Lakers had two rough stints with Dončić on the bench, struggling against the Pistons’ on-ball pressure and losing both decisively. Those fourth-quarter turnovers kept the Lakers trailing even during stretches when the Pistons couldn’t buy a bucket.
3-Marcus Smart is irreplaceable (
VIDEO)
“Not having Smart tonight killed us.” – JJ Redick post-game.
Another thing I highlighted in the 70-game check is that the Lakers got healthy, finally figured out the starting lineup, and started to build continuity with it. Last night, Jake LaRavia replaced Smart, who was out due to right hip soreness, and the drop-off was visible and significant.
Without Smart, the Lakers’ perimeter and point-of-attack defense collapsed, allowing a career-high 30 points to Pistons second-year backup point guard Daniss Jenkins. Jenkins is an underrated on-ball creator, and both LaRavia and Reaves struggled to defend his pick-and-roll actions and drives to the basket.
Jenkins scored on two crucial, consecutive possessions against LaRavia and Reaves in the last minute. Especially that first LaRavia foul was a play where more patience and discipline were needed.
LaRavia has a great motor and can make an impact with his energy and hustle, but possessions like these show why he was overtaxed as a primary defender earlier in the season when he had to play extended minutes because of injuries.
The Lakers still had a chance to win, but went 0 of 2 on their final two possessions, with Dončić missing a mid-range pull-up over Kevin Huerter, and the Pistons deflecting James’ inbound pass to Dončić on the final play, forcing him into a heavily contested heave instead of an open three.
4-Jaxson Hayes activity and rim protection (
VIDEO)
The Lakers’ defense had problems defending Jenkins’ pick-and-roll and Duncan Robinson’s dribble handoff actions for most of the game. Both got loose for a couple of open threes in the middle of the game, when the Pistons built their double-digit lead.
However, the Lakers’ activity and defensive playmaking were again good enough to keep them in the game until the end. Dončić had three steals and drew another charge, his 13th of the season. Unlike in prior games, Deandre Ayton had a very active first stint, with a block and multiple offensive rebounds. But it was his backup, Jaxson Hayes, who shined with 6 stocks (4 blocks and 2 steals).
Hayes struggled against the stronger Jalen Duren on the offensive glass, but made all five of his shots, once again showing the progress he has made this season into a solid backup center.
5-Kennard’s miss hurt, but the ones he doesn’t take are more problematic (
VIDEO)
Luke Kennard, who was a hero in the previous game against the Magic, calmly draining the game-winning three, had a rough shooting night, going just 1 of 5 from beyond the arc in this one. He had another opportunity to hit a late-game dagger, but missed a good look after Ausar Thompson went for a double against Dončić late in the game.
Shooters shoot, and Kennard will make more than he misses. For Kennard and the Lakers, the more problematic shots are the ones he doesn’t take.
Kennard’s shooting makes him, in theory, an ideal partner for guard-to-guard screening actions with Dončić, something many teams, including past Dončić-led Mavericks teams, use in end-of-game or end-of-quarter situations. These actions either create a switch and a mismatch for Dončić against a smaller guard, or an open pop three for the shooter if the defense collapses on Luka.
Why in theory? Because Kennard’s slower release and hesitancy to shoot are big reasons why he has been a high-accuracy but low-volume three-point shooter throughout his career.
Some of the shots Kennard passed up weren’t ideal open looks, but they are shots a great shooter like him has to take to keep the pressure on the defense and serve as an antidote to teams loading up on Dončić. These are actions that become crucial in the playoffs, where closeouts are even faster with even less time to shoot. Reggie Bullock and Tim Hardaway Jr., two of Dončić’s former teammates, were not on Kennard’s level as pure snipers, but their quick trigger made them more dangerous in these guard-to-guard screening actions.
We’ll see if Kennard can grow more confidence and comfort with more reps, because as it stands, it puts a cap on his potential, especially for the playoffs.