LAKERHOLICS BLOG
Live Lakers News and Conversations
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
in case you missed it, i wrote about lebron james and a versatility that has not only allowed him to evolve over time, but shape-shift in the moment to be whatever his team needs — including a lower usage force for the streaking lakers: https://t.co/Cd4fYcGQfp— Darius Soriano (@forumbluegold) March 22, 2026
Read Morein case you missed it, i wrote about lebron james and a versatility that has not only allowed him to evolve over time, but shape-shift in the moment to be whatever his team needs — including a lower usage force for the streaking lakers: https://t.co/Cd4fYcGQfp— Darius Soriano (@forumbluegold) March 22, 2026
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
The NBA just RESCINDED Luka Doncic's second technical foul from last night – meaning he SHOULD NOT have been ejected against the OKC Thunder 😬 pic.twitter.com/ARTJC7TJNL— Basketball Forever (@bballforever_) April 9, 2025
Read MoreThe NBA just RESCINDED Luka Doncic's second technical foul from last night – meaning he SHOULD NOT have been ejected against the OKC Thunder 😬 pic.twitter.com/ARTJC7TJNL— Basketball Forever (@bballforever_) April 9, 2025
-
Stupid move to give Luka that kind of tech knowing he had 15. Poor judgement. Need to look at things in full context.
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
Read MoreIf the Lakers continue to perform like a top-5 team the rest of the season and playoffs, their goal next summer could be to add finishing touches to a championship team rather than conducting an extreme roster makeover.
The Lakers’ top-5 play the last 4 weeks has dramatically transformed what was supposed to be a ‘gap’ year in their post-sale championship pursuit into a surprising legitimate opportunity to possibly go deep into the playoffs. Over the last 4 weeks, JJ Redick has the Lakers playing like an elite top-5 NBA team on both ends of the court. In fact, they have played so well they now have the 3rd best record in the West and 5th best record in the NBA.
The biggest winners of the Lakers’ dramatic turnaround are JJ Redick, who’s suddenly a legitimate candidate for Coach of the Year, and LeBron James, who’s suddenly found his ideal Lakers’ futugre as a role player.
The job JJ has done with this flawed Lakers’ roster is totally deserving of Coach of the Year and LeBron’s not only accepting but fully embracing being the Big Three’s third option is the move that made it all work.If the Lakers have a deep playoff run this season, they may have to use more of their $60 to $80 million in cap space next summer to re-sign Austin Reaves, Marcus Smart, Rui Hachimura, Jaxson Hayes, and Luke Kennard.
Besides cap space, the Lakers will also have $25 million in tradable contracts and 3 first round picks to possibly trade for a new starting 3&D small forward and/or a new starting rim protecting, floor stretching center.Imagine a Lakers team next season that starts Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Peyton Watson, LeBron James, and Walker Kessler with backups Marcus Smart, Luke Kennard, Jake LaRavia, Rui Hachimura, and Jaxson Hayes.
-
Lakers Sudden Top-5 Ascent Could Transform Plans For Next Summer The Lakers’ top-5 play the last 4 weeks has dramatically transformed what was supposed to be a ‘gap’ year in their post-sale championship pursuit into a surprising legitimate opportunity to possibly go deep into… pic.twitter.com/9VtzJCy8cC— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 22, 2026
-
Lakers Sudden Top-5 Ascent Could Transform Plans For Next Summer The biggest winners of the Lakers’ dramatic turnaround are JJ Redick, who’s suddenly a legitimate candidate for Coach of the Year, and LeBron James, who’s suddenly found his ideal Lakers’ futugre as a role… pic.twitter.com/BtgWdrIGHp— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 22, 2026
-
Lakers Sudden Top-5 Ascent Could Transform Plans For Next Summer If the Lakers have a deep playoff run this season, they may have to use more of their $60 to $80 million in cap space next summer to re-sign Austin Reaves, Marcus Smart, Rui Hachimura, Jaxson Hayes, and Luke… pic.twitter.com/OstGAaPMJz— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 22, 2026
-
Lakers Sudden Top-5 Ascent Could Transform Plans For Next Summer Imagine a Lakers team next season that starts Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Peyton Watson, LeBron James, and Walker Kessler with backups Marcus Smart, Luke Kennard, Jake LaRavia, Rui Hachimura, and Jaxson Hayes.… pic.twitter.com/qexRIHBYbE— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 22, 2026
-
NEW: LeBron’s odds to remain with the Lakers next season are surging on Kalshi:49% — Lakers/Retires33% — Cavs13% — Warriors4% — Knicks pic.twitter.com/xBPonyM5DC— Kalshi Hoops (@KalshiHoops) March 22, 2026
-
If he leaves he is going cheap to Spurs or OKC or a place to fit in and guide and WIN! If he were 31 there no question he’s an excellent player, without respect to money.
-
LeBron may have found a way to keep playing for another 2 or 3 years with the Lakers but at a discounted salary. Why move from LA when he can win more rings there and continue to enjoy SoCal life. LeBron’s not leaving LA.
-
I agree 100%. He doesn’t need $$ and Luka and Austin and Giannis will allow him 2 more years.
-
-
-
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
I’m So Sorry To Tell You This But The Lakers Must Be Taken Seriously https://t.co/ZlsJrRwAAA— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 21, 2026
Read MoreI’m So Sorry To Tell You This But The Lakers Must Be Taken Seriously https://t.co/ZlsJrRwAAA— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 21, 2026
-
Why Lakers' 9-1 record in March sends shockwaves through the NBA Playoff picture https://t.co/NtHWQqhp83— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 21, 2026
-
FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
The Lakers’ recent victories, including wins over multiple strong opponents and tightly contested finishes, reinforce the idea that they are learning how to close games effectively. While questions about consistency and defensive sustainability remain, their March performance has reshaped expectations.
-
-
Lakers finally know who they are and it’s getting scary for the league https://t.co/5giDruY3CF— LakerTom (@LakerTom) March 21, 2026
-
FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
The turnaround for the purple and gold starts at the top with Redick, Luka, and LeBron before working its way down through the entire starting lineup and second unit. For a while, the Lakers were a rusted-out old Honda. Now, they are a well-oiled Lamborghini with the playoffs approaching.
-
Tom, you’re once again preaching truth right now — this team has flipped the entire narrative on its head. A month ago, talking heads were everywhere saying the Lakers look old and slow, opponents circled the Lakers on the schedule as a “get-right” game. Now? They’re circling it with dread. You can feel it in the way teams tighten up in the fourth, the way coaches burn timeouts early, the way stars start forcing shots because they know the Lakers are coming.
What’s wild is how earned this transformation feels. It’s not smoke and mirrors. It’s not a lucky stretch. It’s a group that finally decided to match its talent with toughness and execution. Redick has them playing with clarity. Luka has embraced the responsibility of being the engine. LeBron has shifted into that terrifying “I’ll do whatever the game needs” mode. And the rest of the roster — from the starters to the second unit — is feeding off that energy like they’ve been waiting all season for this moment.
You nailed the metaphor: this team really did go from a sputtering Honda to a roaring Lamborghini. And the best part? They’re not even redlining yet. They’re still finding new gears, new combinations, new ways to close out games that used to slip away.
The league can pretend they don’t see it, but every coach and every contender knows the truth: the Lakers have become the team you don’t want to see in a seven‑game series. Too much shot creation. Too much experience. Too much belief. And now, finally, too much cohesion.
If this is the version of the Lakers we’re getting heading into April, then the West just got a whole lot more interesting — and a whole lot more nervous.
The purple and gold are officially back in the conversation. And this time, they’re not asking for respect. They’re taking it.
-
-
-
-
-
LakerTom wrote a new post
Playing 2 on 2 after going full court for 3 hours @UCLA, Wilt and I were teammates. The late David Greenwood was giving Wilt the biz, talking major trash in the process. “too old”, too slow, big fella” type ish. Wilt pulled me to the side and told me to pass it to him every time.… https://t.co/SxKUPuOsXo— Elder Marques Johnson (@olskool888) March 21, 2026
Read MorePlaying 2 on 2 after going full court for 3 hours @UCLA, Wilt and I were teammates. The late David Greenwood was giving Wilt the biz, talking major trash in the process. “too old”, too slow, big fella” type ish. Wilt pulled me to the side and told me to pass it to him every time.… https://t.co/SxKUPuOsXo— Elder Marques Johnson (@olskool888) March 21, 2026
-
You have to listen to this story about Wilt and how Magic used to always stack his team when he put together games. Wilt and four UCLA freshman against Magic, Worthy, Bernard King, Byron Scott, and AC Green.
-
- Load More Posts

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.
FEATURED ARTICLE

Lakers’ Elite Shooting & Playmaking Propelling Miracle Sweep of Rockets
Give Lakers’ second year head coach JJ Redick and his staff their flowers because they have found the blueprint to beat the younger, bigger, stronger, and more physical Houston Rockets in their first round playoff series.
FEATURED POST
5 Things: Finding Some Grit
65 games in and the team is starting to look a little sterner, little grittier. One of the ugliest first halves I’ve seen since the 90’s man. The win was one of the more impressive of the season, in my opinion. 1) Luka finding solace on the court. Sounds like his personal life has been […]
FEATURED PODCAST
NBA Observations- Big Money Spent For The Clippers And Heat, Are The Lakers Next?
The guys from the Lakers Fast Break return for some NBA Observation as they share thoughts on the recent big-money extensions for Miami coach Erik Spoelstra and the Clipper’s Kawhi Leonard. Does this mean the Lakers will be opening up their wallet a little more as well? Plus after Toronto Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic’s huge rant after the Lakers game because of the fourth-quarter free throw disparity, we ponder if Darvin Ham will ever show that kind of energy if he remains as the guys on the sidelines for LA. We’re back talking some big $$$, and wondering if the Lakers are ready to go on a spending spree? Find out our thoughts on the latest Lakers Fast Break podcast!
Don’t forget to watch the Lakers games with us LIVE at playback.tv/lakersfastbreak and our newest Lakers Fast Break merchandise site is now up at https://tinyurl.com/39yb4ta3, check it out!
Please Like, Share, and Subscribe to our channel and our social media @lakersfastbreak on Twitter.
If you have questions, give us a shout-out on Twitter, YouTube, Twitch, Kick, Instagram, TikTok, or Facebook, or send us your thoughts to lakersfastbreak@yahoo.com or become a supporter of the Lakers Fast Break today at https://anchor.fm/lakers-fast-break
The views and opinions expressed on the Lakers Fast Break are those of the panelists or guests themselves and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Lakers Fast Break or its owners. Any content or thoughts provided by our panelists or guests are of their opinion and are not intended to malign any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual, anyone, or anything.
Presented by our friends at lakerholics.com, lakersball.com, Pop Culture Cosmos, Inside Sports Fantasy Football, Vampires and Vitae, SynBlades.com, YouTube’s John Mikaelian, the novel Congratulations, You Suck (available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble), The Happy Hoarder, EmpireJeffTV, Larry Lakers Dribbling Chat Chat, Lakers Corner, and Retro City Games!
Recent Comments
WHO’S ONLINE
[who-is-online-now] 

FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:
LeBron James might be the most versatile player ever and it’s allowing him to take on less while doing more.
If the biggest talking point from the Lakers current 8-game winning streak is the unrelenting brilliance of Luka Dončić as he scorches every defense in his path, the second most discussed topic is LeBron James and his buying into a “smaller role” for the benefit of the Lakers.
Listen to most any talking head speak about the team, and there it is: LeBron as the third option is the sort of insert-your-superaltive-here fodder that everyone is feasting on.
It’s not just coming from folks outside of the Lakers, either. Prior to the Lakers’ first game against the Rockets this week, head coach JJ Redick spoke about where LeBron’s role is now, particularly in relation to Dončić and Austin Reaves (emphasis added).
“(LeBron’s) still going to be, and still has been, a high-usage player relative to your average player,” Redick said. “The best thing for our team is him being the third-highest-used player. Obviously, there’s been stretches of the year where he’s had to do more, with injuries or guys being out of lineup. And I think finding a rhythm and a groove within the rotations and lineups when those three guys play, I think that’s been the challenge for all of them, not just LeBron, all season.”
After the Lakers’ win over the Heat, LeBron himself built on Redick’s last point about finding that elusive cohesion, noting a key reason things are where they are now is that this group is finally getting more on-court time together and the reps that come with it.
“I think for us, it’s always been about time,” LeBron said. “We haven’t really had a lot of time to actually put in the work on the floor with one another. Obviously, we had a little bit of last year but Luka was just getting to the team and trying to get comfortable with what he wanted to do. We’re all trying to get comfortable with what all three of us wanted to do.
“I start the year not in the lineup. [Reaves] had a moment where he was out. It was just trying to figure it out. Then I was out a couple weeks ago and was able to come back and see how I could best fit [with] those guys because they were playing so dynamic off one another.”
All of these comments ring true to me. But they also obscure something that is hiding right under the surface, and are sort of the unsaid and implied idea that actually make all of this possible.
Namely, that this only works this way because LeBron is a gifted and versatile enough basketball player to lean into the parts of his game that fit the style his head coach wants to play and what best works around a superstar offensive monster like Dončić and a second option like Reaves.
MEMPHIS, TN – OCTOBER 31: Austin Reaves #15 and Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrates during the game against the Memphis Grizzlies during the 2025 – 2026 Emirates NBA Cup game on October 31, 2025 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Grant Burke/NBAE via Getty Images)
MEMPHIS, TN – OCTOBER 31: Austin Reaves #15 and Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrates during the game against the Memphis Grizzlies during the 2025 – 2026 Emirates NBA Cup game on October 31, 2025 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Grant Burke/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images
It’s not just that LeBron is being asked to play less of an on-ball role. It’s that he’s also supposed to be someone who can be a screener and finisher out of the pick-and-roll, be a connective passer, a shooter in spot up situations, a cutter who slides into the gaps of the defense as his teammates draw attention, a post up threat who can score in single coverage and pass when the double comes and an elite transition player.
And then on the other side of the ball, he needs to be a defender who can help all over the floor, hold up in isolation and matchup with multiple positions, be a good enough rebounder to play in center-less groups, rotate from the paint to the rim and back to the paint again, force turnovers in passing lanes and as a back-line disruptor and be an expert communicator whose voice helps organize the entire unit he’s on the floor with.
Few players can check all of those boxes at all, but even fewer can do it while also being, historically, one of the best on-ball shot creators the league has ever seen, who just so happens to be playing in his 23rd campaign in his age-41 season. It’s just not supposed to work that way.
But, here is LeBron doing exactly all that.
For example, here are the highlights from LeBron’s triple-double vs. the Heat:
Look at all the different ways he’s scoring and impacting the game. Flashing into the middle of the Heat’s zone to serve as a scorer and a passer, attacking closeouts from the corner to set up teammates for shots, serving as the hub of the offense out of the team’s Horns sets to get Luka and Reaves the ball in scoring position, running the break as a finisher and a creator.
Just an unreal level of versatility that shows an expertise in multiple parts of the game.
Of course, at this late stage of his career, LeBron isn’t perfect. His effort from play to play is not what it once was and earlier in the season, it would not be difficult to find a string of possessions on either side of the ball where he stood and watched too much and simply did not show the type of activity needed to be a positive contributor in those moments.
Those were the stretches that had analysts and fans alike wondering whether the Lakers were better without LeBron and if this should be his last season…and not just with the Lakers.
With how he’s playing now, though, those sorts of thoughts look totally misguided. Because LeBron isn’t just showing that he still has enough juice to play well and put up counting stats, but that he has the intellect and versatility to impact winning.
I struggle to think of any other player in league history who could claim to make this sort of transition, much less tap into these different aspects of their game on any given possession to give the team exactly what it needs at that time.
Which, I think, is actually the bigger and more impressive point to be made.
We have all seen the evolution of players who could play for extended periods. I think of players like Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant who added to their respective games year after year, turning weaknesses into reliable weapons and showing an ability to adapt with age to whatever new circumstances were presented to them.
LeBron fits into this mold too, incorporating post-ups and 3-point shooting into his arsenal over the years to combat any and all defensive coverages.
Getty Images
But LeBron hasn’t just evolved with time. He’s shown an incredible ability to shape-shift and be whatever his team needs him to be. And not just game to game, but from shift to shift and possession to possession.
In the Lakers second win against the Rockets, LeBron began the game knocking down a spot up three on a play designed specifically to get him that shot, in the same game he had six dunks while dominating in transition and working out of the post. At the same time, he had multiple defensive possessions switching between Amen Thompson, Alperen Şengün and Kevin Durant — and getting stops on all of them. He flashed similar versatility against the Nuggets recently, defending Nikola Jokic, Aaron Gordon and Jamal Murray, all while working offensively from a multitude of spots on the court.
And he’s done stuff like this his entire career. Back in 2011 when he was with the Heat, LeBron famously switched onto Derrick Rose defensively in a matchup with the Bulls in the playoffs to help Miami swing the series in their favor. Less than a year later, I remember LeBron expertly fronting Pau Gasol to deny him the ball in a regular season game to shut down a player who was, at the time, one of the best post-up bigs in the entire league.
Over a decade later, LeBron is still flexing all the different parts of his game to help his team win. And, no, he might not be the main guy he was back then with the Heat. Just like he’s not the same main guy he was with the Lakers just a couple of seasons ago.
But I’d argue that makes what he’s doing now even more impressive. It’s not just that he’s passed the reins to someone else or taken on a lower usage role. It’s that he’s done so while also turning up other aspects of his game that allow him to maintain a baseline level of production while also clearly contributing to winning.
This just isn’t something that we’ve seen in the history of the NBA, and, honestly, I wonder if we’ll ever see it in this exact way ever again.