I dare anyone reading this to find a better historical record of two Franchises whom…it doesn’t matter who owns them, who coaches them, who plays for them…it don’t matter, they will find a way to wither away.
5 THINGS
5 Things: Lakers need to…
Ask any 8 Laker fans and they’ll have a list. It’s a list with a lot of crossover betwixt one fan or another. It’s a list that could be lengthy or succinct. It’s a list of things that individual fan is 100% certain needs to be “fixed” on the Lakers to ensure that the pathway to another banner has the highest probability of success. Obviously this is a list any fan of professional sport has in one form or another but, in my opinion. Laker fans always have the best lists. Here’s mine.
- Get healthy. Half the items on all of our lists would be solved with better team health. Whether it’s the injuries to Davis and James, COVID and the H&SP or some bum ankles or balky backs the Lakers have not been a very healthy team this season. The effects have cascaded down the roster in multiple ways: Inconsistent rotations, random players thrust in and out of the starting line up and no real feel for the team from the coach. Unlike last season where we featured a very stable and specific rotation, starting five and feel for the coach this team has none of those bonuses. Will that be an issue come the playoffs? My guess is yes it will. Simply from the standpoint of some guys being forced in and out of the starting five so much in addition to making room for Drummond but it’s also showed itself in specific player’s and their impact. Morris tops my list as it would appear his taste of starting has soured his impact off the bench. Will that be the case in May and June? I hope not.
- Settle on roles. This is impacted by the team health but it’s essential for the playoffs that everyone accept and understand what their role on the team is. What you’ve been doing since LeBron and AD have been out is not what you will be doing when they come back. Some guys get that and are willing to sacrifice the individual for the greater good of the team. There are still some question marks in my mind and, for the most part, they all revolve around guys looking for their next contract. Can Drummond sit out an entire playoff series, or more, and not gripe to Jon Q media dude? Will Schroder be able to quickly re-adjust to being the secondary ballhandler on the team and still bring the tough D and grit? Will THT accept the limitations he currently plays under as a burgeoning player in the NBA while still trying to bolster his off season value? The on guy I don’t have questions about is Alex Caruso who is in the same boat: contract is up, small role on the team. He’s always been a team guy and I don’t see him hunting shots or glory points. I want to feel the same way about the other guys (add Markieff Morris to the list as he’s playing for us on the vet minimum but is in the same category as AC is).
- Unleash Montrezl Harrell. It has to happen for us to have lasting success in the playoffs. We will struggle, mightily, if our best player off the bench can’t have an impact beyond taking a charge here or there. A lot of this, in my opinion, lays at the feet of the coaching staff. It’s no secret we’re not a dynamic team on offense but we need to figure out how to get Trezz shots when AD and James are not on the floor, or even if one of them are. I’m not talking about lobs off of drives, those will happen organically. I’m talking about sets we can run to free up Trezz in the paint. Come the playoffs I don’t need to see him shooting from 15 feet out. That’s regular season stuff.
- Keep the turnovers low. Possessions are worth their weight in gold in the postseason. The more gold you hoard during every series the better your chance to hoist a trophy made of it (or at least glazed with it). Silly passes need to stop, fundamental errors (like shortening your dribble, not exposing the ball to small players when you rebound, etc.) need to be cleaned up. The fewer possessions you give away the more field goal attempts you can generate. It’s the simplest math that there is.
- Make threes at a decent clip. I don’t have a number in mind in terms of attempts. If there are better shots available than a three then you take it. I do have a percentage that should allow us to win most series: 38%. A couple ticks over 1/3. If you make that many three point attempts you’re going to do alright. Higher would, of course, be better. But simply shooting the three a lot without corresponding makes is not in and of itself a pathway to success. This will fall on multiple players to help accomplish but number one on my list is Ben McLemore who could be this season’s Markieff Morris. If we can get him hot, keep him and ride for a couple months we’re golden. Larry O’Brien golden.
Just saw that LBJ was upgraded to ‘questionable’ for tonight. Awesome.
https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/31366420/los-angeles-lakers-star-lebron-james-return-ankle-injury-friday-sources-say
Anyhow, what’s on your list?
5 Things: Texas Two-Step to nowhere
The Lakers dropped the second game of a back-to-back against the surging Dallas Mavericks. While it may be true that the Mavs have more to play for the Lakers aren’t necessarily sitting pretty in terms of playoff seeding right now. As they tumble further and further down with not even the return of All Star and NBA champion Anthony Davis stemming the tide one wonders what the Lakers can do to right the ship and get back to at least treading water.
- Unclog the paint. This is a tough one as much has been made about the Lakers ability to acquire All Star talent in Andre’ Drummond but it’s no secret that one of the Laker’s biggest issues on offense is spacing. With our inconsistent ability to hit the three point shot looming larger and larger as the playoffs approach there aren’t many options left for Frank Vogel and the coaching staff to try, The easiest on the court but likely most difficult in the locker room would be re-inserting Marc Gasol back into the starting line up. He plays better from the high post than any other center on the roster and can hit the three. This, likely, would not sit very well with Andre’ Drummond as there is little doubt that Montrezl Harrell is our best-used off the bench and is our best small ball center option after Anthony Davis.
- Find Ben McLemore shots. The Lakers are not a dynamic offensive team, that horse has pretty much been beat down to the ground here and round the world. Coach Vogel and his staff are excellent at crafting top notch defensive schemes and getting the team to adjust them in-game and on the fly. Where we suffer, and it’s an area I hope Rob and the front office will address this summer, is in creating offensive sets designed to get specific players specific shots. I touched on this on the post game podcast last night but wanted to get into this a little more. We got guys who can make threes but there’s no system in place designed to accentuate any of our player’s skill sets except for LeBron James and Anthony Davis. We under-utilize, in my opinion, the shooting of McLemore (and even Wes Matthews) in terms of setting them up for success. It’s all well and good to have some flow and groove to the offense when The King has the ball but one thing this stretch has shown us is the lack of options the Laker offense creates through schemes. Talent is not enough when your best players aren’t playing, you need something else to fall back on.
- Live by the three, die by the three. The above point is not meant to highlight our three point shooters, we got plenty of guys who can score from the rest of the floor. We got lazy last night moving the ball meaninglessly around the horn until we were up against the clock and settled for bad three point shots. Shooting volume shots of any kind in and of itself is not a solution to ay problem. You want to create good shots, that should be the goal. If they’re from three, great. If it’s a post up with big on small, awesome. If it’s juking a guy for an open mid-range, fine by me. Without James and even with Davis we are not a good enough offensive team to settle for bad shots.
- ‘Kieff off the bench ain’t what it was. The difference between Markieff Morris starter and Markieff Morris coming off the bench is jarring. It’s like the guy coming off the bench forgot how to play NBA basketball. In the NBA playoffs Morris was one of our best players off the bench but this season…not so much. The issue is he does not in any way shape or form have a starting role on this team in it’s current rotation. In my opinion this is another area Frank might want to get creative with. Start Morris over either Gasol or Drummond for a couple of games, see how it works out. The dude rebounds bigger than his size, defends bigger than his size. Morris could be our version of P.J. Tucker.
- The learning process of Talen Horton-Tucker. Sometimes it’s easy to forget this is, for intents and purposes, THT’s rookie season. While the record books will not reflect it as such in terms of his NBA growth I assure you that it is. Talen (hopefully) learned some lessons from this series, lessons in regards to how to better box out without fouling, to use your feet and not your hands and sometimes it’s better to slow down than play at the fastest speed possible. The league is starting to sit on his drives, almost luring him into the paint and then swarming him forcing him into ever-increasingly difficult shots. Use the mid range to shake the defense loose and trust in your three point shot, again. Open up the floor for your drive early by maybe taking some out of character shots from long range. Got to mix it up.
This stretch of games coming up is about as crucial as it gets. We need to get back to at least playing .500 ball before LeBron comes back if we want to stay out of the play-in rounds. Although I can think of worse things than a couple tune-up games prior to the actual playoffs for this team the prospect of getting booted before the true playoffs even begin is a specter no Laker fans wants to see looming. All in all, we need a little more from AD and smarter basketball from the squad.
5 Things: AD returns for 1st half, Lakers can’t pull out the win
He’s back!!! At least for a half. Anthony Davis was on a minutes restriction (15? 20? didn’t really matter) and only saw some first half action. The second half was left to the Laker Remainders who couldn’t get the stops or hit the shots to beat the Mavs who also saw Porzingis limp off the floor after rolling an ankle. Lakers are putting themselves in a tough sport seeding wise and The King is still a couple weeks away.
- The return of Anthony Davis. The man looked, expectedly, rusty. Coming off the longest injury lay-off of his career Davis struggled to hit shots form everywhere. That’s expected as I’m sure he got practice in and got plenty of shots up but this was his first NBA action since leaving with the scariest calf strain in Laker history since the hamstring debacle versus the Bad Boy Pistons over 30 years ago. Where Davis did make his impact felt was on defense where he showed he might be able to recapture last season’s defensive impact. That’s where we need AD the most. If he can bring that kind of effort and impact for more and more minutes or playoff chances improve a lot, regardless of seeding.
- Kentavious rounding back into playoff form? This has been a pretty decent stretch for KCP. He’s being more aggressive with the ball, diversifying his attack and still playing solid D. While it wasn’t enough last night the month of April has revealed that the forks we were all sticking in Caldwell-Pope for a good chunk of the year might be ready to be washed and put away. the man didn’t look done last night at any rate. The bigger question is can he sustain and even improve on efforts like this? If AD isn’t able to recapture his shooting mojo like he did in last season’s playoffs it’ll fall to guys like KCP to bolster the offense and release the pressure created by our drive and dish offense.
- Talen’s defensive learning process. Last night was a bit of a down game for THT. It’s hard for any player to se their minutes fluctuate like they have for a lot of the guys on the team, harder still for younger players still trying to find their way. Give the Mavs credit, they were ready for his patented drives and forced him into some bad passes. It’s a rare thing these days when THT has more turnovers than assists. Still, despite his atrocious +/- 12 minutes is just too few for Horton-Tucker. The kid needs to play and it’s on the coaching staff to find minutes for him.
- Three point shooting woes. It’s no secret the Lakers a re not an elite shooting team from beyond the arc. Morris off the bench had a donut to the tune of 0-5, only Schroder and KCP made more than 1 (KCP was on fire hitting 6-12) and neither Kuzma or AD hit one to help open the paint up. Off the bench only Caruso and McLemore (both 1-3) were able to connect. We need to do better, although we kept finding KCP which is line with out team ID. When LeBron returns the paint will be well-packed if we can’t hit threes.
- Defending without fouling. Too many free throws for the Mavs, who whine enough to get them… Some of that is superstar Luka treatment which i wouldn’t mind quite so much if LBJ and AD got the same. They don’t. Anyhow, some of that is on us over-reaching and not just playing solid D without trying for impossible steals. Just man up, keep your feet active and hands up. if they make shots over you, that’s OK.
This was a game we could have won if we clean up some issues. For me the big thing is we’re keeping our turnovers low. That’s a huge key to playoff success and something that is a fixable issue. Lakers need to get this one back in the next game against Dallas or we’re going to be putting ourselves in a sticky situation.
5 Things: Lakers get their hat handed to them in rematch with Jazz
“Sometimes you get the bear and sometimes the bear gets you”, Big Lebowski. The Utah Jazz, with a healthier roster than in the previous game, easily handled the Lakers last night in a fairly one-sided affair. The Lakers never led, the same starters who shone a couple days ago couldn’t replicate that effort and the Jazz shot the lights out. One to forget because sometimes you just get you ass handed to you.
- Starters get whupped. The same group that all had heady +/- stats in the previous game all had equally abysmal +/- ratings last night. Not surprising really as it was our hodgepodge collection of “starters” competing against the true Utah Jazz starting five, minus Donovan Mitchell of course. As we’ve said several times this collection of guys was not meant to carry the Lakers for a stretch like this. They’re above-average players, a step or two above role-player, journeyman status, but they’re not All Stars. Maybe Drummond has AS potential, not sure about anyone else. Asking them to beat the #1 Jazz is a tall order considering the Jazz had all but one of their players.
- The Gobert Effect. Much has been made of the diminishing role of the true big man in today’s game but Rudy Gobert completely flipped the game for the Jazz. With Rudy patrolling the paint on defense and offering an easy scoring release valve for the guards the Jazz dominated the glass, dominated the points in the paint and that opened up their three point game like it has all season long. Most people point to the French Rejection’s defense as the main game-altering ability he has but his ability to finish in the paint and control the glass is huge, as well.
- The diminishing Montrezl Harrell. Trezz has seen his minutes dwindle as Drummond has asserted himself into the line up. It feels like it’s affecting his game and the staff needs to figure out how to unleash him, again. When Trezz is going we are scoring in the paint, putting a lot more pressure on the defense. That was not the case last night as Harrell only got 4 FGA and no FTA. We’re going to need a lot more from him if we want to pick up a couple more wins.
- THT’s monster game. I give this kid a ton of credit, he’s taken a lot of the adjustments the NBA has made in regards to his ability to get to the rim and added some moves and wrinkles to keep his flow going. By far the best Laker on the court last night, Horton-Tucker is making a case to be in the starting line up now and the starting PG next season. Worse things could happen, given our cap situation.
- Time to give Wes Matthews minutes to Ben McLemore. No more reasons, it’s just time. Make the move, Frank.
Not going to read too much into this or overly bemoan the lack of energy and fight, the Jazz are the better team right now. We’ll see how this looks if we meet in the playoffs and we have James and Davis. This was no playoff preview. Time to prepare for the Mavs on Thursday.