JAMIE SWEET’S ‘5 THINGS
Lakers’ Post Game Reports & Analysis
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreBeen swamped at work and at home so haven’t had time to dig into every game. Lots to like, some issues persist but one thing is clear: we won’t miss the playin. Had we won out and not lost to the Clippers we would have been guaranteed to slot no lower than the 6th seed. As it stands we’re probably going to have to play at least one extra game and potentially face the Nuggets or Grizzlies in our first round matchup, should we get that far.
- As it has been for months the daily mantra is “kill ’em all”. Not literally, of course, this is a figurative mantra. The Lakers need to keep applying pressure through winning. We went away from our recent tried and true formula of making AD the focal point with Russell and LeBron on the court against the Clippers as Davis shot the ball only 14 times compared to James’ 20 and Russell’s 13 and Reaves’ 11. Hard to kill ’em all with jump shots when we need to pound teams into submission in the paint. This isn’t as much on the players as it is the coaches. Anthony Davis simply must be the main focal point on offense and our chances of winning will go up with the number of field goals he takes. 20 is the bare minimum.
- Nagging injuries are the bane of our team. Now D’Angelo is nursing a bad wheel? Geeeeez man. Between AD’s floating bone, LeBron’s lower body and now Russell’s hip, back and foot the Lakers have an Operation game on their hands keeping guys available. Hopefully less travel and time between games will help alleviate that although the Lakers are assured zero home court advantage in any series they participate in.
- The starting line up is as solid as it’s been all season long. Unfortunately that means the bench is now lacking depth, especially on the guard front. All our best players start and play big minutes so one of the challenges facing Coach Ham and his staff is finding reliable production off the bench. Schroder has looked gassed this week in all our games. Wenyan busts his ass every night but is generally facing a more talented opponent and that gulf will only widen once we hit the playin/offs. Our “laser” isn’t firing very well. Our more dynamic athletes don’t get consistent minutes. Of all our bench guys I think I trust Rui the most because his offense is pretty consistent and his defense seems to have already taken a small step in the right direction. Not too sure how much I’d throw at Mo Bamba but, like LW4, he is an option.
- Coach Ham still struggling with adjustments. This is one of those things that he’ll be working on for as long as he coaches but we need to see more immediate growth sooner than later or I worry about how we’ll fare in 7 game series. We’re just about one season in under coach Ham and the best I can come up with in terms of identity and philosophy is use our defense to get out on the break and play inside out as much as humanly possible with the focus on the inside. Not to be dismissive but that really is a basketball 101 approach to the offensive side of basketball. Like Vogel before him I think Ham is more comfotrable coaching and preaching defensive principles, which is good, but our offense lacks a dynamic look at times, which is bad. Especially when it comes to freeing up guys like Beasley, Bamba, and even LeBron and D-Lo for three point shots. There doesn’t seem to be a play we run that all but guarantees a shot or a foul. While I doubt that changes this season it’s certainly something I hope he addresses over the summer.
- What destiny we control. Not gonna lie, the loss to the Clippers coupled with a lot of teams in front of us resting key players makes us getting out of the playin rounds a real challenge. it’s unfortunate that we played LeBron, AD, and D’Angelo at less than 100% and still lost because now hindsight is telling me we should have rested all 3 and sucked up the loss in a sacrifice to better health. Still, there’s a small chance we crack through so keep the love light burring, Lakerholics.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreIt’s always good to see the Lakers do what they ought to do. Whether it’s playing the game the right way, not playing down to an opponent or taking a game off for whatever reason it can be infuriating when the Lakers challenge the Basketball Gods. So it was good to see them show up and dominate against the Rockets and not let a bad half stop them from competing against the T’Wolves.
- Dominant Davis. This is the way. It has always been the way. For many years AD himself resisted the idea until no other path made sense. AD at the five, working in the paint and terrorizing teams on both ends. Especially as LeBron ages out and needs a little mroe room to operate having a true center and AD on the floor increasingly makes less sense. Pairing him with a jack-of-all-trades power forward (like JV) makes a lot more sense. Maybe if the other 5 was an elite scorer or defender (like Gobert) one could make a case but the truth is few centers in the league are up to Anthony’s level on defense. Because of his speed and quickness he can compensate for lack of bulk against the Jokic’s and Embiid’s of the league. He can overwhelm smaller players with either size or speed. He can shoot from the outside but honestly the whole team is better when he doesn’t. This is the way. It has always been thus.
- Reaves as a starter works and needs to be the move from here on out. Want Austin to stay? Offer him as much money as you can and tell him he’s the starter going forward barring injury or steep decline. because it’s not only the right move it’s also the smart move. He fits in everywhere and is just good enough at everything to raise the performance of everyone else while not dominating the ball or possessions. There are better ball handlers, rebounding guards, passers and shooters but few who are above average in all those categories like Reaves has proven himself to be. It took awhile for Ham to come around but it looks like he has and here’s hoping there’s no going back. (or cheaping out come summer…TBD on that one)
- Dennis Schroder embracing whatever comes his way. We need you to spot start when D-Lo has a hang nail, Dennis. OK, coach. We need you to come off the bench now, D-Lo is back. OK, coach. Would it be OK if- Stop right there coach, I’m here to support the team in whatever capacity I can. This is what makes Schroder so valuable. He has a slow to load outside shot and isn’t the greatest finisher at the rim but he is a pretty solid on-ball defender, doesn’t turn the ball over too much, and embraces the challenges whatever role is assigned to him.
- Coach Ham’s adjustments are coming around. One game after the absurd hockey line shift substituting we saw that banished. one game of LeBron coming off the bench (one assumes to better align his minutes with finishing the game but still…). Add in playing the right guys in the rotation at the right times and what I consider to be a team-helping injury to Mo Bamba as it’s opened the door for a very effective and efficient Wenyan Gabriel and you can see a playoff rotation forming. That’s one of the goals of the regular season: hone your 10-12 man team down to a solid 9, maybe ten. When Mo comes back one wonders if they’ll slide him into Wenyan’s role, or try to at least. I have my doubts how effective that can be. Wenyan, like Vanderbilt, doesn’t need plays run for him, Bamba does. Or I should say that, unless he just stands out at the three point line he’s not very effective otherwise whereas Gabriel’s hustle and energy provide multiple opportunities for the team. The Bamba vs. Wenyan equation will get interesting come the playoffs, methinks.
- Speaking of which we are so freaking close it’s astounding. Despite all the games frittered away, the lengthy Russell Westbrook experiment that simply was never going to work the team constructed as such and the lengthy absences to LeBron and AD this team has a legit shot at snagging a playoff spot and skipping the playin. This is a goal that should be achieved at almost any cost as it means extra rest and less wear on our best players. It gives the coaches more time to game plan for a specific opponent especially since we pretty much know who we’ll get. Even the 5th seed isn’t wholly out of reach. However, since neither comes with something resembling home court it doesn’t mean much other than playing against Sacramento and Phoenix. I think we match up decently against either team with Sacramento being deeper but that’s not as important in the playoffs. If I had to pick I suppose I’d say I would want to face the Kings in the first round but I like how we match up with the Suns, too.
Just need to keep winning, getting a better in-division and conference record and accumulating as many tie-breakers as possible. It’s the little things that can trip[ us up. Just need to take care of business and we should be OK.
NBA’s tiebreaker rules:
- Tiebreaker No. 1: Win percentage in games played among the tied teams
- Tiebreaker No. 2: Division leader wins tie over non-division leaders
- Tiebreaker No. 3: Division win percentage, if tied teams are in the same division
- Tiebreaker No. 4: Conference win percentage
- Tiebreaker No. 5: Win percentage against conference teams eligible for the playoffs
- Tiebreaker No. 6: Point differential
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThis is how it had to start, how it needs to continue and how the season should end: with a W. With the countdown on and the regular season nearing it’s conclusion the Lakers start a 5 (well, 4 on the road and a visitor game against the Clippers) game road trip. They got off on the good foot to kick things off with a dominant 1st and 3rd quarters and held strong for the win. A new starting five and the trio of D-LO, LBJ and AD remains undefeated in three games.
- The planets were aligned and AD dominated. I can’t go back and forth on this much more. We all know the M.O. When AD plays well, the Lakers usually win. When he takes a back seat, we usually lose. No other Laker affects our winning percentage like AD does. We can say all the platitudes and hyperbolic statements we want but it all comes down to him and his internal fire. Sometimes it’s there, sometimes it ain’t. We need it to be there more than he’s likely comfortable with from here on out. Filed under “We’ll see man…”
- ‘Bron getting his legs back under him. Moving more fluidly then in his first game back, James looked more like the “turn back the clock” player we’d kind of grown accustomed to this season. Still tied for team lead with turnovers with 4 (some how Malik also coughed it up 4 times in just 10 minutes of play…) but everything LeBron did looked like it came easier. He was efficient, go to the line a little, and generally looked and played dominant when we needed him to be.
- D-Lo is the grease this machine needs. In only three games together the new Lakers “Big Three” is undefeated. Small sample size notwithstanding it’s plain to see on any level how much easier everything is when D-Lo plays. He and AD already have a nice P&R vibe going, he doesn’t force his offense and has an uncanny knack for knowing when he needs to make a play to keep the defense honest on everyone else. Mainly it’s his poise and composure that seem so different than D-Lo as a Laker 1.0. He and Reaves are big enough in the back court to cause some defensive issues for other teams and hopefully that continues to trend upwards.
- Playing the right players. If it were me the rotation would like about how it did last night except I don’t know that Malik will get rotation minutes in the playoffs. The money he’s potentially due is the main reason he’s getting any time at all because it can’t be how he’s playing. He’s the third one off the bench between Rui, LW4 and himself. Coach Ham went back to the correct player in Hachimura in terms of favoring him over either LW4 or Malik. Rui is bigger and has the most consistent and dependable offensive game. He can defend as well as any of those three so that’s wash. Stick with this rotation, coach.
- Smart threes, not volume. I get the theory but this team lacks two things that make a volume three point shooter necessary: the proper offensive schemes to best utilize that skillset and time to implement them and the right players to make it work. We’ve auditioned a “Who’s Who” of three point marksmen of various size and skill. Beasley is just another in a long list of shooters who come to LA to sully their reputation. In a way it’s not entirely their fault. The style of play that best suits AD and LeBron is to attack the paint. This is not a surprise. This is why teams will let the Lakers take threes and midrange shots. So when I see 20 next 3PT FGA I don’t panic. The Lakers might, and should, be at the bottom of that particular stat. We function best as a team that forces the ball to the rim. If that leads to an open three, wonderful, but only if that’s actually the best shot. I’ll take AD shooting in the paint over a three all game long.
Friday in Minnesota is as “must-win” as it can get. The Lakers desperately need that win both to move up and maintain positioning as the games dwindle.
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I had issues with the hockey line change in the 2nd quarter when all the starters rested and the Bulls caught up. The 2nd half was much better when Ham mixed starters in with the reserves. It’s apparent that Austin was the straw that stirred the 2nd units drink. He and Dennis have a great chemistry and it gave us a solid 2nd unit. I love Austin starting. But Moving forward I would like the rotation to feature Austin a little more with Dennis on the 2nd unit. And please do not rest LeBron and AD together again!
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThe Lakers lost anyhow. Spoiling what one assumed would a triumphant return the Lakers instead chose Sunday as a Defense-DNP (IDFKW…) game. As a result the game was never really competitive and the Bulls pretty much scored at will, dominated most of the hustle stats, and won the game easily.
- AD taking a back seat approach. AD should have dominated this game, especially after Vucevic was ejected for losing his cool. Instead Drummond and a bevy of small forwards outplayed him on both ends. This was what I was afraid of when LeBron came back. That AD would exhale and take his foot off his internal gas pedal. PatBev used the “too small” trash talk for LeBron, he should have used it on AD who played a lot smaller than he can.
- 34 points off of 18 turnovers tells me our transition defense sucked and that we didn’t value the ball. LeBron and Austin had five turnovers each to pace the team but every Lakers that played, except LW4 and Wenyan, had at least one.
- 54% shooting, mainly from role-players getting what they wanted, when they wanted and no answer for Zach LaVine. Considering that Coby White went 5-17 and the Bulls still shot such a high percentage the outcome could have been a lot worse.
- The fallacy of the volume three point shooter. Malik Beasley had a solid game, 6-14 from three (all of his shots were from beyond the arc) and still was -11 in +/- for the game. There wasn’t a great amount of space generated by his presence, he was unable (and has been unable) to alter the outcome of most of the games he’s played, and the Bulls happily let a one-trick-pony dance and frolic while they went out and won. Malik would do well to add to his one-dimensional shot selection and drive to the hole from time to time, especially if he gets his man in the air off a pump fake which happens a ton. Yes, the three point shot is a valuable weapon. Yes, it can help to have a marksman that theoretically generates space (but not a team like the Lakers who are designed to punish you in the paint…which we went away from this whole game). Yes, he along with the rest of the Laker bench (LeBron included) were awful on defense and got worked over by Chicago’s bench. Don’t know why we keep playing this guy when Rui is a better defender, rebounder and more efficient scorer. Play the better player.
- 2 games together. That’s how much the Lakers currently have to evaluate the pairing of LeBron and D-Lo. There aren’t many games left to base opinions on. The fir may be solid…it may not, 2 games is basically nothing. We desperately need another ball-handler that has a better handle than Reaves does. That’s not a dig against Austin, he’s filled in admirably, but the Bulls knew where he was trying to go and stymied him to a large degree forcing him to be more of a scorer and not the multi-threat player we tend to rely on most games. The Lakers have a multi-million dollar decision before them and their two best players have barely played together, that could make for some unwanted and, frankly, un-needed drama this summer.
Revenge could come as soon as Wednesday and here’s hoping it does as the Lakers go on a 5 game road trip (last one at home against the Clippers with the Lakers as the “road” team) that will basically make or break the season at this point. Can’t finish the road trip with a losing record, have to at least go 3-2 and we need to beat all the western conference teams no matter what.
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Great post about an absolute stinker of a game. I won’t be surprised if something similar happens in Chi-town on Wednesday. Maybe AD will be motivated playing in his hometown but I’ve given up trying to figure out what kinda planetary alignment is necessary for this dude to give it his all on a consistent basis. Gotta be frustrating as a coach or a teammate. I think we’ll still get to the play-in just by looking at where we stand right now and everybody’s schedule down the stretch. But we can’t keep losing games that we’re favored to win (like yesterday).
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Nice post Jamie. You said AD may have exhaled. I think just about the entire team did. Although I have to give props to Troy. 18 points 4-9 from 3, 2 blocks and 2 steals. He actually came to play. I think DLO could make a big difference. He plays under control, gets in the paint and shoots the 3 plus he doesn’t turn it over much. But there is a residual effect. With LeBron back and when DLO comes back, Troy and Dennis move to the bench, giving us a really solid 2nd unit. With the losses to the Rockets, Mav’s and Bulls, making the 6th seed is just about out of reach. We just can’t lose if we want to get to even 7th or 8th. We can’t afford anymore let downs.
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I can see a world where TB takes the starting 2 spot, as well, but likely it’s Reaves for the last few games. Troy has been balling to end the season and is one of our better defenders.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read More400 days later, since last January…8th? When the Lakers were 24-24. It had been an exhibition in mediocrity and futility since that moment. At long last the .500 summit has been crested and the true journey revealed on the peaks and valleys on the other side.
- AD went full-on mountain Yeti on OKC. His 37 points led all scorers, his 15 boards were second to Giddey’s 17 (that dude is going to be gooooood) and, in general, AD asserted himself the way you want him to on a nightly basis. His way of taking the torch won’t look like LeBron, it’ll be as much about his D as his scoring, but games like this make it easier for the rest of the team.
- Dusting off an old fave. Lonnie Walker IV got in early and made an instant and lasting impact on the game. His 20 points off the bench were crucial, his outside shooting was stellar, and his defense was solid. That’s what a professional looks like: hasn’t groused about what I’m sure feels like a demotion on some level and when his number was called because the team needed him he delivered. Big time.
- Dennis taking over down the stretch. The Lakers and Dennis made an excellent 4th quarter adjustment after OKC started overloading on AD essentially daring another Laker to step up. Into that void entered Schroder with drives to the rim against a single defender and timely shots from the midrange and three. Dennis picked his spots like the savvy vet he’s become.
- Reaves struggles. One of the reasons AD got going early was that the Thunder made it a mission to deny Reaves a big game. Austin did right by not fishing for fouls, moving the ball to the tune of 9 dimes, and staying within the offense. It allowed AD to dominate both off the pass and on the glass until they switched late in the second half and had at least two lengthy defenders on AD. Lonnie’s bug game also helped neutralize both tactics.
- Russell out multiple games, again? With an early game Sunday and a 5 game road trip that probably won’t do D-Ali’s sore hip any favors it’s possible he goes on the IL for another lengthy stint. Hip injuries are nothing to gloss over, ask Isaiah Thomas about that, and hopefully his absence last night was as much precaution as anything else but for a team that really could stand to win out the rest of the games any injury, minor or not, is a major concern.
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Yes indeed, me too, but they also vote for things to stay as is (mainly thanks to gerrymandering) so it seems like it won’t be changing any time soon…
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JAMIE SWEET
Associate Publisher
Jamie Sweet and his eagerly awaited ‘5 Things’ post after every Lakers game have become a staple feature of Lakerholics. Jamie’s the Laker fan who jumpstarts and drives conversations with his informed comments and insightful observations.
Another refugee from the LA Times Lakers Blog, Jamie’s a must read Lakerholics poster and commenter whose reputation as a savvy but objective fan is well deserved
You can always get in touch with Jamie on the Lakerholics blog. You can also check out his work with the Garage Theatre in Long Beach or with his band Gnarwhal.
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Teams are doubling AD and forcing someone else to hit shots. We’ll see alot more of that if it continues to work.
Basketball isn’t a complicated sport..the staff needs to figure it out and AD’s also gotta put up more of fight as well.
One thing to look out for as we get into the playoffs…will the Lakers continue to get all these free throws that we rely so heavily on?