JAMIE SWEET’S ‘5 THINGS
Lakers’ Post Game Reports & Analysis
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreSome guys have it. You certainly can’t teach it but you can, sometimes, inspire it as the great ones have done in the past. That inner fire that doesn’t quit, that doesn’t give up or hang your head. Ever. Last season’s team did not have it in any way shape or form. This season’s team has had it all season and it’s nice to see it didn’t go away with the roster turnover and possibly even got better. Let’s get cooking.
- Dennis Schroder rising to the task at hand. Dennis has had a myriad of assignments tossed his way, was recently demoted to the bench, and was thrust back into the starting line up due to injury. While his shot wasn’t on he didn’t let that deter him, something that is emblematic for the entire Laker team these days, and found a way to get the team going on offense with 8 assists to just one turnover. Schroder didn’t hit a single three pointer but did score inside often enough to keep the pass alive when it was needed and showed a coolness under pressure we needed to pull the victory out.
- AD’s big game. Davis hadn’t looked like himself much lately his uneven play. He found his inner flame last night in the paint where he dominated on the glass and with his scoring along with racking up 4 assists. He was also a force on defense deterring shots at the rim and that’s what we truly need out of him. This team is very beatable when AD doesn’t play defense at an elite level. While he had some help on that end and on the glass last night it starts and basically ends with AD.
- LeBron’s foot injury. Feels like the entire season is riding on one’s guy aged body and we’re all hoping he just gets through every game able to still play. Oh…wait…that’s exactly what’s happening. Hopefully LeBron’s right foot injury isn’t too serious, haven’t really seen any updates, I assume he’ll be listed as questionable on the IL for the Memphis game and I kiiiinda hope he rests it for a week because there will be no rest of the season if he goes down.
- Austin Reaves not backing down. Reaves is a pretty quiet and low-key dude. If you’ve seen him on Backstage Lakers he’s pretty humble and reserved. Last night he showed his inner fire by getting into it with Josh Green and earning the legendary double-tech. Still, it was a defining moment in the game and showed the heart of the Lakers and the Mavs lack of poise, a trait we showed a lot last season as the losses piled up. Reaves was, by a wide margin, the most impactful player off the Laker bench which didn’t really ever get going
- Jarred Vanderbilt. Had to save the best for last. No way we can over look this dude’s versatility and tenacity. Pulling down a game-high 17 rebounds (including a career high 8 offensive boards which were key in keeping us in the game), guarding the other team’s best player, scoring efficiently and adding 4 critical steals Jarred was everywhere last night. Far and away my favorite player we traded for, Vanderbilt continued to endear himself to fans and showcase his talents on the biggest stage basketball has: a Laker game. Moving him into the starting line up has so much impact on the quality of overall play on both ends of the floor. Yes, the offensive spacing Malik Beasley creates is important but that doesn’t stymie the best wing or fuel fast breaks with rebounds or keep possessions alive. Jarred changes the game fir the Lakers on both ends of the floor and I wish we had acquired him a lot sooner but I sure glad we have him now. Definitely a keeper.
This win kept any actual playoff hopes alive as it’s quite likely Dallas will be the team we need to leap frog past in order to get there. Dallas had a lot it wanted to prove: that the Kyrie/Luka pairing will work against the best teams (so far the only win has come against the Spurs who are all but trying to lose), get some standings separation and claim the tiebreaker in the same game. With one more game against Dallas on March 17th and each team having won one that will now be decided at a future time and place. That tie breaker could end up being huge. Anyhow, this was the grittiest win I’ve seen us come up with in a long time and it came when it was truly needed. Good stuff. Hope we get D-Lo back to take some pressure off LeBron.
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Yup. If LeBron goes out for awhile I don’t know how much it’ll matter in the end but hopefully Vanderbilt has played his way into a long career as a Laker.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThe Lakers started their end of season run off on the right foot. Winning against an under-manned and struggling in general Warriors team was as close to a must-win game as one can get with 23 games left in the season. Lose and the questions continue, the identity as a team that wilts under pressure gains continues, the overall malaise that had built up around the team continues. Instead the Lakers took the first step in changing a season-long narrative of futility and ineptitude and gained ground on some key teams in the doing.
Got to get over the hump! - Off night for both LeBron and AD. There have been a couple games this season where AD or LeBron (or both) were out and the team came through with a win. none were as convincing as last night’s victory. With Davis and James combining for 8-25 shooting (25 points) and 21 rebounds the stage was set for a disappointing loss. The rest of the Lakers did an admirable job in picking up their two best players and, for a night at least, providing enough firepower to get them over the line with a W.
- Reaves’ perfect night. Austin had a perfect night from the field and a solid game overall. While he didn’t force his offense he was still stellar and helped build a big cushion in the 3rd quarter, an area we’ve struggled in for the most part this season. In his post gamer Austin estimated he had hit the weight room and played “about 110 holes of golf” which is curious because there are 18 holes on most golf courses.
- Shooter! Malik Beasley showed everyone yearning for a volume three point shooter that the place where shooters go to die won’t be claiming his soul, at least not yet. He was magnificent from beyond the arc, solid on defense with 3 steals and had a great game overall after D-Lo went down with an ankle injury. Great game from the new addition.
- Worst coaches challenge ever? Darvin Ham has been pretty solid in terms of when and on what calls to deploy the coaches challenge this season. Last night he challenged one of the most blatant fouls called on a player I’ve seen in a long time. I know LeBron went apoplectic when the foul was called, that’s what he always does. Don’t waste those and don’t get caught up in your player’s emotions. Less than 5 minutes, maybe even 3 or 2, in close games is the only time to ever use a coaches challenge. Players will whine about calls. Always. Don’t let that effect the decision to use it.
- D’Angelo goes down and then goes out. Bad timing for D-Lo when he rolled that ankle, hoping he comes back as it didn’t look too serious but would rather he get it under control now and come back strong. Injury bug came back after the break, too, unfortunately.
All in all I’m still taking this win with a small grain of salt. Warriors have had defensive and turnover issues all season long and that continued coupled with some bad shooting that wasn’t always the result of good Laker D. A healthy and hungry Dallas team looms on Sunday and that will be a solid challenge for the new squad, one that really hasn’t seen a complete, healthy and hungry team, yet. Need to keep on winning in-conference and division games, though, so this was a solid first step in the right direction.
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Encouraging game. The biggest takeaway for me was that both Lebron & AD were subpar but the rest of the roster took up the slack. The win was expected (we were 8pt favorites) but the way we got there was impressive. Hopefully this was just a blip for LBJ but it’s becoming all too common for AD. Nice night all around with Portland, OKC, & Pels also all losing and taking a 2-1 lead head-to-head now against GSW.
Sidenote…we haven’t really changed our style of play yet. Took 30 shots from the arc which is right around our average but Beez was on fire (good to hear D.Ham telling him to keep shooting that thang during the game lol). Blew them away on the fast break buckets though, which has been our bread & butter all year. Felt almost like AD was deferring and trying to get everyone else involved by being a playmaker but that shouldn’t be his role. Can’t have him taking only 5 shots
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Nice post Jamie,
it is great to actually get to post positive things. Watching Beasley i think he may succeed where other shooters have faild. like Steph and Klay he is constantly moving, running to differnt spots as the ball moves, making himself available. others we have brought in would park in a spot and wait. by moving like he does he allows for more volume shooting. now he is streaky so every night wont be like this one. still just having to account for him all over the court will open up others.
We won in a convincing manner but if we are to make the playoffs AD can not take 5 shots a game. he needs to dominate inside. The Warriors have held him in check two games in a row but our success is not sustainable without a larger contribution from AD. im not concerned about Lebron. he had an off night. it happens. but he got up 19 shots so, passivity is not a problem for him.
finally, Bamba was a pleasant surprise. he has not been know as a good rebounder. But he had 13 boards last night. he also has a reputation for being played off the floor by small ball line ups. but he hung in there. Hopefully we are seeing the new Mo. i would like him to develop a post game and a roll game. At 7′ tall with a 7′ 10″ wing span you would hope he could reek havoc on smaller line ups but he tends to foat around the 3 point line. i hope Handy works with on that because a 7 footer should play like one.
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Thanks! Totally agree on the good game by Bamba but that he needs to add to his game. I feel like, should we get to the playoffs, he’ll be another minutes casualty.
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Agreed on AD, got to the line a decent amount and as you pointed out moved the ball but if he’s not involved in the offense we won’t go far. I did think he got missed on a couple of seals and some of that will hopefully get ironed out with time on the floor. Also the only true PG we had left after D-Lo went down was Dennis who is fine but not elite at passing. Still, the foundation of your point is solid and AD needs to be better.
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It’s a testament as to how bad our roster was. We had dudes playing major minutes who really shouldn’t have been. We root for them because they’re ours but….reality. You ain’t winning chit with Lonnie as your 3rd best dude.
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Alotta times when these guys fall through the cracks it’s a problem with consistency. Talented, but everyone who makes an NBA roster is talented. Your work habits & preparation are often the big factor. As well as health…
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Yup, Lonnie may end up a casualty of the talent influx but hopefully it forces him to raise his game and make it a problem to bench him.
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Yup. There will be games where foul trouble or his athleticism are what forces him back into prime time minutes.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThe new look Lakers took the floor against the Golden State Warriors on their home floor where they have been extremely tough to beat and win despite a game that saw Anthony Davis handicapped by the refs as much as anything the Warriors. New faces (one old) all found way to contribute and the Lakers came out of the Bay Area with a much needed win.
- Anthony Davis stymied by “tough” D. I felt for AD by the end of the game. Dude was fighting hard and just couldn’t get a call in the paint. Probably settled for a few too many midrange shots but he was usually open and he’s got to take those shots or drive it in. With the whistles being MIA it was hard to fault him opting for the jumper. Which was mostly off target.
- D’Angelo looked like D’Angelo. A little stronger, a little less greedy in getting his shots, and still playing smooth. He won’t collapse the defense like Russ did or defend like Patrick can but if he just plays his game within what we do it should balance out to net neutral.
- The art of flopping. It’s unfortunate that the NBA doesn’t reward strength, toughness or good fundamentals. You want the call on that moving pick you have to fling yourself sprawling to the floor. It’s silly, I don’t like it, but it works.
- Jarred Vanderbilt is just what this team needs. I loved pairing him with Wenyan for a tall, active front court tandem. Could play those two with LeBron, D-Lo and Malik or any number of combos. He reminds me of a less polished, more active Lamar Odom and his play against the Dubs reinforced my feeling that he was the steal of our trade activity.
- Ham learning. Called some late time outs instead of letting the players just feel it all out. Still went to some small lineups but also played AD and Vanderbilt together (unlike AD and TB which never saw the light of day or barely did). Better late than never.
Can’t keep winning a few and losing a few. Need to put together a 5-7 game win streak. At least need to go into the ASB on a winning streak. Honestly, wouldn’t mind LeBron sitting up to and through the ASB.
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Good fiver, Jamie.
1. AD is an enigma and doesn’t seem to be the same player he was before he got injured. Not sure if we will see that but at least he got his defensive act together at the end of the game. We may not need him to be the second coming to win a championship if we have a dominant LeBron and dramatically improved roster.
2. I’ve always liked D’Angelo both for the skillset and edge to his game. He’s one of those guys who could have gone either way, a braggadocio type player whose mouth is bigger than his game or a brash confident kid who grows into a savvy winning player. I think DLo and we are going to find out which he becomes.
3. l think the only thing you can do to fix the refereeing is to expand the use of replay even if it slows down the game. Better to get it right than to have fans, players, and coaches lose confidence in refs. Give each team 2 challenge and require the refs to look at any controversial play in the game’s last 2 minutes.
4. Vanderbilt is probably the steal of the trade deadline for the Lakers just because of his contract, age, upside, and fit. We’ve been desperate for a bigger wing defender to guard the bigger wing scorers like Kawhi, KD, and Luka. Can he play more minutes without fouling out? Can we surround him with enough shooting so he could start? Want to see Mo Bamba before I declare Vandy the steal of the draft.
5. I’m worried a little about Ham. I wish he would just understand he has three situations where he needs to stagger pairs of players so that he always has:
One of his two superstars on the court.
One of his two point guards on the court.
One of his two rim protectors on the court.Don’t know if we have enough time to make a championship run but winning the next two games with or without LeBron is an important first step. Go into the break 28-31 just 3 games under .500 with 23 games remaining.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreEverything changed and then everything stayed the same. The Lakers continued a mostly season-long trend of coming out quiet in the 3rd quarter which doomed them to another loss despite the flurry of trade activity conducted by Rob. With LeBron out resting a sore left ankle the burden fell to Anthony Davis to lift and like his future HOF cohort he couldn’t get it done. What Lakers remained did their best but it wasn’t enough despite a below average game from the Bucks.
- So long ex-Lakers. To Russell Westbrook, Patrick Beverley, Damien Jones and Thomas Bryant I say thank you for your time in the purple and gold. A lot of you took more flak than you deserved, sometimes you also didn’t do yourself any favors and I, for one, wholly appreciated the fire and intensity this particular group of players (well…not really Jones…) played with every single night. I don’t care if egos get bruised or some eggs get broken making the meal. We saw a whole team of chummy buddies lose a shit ton of games last season. Getting along and feeling good does not a championship team make. We’ll see who lights a fire under the moribund team now because a lot of people are running out of excuses at this point.
- Davis struggles against good to elite defense. AD had no answer to Brook Lopez’s defense except to move further away from the basket. He reverted back to an older shot profile, one that doesn’t lend itself to efficiency and it showed in his FG%. You could argue that Davis took what the defense gave him but I’d counter with he didn’t really even ever try and attack the rim and his lack of free throws shows that. Yes, Brook Lopez is the elite center we traded D’Angelo Russell for (to rid ourselves of the awful, awful Timofey Mozgov signing) and it wasn’t lost on me the irony of people hoping Mo Bamba has it in him to replicate that which we let get away because of our pursuit of a LeBron and AD tandem. At this point Brook has as many rings as our duo and is in a better position to get another one before we do. I’ve long thought that Brook was one of the best players we let get away and he showed that in every facet of the game last night by thoroughly outplaying AD.
- Lakers didn’t do much rebounding. We got anhillated on the glass giving up 16 (!!!) offensive rebounds and losing the overall rebounding battle by 19. This is an area I’m not sure which guy we traded for makes up the difference of losing Russ and Bryant. For all the hoopla about how long Mo’s arms are his career high at 7’1″ is 8.1 rebounds per game in his highest MPG season, by far (25.7). That’s not going to get it done, especially since everyone seems to think he’s best stationed at the three point line rather than do his center job which is box out and rebound. In his 17 MPG this season he’s averaging a quite meager 4.6 boards. Since I don’t envision him doing more than backing up AD (at a pricey $10 million) we turn our eyes to Jarred Vanderbilt (my favorite player we traded for yesterday already). He at least has a rebounding mentality so I won’t be surprised to see him alongside Wenyan when LeBron and AD go to the bench over Bamba.
- Austin Reaves with a bounce back game. Here’s hoping Austin knocked all the rust off last night. he had a great game after a middling affair after a lengthy stint on the IL. Starting or not (likely not) we need this version of Reaves consistently.
- Hey, it’s Dennis Schroder. For at least one game Dennis looked good. After languishing through the game against OKC where he basically looked like a G-Leauger, Euro League Dennis showed up last night. Don’t know what he does on good game days but he needs to bottle it and replicate it in a lab, hopefully one run by David Hasselhoff.
Well, some new players are coming in and it’ll be anyone’s guess what this all looks like leading up to the ASB. My hope is we can go 2-2 before the break, get the new guys into some line ups of impact and give the staff some time to go over film and put some time in on some good ways to utilize them. Whether Rui continues starting is a valid question after his mediocre showing last night. He’s an up and down guy, so far, so it won’t surprise me if he quickly loses his starting spot to Beasley or Reaves or LeBron and we go big with Vanderbilt or Bamba. I have no real clue, honestly, a lot of these guys were running the show or had a steady role on their older teams and that’s not necessarily going to happen here. How they adjust to that and figure how to fit in…and how long that all takes…will now define the Laker’s season along with the game to game health of LeBron and AD. Here’s hoping they’re fast learners.
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Honestly we could have traded everyone but LeBron and AD and we’d be in the same spot we are now: can AD and LBJ play enough games to get us into the playoffs? We just don’t have the chemistry, talent or skill to compete in the west and maybe not even beat Boston, Milwaukee or Philly.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreLeBron James did something few thought possible. He passed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on the NBA All-Time Scoring list and now stands alone atop a pile of some of the best buvket-getters to ever lace them up. What this accomplishments means is something best left to the scholars. For myself, I did get a bit emotional not just because of what it must mean to a person to break a record like that but also because Kareem has always been my favorite player. I like that he’s brusque, focused on things more off the court than on and he had an unstoppable shot nobody has been able to replicate. Like many things of his era Cap was one of a kind.
- Kareem’s legacy is one of repetitive excellence conducted amongst swirling chaos around him. But his space that he occupies is both controlled and fluid. He rarely scored quickly, always measured. His game was forged from his time spent at UCLA under Coach Wooden, his sparring sessions with the legendary Bruce Lee, and a lifetime of fighting against racial and religious stereotypes. He alienated many on his journey, something that many believe is why he’s not more celebrated. I think it’s simpler: he was too good at what he did and if you can’t copy greatness it’s not celebrated to the same degree. Take Edie Van Halen, his way of playing guitar was once unique but then was able to be replicated to a large degree by many others. Same with Michael “Air” Jordan. While he made his name dunking the ball from the free throw line he became a legend because of his fade away jump shot. Lots of players use the same move to create space to this day. LeBron broke the record using that shot. Nobody can shoot the Skyhook and few try. So it will will one day pass from all knowledge and existence save for clips some media producer chooses to show on TV or the internet.
- LeBron’s legacy is one built on power, ferocity and a sustained level of efficiency rare for a modern NBA player. LeBron came into the league with more expectations than perhaps any player in NBA history up to that point. This will likely be surpassed this summer when Victor Wembanyana dons a cap from one team or another when he’s selected first. LeBron’s game came with holes at the beginning. He always was a willing passer but had to grow as both a defender and scorer. He made his early living punishing people in the paint by simply jumping over them. He made a career by adding to his game over time like all the greats have done. He also had the benefit of modern sport medicine and so on to aid in extending his career. The same could be said for any player in any era several years removed from the last time a record was broken and it still takes the dedication of time and energy to go through the process. At any rate, I got emotional seeing the awkward exchange being The Captain and The King, two men who have some differences of opinion but share an appreciation for each other’s skill and accomplishment.
- Coach Ham needs to cut down on his learning process and fast. We had bad match ups far too often last night playing our older, smaller guys too much (Schroder in particular was devastatingly bad last night just giving the ball away a few times and missing all 5 of his three pointers, he looked slow most of the game except a couple of times he used a burst of speed to shake loose for layups). Coach Ham evidently doesn’t believe in extending the game in order to win because he left two time outs in the chamber when we needed to lengthen the game by a few seconds to even have a shot. Despite the make up of OKC (long, athletic, fast) we didn’t play Wenyan Gabriel or Max Christie a single minute and barely played Reaves (the latter making his first appearance after a lengthy stint on the IL). I can understand not playing Austin too much, he didn’t have much of anything going in his 7 minutes, but we needed someone to counter the length of OKC but we stayed with our small ball line up. Again.
- Too many turnovers. 20 with Russ leading the way with 6 but every starter had at least two and both our starting guards (who are PGs by trade) had 3. LeBron wasn’t far behind Russ with 4. Still, the Lakers were the better team in capitalizing points off turnovers the costliest TO was Dennis when he basically just let Shai take the ball away from him while he dithered on the perimeter.
- Anthony Davis has to defend and rebound if he isn’t going to score. AD was an after thought in this game and that can’t happen. 9 shots (made 6) and 8 boards along with a steal and a block all look OK. My issue was his overall lack of aggression, he just kind of floated from one end to the other, wasn’t assertive and didn’t do much to alter the outcome of the game.
Wasting history seems to be the Laker M.O. these days. The crowd was amped, we were playing a team we need to pass, and we kind of showed up. That is absolutely unacceptable. LeBron showed up, Russ showed up, PatBev showed up as much as he is able (which isn’t enough to justify $13 mil, IMO) and Rui showed up. That’s not a team that’s most of a line up. Guys made baskets but didn’t defend the three point line at all. The defense has fallen off a cliff since the calendar turned to 2023. Not winning anything with anyone that way.
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While everyone wanted to LeBron to get the record I think we were to LeBron focused on offense. Other guys were not getting involved on offense and I actually think it effected the defensive end, especially AD. Guys are just more engaged when everyone is involved. As for Russ and his turnovers I can live with some. But besides the one you mentioned, he had two that were just unbelievable. Two times guys were out ahead for a fast break and he passed the ball too literally no one. I’m there wasn’t anyone even in the direction of the pass. So those 3 cost us 6 points. Throw in 3 for 6 on free throws and the combination probably cost us the game.
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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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Good fiver, Jamie. Not what I imagined when were down 27.
Man, we actually beat a team who outscored us by 42 point from three by countering them in the paint by 30 points and the line by 11 points. Amazing grit and defense in that comeback.