JAMIE SWEET’S ‘5 THINGS
Lakers’ Post Game Reports & Analysis
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreAaaaaaand that folks is why we don’t award things based on hype or expectation. One would imagine just about every human on Earth calling this one a loss before the game but as we saw there’s a reason they play the games. The Lakers got some great contributions from up and down the roster in what ended up being a testy affair and a really fun game to watch.
- The ejection. The game was a tightly fought, back and forth affair. Just prior to the ejection we saw the Nets briefly take a lead on us. Then Schroder and Kyrie Irving got into it after what seemed to be a fairly mundane personal foul call. I don’t pretend to understand what motivates Mr. Irving but the fact that he has now taken the next game off for personal reason, to me, means it was more about his desire not to keep playing basketball and get some time to himself. he left his teammates to explain what transpired so we may never really hear what went down. Schroder, for his part, seemed confused as to why he was assessed the second tech (the official explanation was his little wave to Irving as he departed the floor, that feels silly, players do that all the time). Regardless of what occurred between the two grown men the incident sparked the Lakers to a 57-33 run that ended when garbage time commenced and the Lakers comfortably ahead.
- How we went on The Run. It can be weird, the thing that sparks a team to realize what they can do when short-handed, in the case of the Lakers who were already without LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Marc Gasol, Kyle Kuzma and Wesley Matthews Jr it was seeing Dennis Schroder depart the court after his 2nd tech. That seemed to free up the remaining Lakers and they started playing fast and loose on offense while getting even scrappier on defense. Whether it was Talen Horton-Tucker finding teammates for a game-high 11 assists, Alonzo McKinnie grabbing 9 rebounds in 28 minutes off the bench, Andre’ Drummond powering his way through the Net defense for a team-high 20 points and 11 rebounds or contributions from up and down the roster the Lakers seemed to make all the right moves in the third quarter and into the 4th.
- Welcome to the Los Angeles Lakers Ben McLemore. He had started fairly quietly in his first game playing only 17 minutes and taking only 3 shots. That was not the case last night as he played 23 minutes canning 6-12 shots, 5-10 from three point land bestowing upon the Lakers the kind of shot-taker (and maker) that Laker Tim has been pining for all season. McLemore led a solid attack from beyond the arc that saw the Lakers shoot 19-35 (55.9%) but it was Ben who helped fuel the run that out the Lakers comfortably ahead in the third. It started with a nifty shot off a bounce to catch a pass from Caruso. McLemore’s feet barely hit the floor before he got into his shooting motion and canned the first of his three pointers. To their credit the Lakers fed him a steady diet of threes or ran screens to free him up. Like Frank says: go with the hot hand.
- Double-figure boogie. The balance the team had in it’s scoring meant that there was no single player Brooklyn could key in on to stop. Every starter scored in double-figures. Off the bench everyone who played during the meaningful minutes except Alex Caruso hit double-figures, as well. That kind of balance is difficult for teams to handle and it assuredly is the way for this team to be competitive without it’s stars. We don’t need every player to score in double-figures but there needs to be contributions in some form or another from everyone.
- Buyout Blues. There have been some recent reports from various media outlets from small market teams and GMs that they aren’t happy with how the NBA buyout system is working. Well if that isn’t sour grapes I don’t know what is. The basis of the issue is that small market teams feel they’re getting railroaded into buyouts by power agents who rep high profile talents who want to play for teams who are in a better position to compete in the here and now. The gist of theses gripes are that they’re not getting compensated in the form of talent or picks when they choose to make these players available. I don’t get it. These teams sign or trade for players on high dollar contracts then choose to sit them in favor of younger talent. These players are often not on expiring contracts (like Blake Griffin was, for instance) and will be a drag on said small-market team’s ability to offer high dollar contracts in the coming off-season. The buyout is a way for them to free up space to re-sign or extend the younger talent they are choosing to build around. They make the choice to sit the current high-dollar contract they have, they save millions of dollars and get salary cap relief and yet…they want more. While it’s unfortunate that not all teams can play in large markets. It’s not enough that the player gives up money out of their pocket, the fact that draft picks or young talent is flowing their way is, somehow, the league’s fault. That’s absurd. You shouldn’t have signed Blake Griffin to a max deal or traded for him when he was early into that max deal. You don’t HAVE to buyout player X, you’re the one who wants the cap space freed up and for the player to be off your roster. If you can’t find a trading partner you don’t have to buy them out. Play the game back at the agents. Small market teams, they want the Sun, the Moon and the stars and they don’t want to work to get it. Here’s another idea: sell your team and get into a business you better understand and can compete at. You expect your players to try their hardest, give their best and sacrifice limb and life for you but don’t want to do the same yourself. That’s absurd.
Tuesday sees the Lakers face off against the resurgent Knickerbockers and one Julius Randle. Should be a good game and if we can turn in the same effort as we did against the Nets we should be competitive. That’s all any of us can ask.
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Great Fiver, Jamie. And the game was a needed breath of fresh air and hope for Lakers fans. What I loved most was zero intimidation. Not when the game started. Not when they fell behind by 4 late in the first quarter and then fought back to get the lead. Not when the dumb ref kicked Dennis out with only a 4-point lead. In fact, our response to the ejections compared to the Net’s reaction said everything about which team wanted this game more.
1. The ejections. Agree 100% that Dennis should not have been ejected. Waving good bye to Kyrie is not taunting. This is like suspending THT for coming a feet onto the court. The league needs to look at these situations with some common sense.
2. The run. Have to give the Lakers credit for not folding when they lost Dennis, who had been having his best game of the year. Lots of credit goes to THT for his playmaking and running the offense but the entire team responded like they had done all game long. I’m hoping this was one of those transcendent moments on the road when this team said enough is enough.
3. Ben! It’s actually rare when a team can add a player via the buyout market who becomes a real difference maker. The Lakers were able to do that last year with Markieff Morris. This year, it looks like Rob was a magician as he appears to have landed not one but two difference makers in Dre and Ben. Every Lakers fans needs to realize we would NOT have won that game without Dre and Ben. Not taking away from the rest of the team but they were the Calvary that gave this team newfound confidence.
4. 8 players in double figures. Right on, Jamie. Balance is a bitch for teams to handle, especially teams who don’t play good defense. Lakers dominated like they were playing the Kings. The defense was great, doubling KD and forcing him into 8 turnovers and shutting down Brooklyn’s 3-point shooting to 0-15 for the second half. Message and Finals preview sent to Nets.
5. Buyout Blues. Ef the small market teams. Don ‘t they remember they were the ones who negotiated these buyouts. Want to blame somebody, blame the Cavs and Piston’s front offices. Don’t blame the Lakers. There’s enough allowing the tail to wag the dog already. Enough with the losers trying to dictate more advantages. They’re being carried enough already.
Lakers need to keep this mojo going tonight and tomorrow night. Can’t allow any letdown and blow two winnable games. Finish the road trip with a pair of blowout wins and a 5-2 record.
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I think we lose to the Knicks, sorry to say. They’re right there with us defensively, have been solid all season and Randle will be motivated. It will be interesting to see how the willowy Nerlens Noel does against Dre’. If Dre can bully the Knicks frontline like he did the Nets we have a better shot but the real issue is I feel like the Knicks will really force us off the three point line with solid close outs. A matchup of two defensive titans, neither team might score over 90, lol.
In regards to the small market whiners, as you know I’m fond of saying: them’s the rules. Don’t like them? The only way it can be fair is to either add a caveat like the MLB has (toss a draft pick to the team you’re buying out from, 2nd rounder only) or simply do-away with the buyout market altogether. The small market teams are the ones that want to curtail player movement, hoard more of the CBA and tilt the playing field towards them even more than it already is. So, if the GMs of those respective teams find the job of managing the salary cap too difficult, end buyouts and see how GM’s look to structure contracts. Heck, add a “no buyout” clause or something to that effect. But once freed there should be no limits on what team a player chooses. They are now unrestricted free agents and can sign anywhere. It’s absurd.
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LMAO. Admiral Ackbar just can’t keep himself from emptying the glass.
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Except that it’s not: the Knicks would be the one’s falling into it and I simply don’t see that happening is all.
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Jamie Sweet: “Tuesday sees the Lakers face off against the resurgent Knickerbockers and one Julius Randle. Should be a good game and if we can turn in the same effort as we did against the Nets we should be competitive. That’s all any of us can ask.”
It must be tough to be a GHE fan, always expecting the worst. The best we can hope for is a competitive game? LMAO. Come on, Jamie. Have some faith in this team.
Lakers will win by a blowout.
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Exactly. Oh how can these woebegone small market teams survive?! It’s absurd.
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Here’s hoping. In the end our role-players beat their role-players along with recently activated KD. I’m not walking away from any of these thinking the team has figured anything special out. The solution is a simple one: compete, play hard. Good things will come of it.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreIn what was likely conceived as an NBA Finals rematch game the Heat beat the Lakers without the main culprits of their Finals demise on the court. No AD and no LeBron James coupled with the late scratches of Kyle Kuzma (calf) and Talen Horton-Tucker (suspension) meant the Lakers had even steeper climb. They should have hired a Sherpa or gotten a helicopter ride because the Heat were just a touch too much for the remaining players clad in purple and gold.
- Don’t diss the Heat. Laker fans seem to want to denigrate the Heat’s accomplishment in making it to the NBA Finals. I, personally, find that notion absurd. There’s a reason things aren’t awarded on hype or expectations. The teams have to play, one team has to win so many games and that team moves on. Seems simple, one team ends up being better than the other. So, for those fans who crow they don’t fear Miami this one was for you. The basketball Gods always listen…always. Also, wishing Victor Oladipo all the best and a speedy recovery. Guess it’s a good thing we didn’t trade Kuzma and KCP and ahhhh why not, throw in Alex Caruso for Vic, eh?
- Free throw parade. Was I the only one who thought it was ludicrous how often Miami got sent to the line for simply crashing into some Laker or another in the first quarter? I didn’t think I was…
- That contract for Dennis is getting smaller every game. Mark my words, that man is going to fire his agent after this summer when he does not get his $20+ million dollar deal from anyone at all. A player that’s worth that sum of money can lead a team in more than the turnover department, doesn’t fall to the ground and leave his team one man down on the break, and does more than just play defense. Schroder is showing that last season was essentially a fluke, that playing alongside superstar talent like CP3 or LeBron is the only way he can shine. Sorry Dennis, I love your moxie, the cut of your jib and your peskiness on defense but you cannot be relied upon to score consistently. We got plenty of guys who make far less than $20 mil who can do just that.
- Hey it’s KCP. Par for the course this season KCP breached for a game and looked like he wanted to play basketball. I don’t really expect it to carry over as it really hasn’t for most of the season. One good game followed by 3 or 4 terrible ones. Not much more useful than Dennis Schroder these days. You need to do this a lot more consistently to make me believe again, Kentavious. I want to but just can’t find it in me to look past the landslide of my new label DP-BDNSU (Dis Play-But Did Not Show Up).
- Hey Andre’ Drummond finished the game! Which is about all we can say about that. Drummond was never going to save this season, he’s a good to above-average player on bad teams because…they’re bad, they don’t have a lot of good guys. He can do simple NBA center things well enough although the free throw shooting is certainly a concern for a team that often goes through major free throw line funks. I love his energy on the glass and his active hands on defense. I have hope he’ll be better at not holding the ball and looking around while the team tries to get a break going. There were more than a few times where it cost him precious seconds to find an open Laker but he’s getting acclimated. Those issues are correctable. I expect to see Gasol play in the 2nd night of back-to-backs in the regular season, maybe get some time of Drummond is in foul trouble. But he was in foul trouble last night and no Marc so…we’ll see how the three-headed center monster we’ve Frankensteined pans out.
Also, bonus point, welcome to the Lakers Ben McLemore. We’ll see how he grows into a role on this team in the handful of games left but this very much reminds me of the Dion Waiters signing. Might have a regular season impact but he may struggle to find a playoff role if he can’t defend at a decent level. The Lakers don’t cover for bad defenders just because they can shoot, that’s Frank Vogel 101 people.
Lastly, bonus BONUS point: a banner hanging ceremony agaaaaaaaaainst…the Houston Rockets (wah, wah, wah). Fishing for a win on banner night is fine but I think the real reason they chose that game is that there is a high likelihood that LBJ and AD could both be on the floor by then. Not certain, of course (tweets or what have you aside) but I feel like that’s very reasonable. That may not be the timeline Laker fans get excited about but it feels like Jeannie et al wouldn’t want to risk a blow out on banner night and that, if at all possible, have James and Davis play in the game.Last thing: just a friendly reminder that this team is not, repeat, not designed to win without LeBron James and Anthony Davis. Not a player on the roster replicates the skills, talent or gravity both of those men create on a basketball court. So don’t overly-fret these losses save for the fact we’re freefalling through the standings. Might end up rocking a play-in game, might s well start getting used to the idea.
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You’re welcome Buba! I feel like I’ve done 5,822 Fivers on our turnovers this season but it was a huge reason for the loss. You’re right, and in all honesty this was probably an overly harsh Five Things, but Miami had it’s key guys healthy and we had a skeleton crew so this was as close to a guaranteed loss as one could cook up. The guys did fight hard, KCP had one of his better games in a good long while, and Drummond did have a positive impact.
I can also understand where some fans don’t see Miami as a “threat” but that reality is that, when we’re healthy, few teams are a true threat to the Lakers…in a seven game series. Any team can get hot, or we can show up with a dud of a game, in a one game affair which is why the notion of falling as far as the pla-in seedings is a concern. But in 7 games I like our chances against 90% of the League. Where I disagree is that Miami was a pushover NBA Finals opponent because that denigrates our accomplishment of winning it. The two best teams that season met in the NBA Finals and I’ll leave it right there.
Also, in regards to Drummond, this will be one of the few teams he’s not expected to be the best player so I hope it helps him relax. While he’s a terrible career free throw shooter he shot them well enough the other night. My hope is he can settle into a solid support role and give us the power down low that drove the team to the NBA Finals and beyond last season.
Schroder. Man what a mystery that dude is these days. Can’t fault his intensity, can’t fault his trying to make an impact but he just…can’t do it. It shows the step one needs to take to make the leap from good to great. He wants to be paid like a great but, in my opinion, is only really good. His defense alone isn’t enough to justify the payday he’s looking for and his offense is too streaky. Needs to learn how to consistently get to the line when he drives and gets Mac trucked to the floor, which is often. We’ll see how that situation resolves but it’s something to watch this summer.
At any rate, this frustrating stretch has to come with the caveat of reminding ourselves that this team was not designed to absorb this many games without James and Davis. I remind myself every game, every day but still get frustrated with the on court play. Especially the turnovers. AT any rate, hoping we can trap the Nets and win this one but feeling like a big blowout is just over the hill in the form of a healthy Kevin Durant.
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Good Fiver, Jamie. And no, you weren’t too harse.
1. Don’t pimp the Heat either. They’re a .500 team who won’t sniff the NBA Finals this year. 6th place just 2 games over .500 is about where they belong. The fact they had to struggle to beat the undermanned Lakers just confirms that. As does the fact they have Ariza, Iguodala, and Oladipo playing key roles.
2. Fouls. I agree the zebras were out of control and heavily favored the Heat, especially in the first quarter. But Lakers did adjust and didn’t foul in the second quarter. I’m reminded of how KD was laughing at all the pointers on drawing fouls that he’s already gotten from James Harden. Are you listening, Dennnis?
3. Dennis’ shrinking contract. Much as I love some of what Dennis brings, he’s seriously flawed as the primary point guard on the team. In truth, OKC had him in the right role coming off the bench rather than starting. Lakers should have traded him. Now there’s a chance they let him walk, which is better than overpaying him and then not being able to trade him.
4. KCP had a great game. Like Dennis was why we lost, Kenny was why we were in the game. Like I’ve been harping, against teams without superstars (Sorry, Jimmy), this team is confident and plays like it. Against teams with superstars, they come out intimidated and beaten. I keep hoping they’ll prove me wrong but so far it’s been like their forumla. We’ll see how today goes.
5. I thought there were positive signs with Dre. Problem is he clogs up the paint on offense and makes it easier for teams to shut down our drivers. Part of why Dennis could not finish. Always two of three guys in the paint makes less lanes to the rim and more bodies to navigate around. Would have liked to see Gasol out there shooting threes to open things up but we know the Lakers don’t play that way…until the playoffs with AD.
Finally, one of the defects in building this team was not having enough playmakers and shot creators for when LeBron or AD or both were not in the game. And it’s not like we just surrounded LeBron and AD with volume 3-point shooters. Hope for the best but plan for the worst. Dennis and Trezz looked like golden finds when we started the season. Now not so much.
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I’m still high on Trezz but we may not be the best fit for him. We saw what he’s capable of when fully unleashed and it’s a fairly consistent line. 18+ ppg 8+ rpg and 110% effort. Ask him to do less and he fades into the background a little too much. Great player, just maybe not on this current version of the Lakers.
Agree 1,645% on Dennis Schroder. OKC knew EXACTLY where he needed to be. however I am also a big believer in guys upping their games. Up until now I haven’t watched a ton of Dennis on the court. Like we both agree, solid defender and decent enough ball handler. When he’s on the floor with James he is essentially the off guard. It’s when he has to shoulder the load of managing the team, getting his own offense and playing solid D that one of the three of those falls to the wayside. Great players don’t let any aspect of their game slip. OK, the defensive end is where most slippage occurs (see Harden, James) but thy don’t shrink from the moment when it comes to scoring. We have like five players that do that. Are we re-signing J.R. Smith for the playoff run or what?
Lastly, as we’ve discussed on multiple podcasts, not only is Jimmy Butler a legit two-way superstar who creates for his team in the same mold as Harden, James, etc. but his team has been ravaged by injuries and COVID far more than the Lakers have. So you can keep right on sleeping on Jimmy B and the Heat but that is one train that will be departing the station without me on it. They would play the Bucks as of today. I would worry about Giannis at this point, the Heat are for real.
#thebestteamsmoveon
#nohypeawards
#currenteasternconferencechamps
#JIMMYB!!!!!!!
#stillgotPhillycomingoutoftheeastthough-
LOL. We’ll have to A2D on Heat and not taking anything away from the Lakers championship. Didn’t have to play anybody other than the Heat more than 5 games. Had the Clippers and Bucks been in the way, they might have taken us to a 7th game. Heat are what they were: a very good but not great team.
As for Dennis, I agree part of his problem is he’s not a lead guard who can run the offense. He’s too 1-dimensional and predictable offensively. Even with his quickness and speed, teams can put up walls to stop him or funnel him down a fixed path. Like with Giannis.
With LeBron, Dennis has a much different role. Were we to trade for a true lead guard like Lowry, who can take care of the ball, playmake, and shoot the three, Dennis could be valuable as the shooting guard. Of course, it comes down to money at the end. The talk from Woj about the Lakers wanting to clear up future cap space is probably valid. I doubt the Lakers are willing to pay $100 million in taxes. The approach is they can find a way to win without having to do that as the money itself is no guarantee. That’s Pelinka’s job. So they might just let Dennis walk and use the money on cheaper options and THT and Caruso.
As for Trezz, the big problem is his game is old school on a team that needs floor spacers. Look at what’s happened with Dwight in Philly. The Sixers cannot play him with Ben Simmons because then they have no spacing as teams just clog the paint. Frank’s a great defensive coach but he’s slow to adapt to the value of spacing in the modern game. The answer is not for LeBron and AD to shoot more threes. It’s to surround them with players who are high volume, high percentage 3-point shooters.
You can’t refuse a gift horse like Trezz for the MLE but there’s a point where rent-a-center and rent-a-point-guard strategies need to end. The Lakers hoped Dennis was a shot at solving the longterm point guard problem but it’s becoming more and more obvious that he’s not the right player. We’re on thin ice overrelying on LeBron to play the point. That’s why I thought it was a big mistake not to trade for Lowry.
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By the way, some great comments and conversations today, Jamie. Thank you.
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We’ll see if the banner they hang has an asterisk on it with the caveat *ONLY beat the Miami Heat, sorry everyone*
I doubt it will. Sleep on the Heat if you choose.
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There will be no asterisk next to the Lakers championship. While it was an unprecedented and weird playoffs, that doesn’t mean it doesn’t count or should be devalued. Lakers followed the rules and won fair and square. Period.
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Thanks, I do what I can. All of us here just opionating and supporting our favorite team!
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThe Lakers have been on the other end of some beatdowns recently so it was nice to see the team cruise (relatively speaking) to an easy win. Certainly not without drama as we saw players from both sides get tossed but a win is a win, as they say. With re-enforcements coming soon, hopefully, the Lakers just need to keep treading water, head above the waves, until the team can get healthy and back on track.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mSS5p9BdNGU&t=1467s- Marc Gasol did all the right things on the court and followed that up by saying all the right things off of it. He contributed his best all-around game as a Laker pouring in 13 points (6-9, 1-3 from three), a co-team high 9 rebounds, 5 assists and 4 big blocks. While he did cough it up 5 times he looked more like the player I think we all though we’d see on a regular basis. In his post-gamer he continued his excellent showing by stating unequivocally that he was all in on this Laker season. Did he mean it? Could he be fibbing? Maybe, sure, who knows but the important thing was that he is playing the right way and saying the right things and being a good teammate in the doing. Solid effort by Marc.
- The THT/AC pairing. This hasn’t gotten much attention but I think it speaks to the coaching staff’s confidence in both players to get the job done. Slowly but surely AC and THT are getting more time as combined unit. For awhile it felt like they were staggered off of one another and it didn’t matter when LeBron was on the floor commanding attention and orchestrating like only he can. In his absence, and when Schroder goes to the bench, Vogel turns to this duo to keep us afloat. The results have been mixed but I think the combo has potential as a stabilizing force off the bench. THT can be the de facto PG and Caruso takes the lead on D. This allows for their offsetting skill sets to balance out a little more organically. We’re talking about 10 or so minutes of actual basketball action so it’s not like it needs to hold up for long. It’ll be interesting to see how the rotation settles in as we get guys back but I kind of hope this continues into the playoffs. For the night both THT and AC had solid games: THT had 17 (6-10 shooting, 3/4 from three), 4 rebounds, 6 assists. Caruso had an efficient 13 (4-7, 3/4 from three) 5 boards and 4 dimes. They both had 4 turnovers which is too many but par for this team this season.
- Wesley Matthews Jr. contributing impact plays if not eye-popping stats. It hasn’t been the easiest of roads for Wes this season. Struggled early, got benched, got a neck injury on a scary fall into the stanchion and has seen his role fluctuate based on how other guys have begun to emerge but through it all he’s been solid on defense and that shot has come around little by little. Last night Wes led the team in +/- and played hard on both ends. We’re going to need Wes to contribute in order to have success in the playoffs so it’s been nice to see him carve out a role for himself on account of his defense and hard-nosed play.
- Trezz standing up for his team. I mentioned this in the podcast but it bears repeating here. I can’t count the number of comments on the site, articles in the media and social media that shine a light on the notion that a lot of these guys will be moved, sign elsewhere and aren’t all in on the Lakers. Last night we saw the other side. The side where guys who play on a team bond together. Trezz id a fiery-fellow, you can see him jawing with opponents, refs and teammates through every single game. It could be as easy to misconstrue that intensity as displeasure with his situation, after all he did have to accept our bargain basement MLE, as it was to misconstrue his All Star tweet. Passion can be an intimidating thing, not always taken the right way or expressed in a socially acceptable manner. To see Trezz stand up for Dennis and then to see the comment about how he has a beef with anyone not wearing a Laker jersey makes me smile. The dude’s heart is in the right place. Still, he did get tossed and only contributed 2 whopping minutes of play. That left a Harrell-sized hole in our line up. One that was filled by none other than…
- DEVONTAE CACOCK! The G-Leaguer, 2-way player had his best game of the year by a country mile. In 17 minutes he had 8 rebounds, hit 5-7 shots for 10 big points, and played with the kind of energy this team needs on a nightly basis. I sure hope Devontae makes the post-season roster. I’ve always loved his hustle and nose for the rebound. For a team struggling with a “next man up?” identity issue Devontae flipped the script and stepped up in a large way.
Miami is up next, gonna be a tough one. Maybe we can play the trap team for once, eh? At any rate, won’t be much of an NBA Finals rematch without AD or LeBron so maybe we can bring this same energy and feistiness and pull out another W. Keep the head a little higher above those waves.
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Great fiver, Jamie.
1. Looks like signing Dre really lit a fire under Marc, which frankly needed to be lit. His play has dramatically improved and it’s good to see him now saying the right things about being ready for whatever. I don’t think it’s a slam dunk that Dre is the starter.
2. The good think about the THT/AC pairing is that it balances the offense and defense. It works by having THT be the point guard and force to score and distribute the ball and Alex be the defensive ace rather than trying to be a point guard. Both played well last night. It was good to see Alex shoot the three. He was emulating KCP too much and trying not to hurt his percentage.
3. Despite his age, Wes can still defend, which means he will get some minutes at key points in the playoffs no matter what. If he can hit his shots and even penetrate once in a while, som much the better. The key will all there guys are can they not shrink when we play the better teams with superstars. Next man doesn’t work when it’s only against poor teams.
4. Trezz. Have to love him sticking up for Dennis. Every team needs that so I give him a pass for getting kicked out although it’s almost always the first guy who escalates the situation who gets the boot along with the original perp.
5. Devontae showed more than Kostas has shown regarding our two-way players. Don’t see either of them making waves or getting minutes when the games count. Time maybe to move on from both next season.
Miami will be interesting. I have us now winning all the next four games except for the Nets. The Heat have been a Jekyll and Hyde team. They lost to Memphis on Tuesday after winning 4 straight, after losing 6 straight, after winning 5 straight. If the pattern holds, they should lose.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreThat was a beatdown of epic proportions. The Lakers never led, never seriously threatened and struggled to make shots. The Clippers on the other hand looked solid despite being without key players themselves. Of course the biggest difference was that the Clipper superstar duo played and ours did not.
- The name of the game is scoring the basketball. The Lakers never figured that out against the Clippers. They couldn’t hit open shots, couldn’t hit contested shots, couldn’t hit from the outside and often missed inside. We had a season-low 38 points in the first half. The Lakers just couldn’t couldn’t throw it in the ocean as a team. 40% from the field, 30% from three but, hey, 75% from the free throw line.
- The defense showed up. The Lakers defense retained it’s elite status in the face of yet another loss without AD and LBJ. We held the Clippers to 104 points, they only shot 9 free throws, and we forced 20 turnovers. Where we failed was in converting those into points of any kind. 15 points off of 20 turnovers ain’t great. Certainly did not get it done on the break with 8 whopping transition points. Allowing the Clippers to rain threes essentially sealed the loss.
- The mental game. It’s become obvious that the guys who should be stepping up (Kuzma, KCP, Schroder) aren’t. Whether they can or not has become a sort of moot point: we’re already falling in the standings, not showing up for big stretches of winnable games and in short not acting like professional sportsmen. Harrell is doing his job, guys on the bench have generally had a decent, if not totally positive, impact. But those three guys are starters right now, they all have the ball in their hands and are bucket-getters or, in theory, creators. This team has z-e-r-o chance of winning against anyone when they don’t play with the right mentality, don’t come prepared, and if they cannot make shots. We know they can but since they are not one has to assume it’s in their heads.
- Adjustments? Please, feel free to enlighten me, perhaps I’ve missed something but I don’t think I have. What adjustments has the team made on offense since James went down? To my count it would appear to be none. We run the same, silly sets we run when LeBron James is playing. But there isn’t a single player that replicates the gravity James brings to the court along with the skillset to maximize that gravity. I get it, there hasn’t been much practice time but we’re talking about a team that semi-overhauled it’s defensive identity mid-playoffs. Surely they can adapt to a life on offense without LeBron James for a few games. The answer, apparently, is no.
- The return of Drummond. The Big Penguin could be back on Tuesday and that’s a good thing. It’s one of the games I have slated as ‘winnable’ and Toronto by way of Tampa Bay isn’t killing it with size this season. So, if he gets the green light, let’s hope for better showing than in game 1 of his Laker career and get this one off right.
5 more games on this road trip. If I let the pessimist in me rule the day I say we go 1-4 and further take a tumble in the standings. But the realist (I don’t have an inner optimist) says we go 2-3. We win the bun games and lose the cheese, patty and lettuce games. So if this Laker burger can be even tastier and we end up winning some of those middle games I like our chances of getting AD back after the road trip, or soon thereafter. Although I also won’t be surprised if both sit until the playoffs.
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One thing about a loss like this is it makes it easy for Jamie to come up with 5 things. Good selections, Jamie. Thanks.
1. Scoring – something the Lakers don’t do well.
2. Defense – not great but better than their offense.
3. Next Man Up – Something Kuz, KCP, and DS need to learn.
4. Coaching – we don’t need no damn adjustments.
5. Dre’s return – not expecting much so hope to be surprised.
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Jamie Sweet wrote a new post
Read MoreMan..I’ve been totally unimpressed by Snyder in this series. Just haven’t seen a whole lotta adjustments..lets just chuck 3’s and hope for the best. And the Clipps were actually seeking out the DPOY with iso ball off those switches on the perimeter. Gotta do better..
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Thanks Buba! Yeah I really felt for Wes when he went down. While on-court play for many Lakers has been on the disappointing side this season you never want to see a guy get hurt. Same for Dre and all our banged up Lakers.
THT is an interesting barometer, much like Caruso last season. If Alex had a decent to good game last season we won more often than not. The same feels like it applies to THT this season. So here’s hoping h puts a gem together today.
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JAMIE SWEET
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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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Agreed LRob, Dennis does not get the whistles on his drives and contact he creates that many of the top players do. Whether that’s a byproduct of being on the Lakers, the manner in which he draws contact or what is a mystery.
Kyrie is one odd bird, the foul call on him was legit, maybe he was griping too much, maybe not. Over-reaction by the ref? in the NBA?! Naaaaaaaaaaaaaaw! Oh wait, that’s probably exactly what the deal was, lol.