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    Tim Harris, Lakers’ president of business operations, will step down after season

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    Lakers' Peyton Watson rumors get more fuel on the fire

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Watson’s name has reportedly come up in Lakers meetings.

      Buzz continues to intensify linking the Los Angeles Lakers to Denver Nuggets wing Peyton Watson.

      On Tuesday, ESPN’s Dave McMenamin revealed that the Lakers have “privately discussed” potentially acquiring Watson in restricted free agency this coming summer.

      Lakers have privately discussed signing Peyton Watson

      McMenamin noted that the Nuggets already have a substantial amount of salary committed for 2026 — $215 million, to be exact. This might prevent Denver from matching an offer sheet for Watson, although there’s also the possibility that the Nuggets could trade Christian Braun (or others) to make fiscal room for Watson.

      Might the Lakers be willing to pivot from Watson, their clear target, and acquire Braun instead? That remains to be seen, but McMenamin also mentioned five other players the Lakers could be in on.

      McMenamin reported that the Lakers have internally discussed unrestricted free-agents-to-be Andrew Wiggins and Tari Eason. McMenamin also mentioned Tobias Harris, Quentin Grimes, and Dean Wade as players who “fit that profile.

      Watson represents the cream of the crop, based on his age (he’ll be 24 entering the 2026-27 season), athleticism, defensive versatility, and greatly improved 3-point shot. Watson is averaging 14.9 points per game for Denver this season on 41.7 percent from downtown.

      At 6-foot-8, Watson represents a potential upgrade to Rui Hachimura as a big wing who can defend four positions. Watson is bouncier than Hachimura and has more offensive upside.

      It’s no secret that Los Angeles needs big, athletic wings who can defend. Luka Doncic was surrounded by these types of players in Dallas when he reached the NBA Finals in 2024.

      The non-Watson targets for the Lakers this summer each have a characteristic that prevents them from checking all the boxes.

      Norman Powell? Not quite tall enough to guard bigs. The same can be said for Anfernee Simons, Kevin Huerter, Bennedict Mathurin, and Grimes.

      Wiggins is intriguing, but he’s already reached his ceiling as a player, whereas Luka might be able to unlock a new level that we haven’t seen from Watson, thereby increasing the Lakers’ return on investment.

      Eason would really help defensively, and he’s young, but he’s limited offensively. And Tobias Harris would be decent, but he’s near the end of his career and wouldn’t necessarily be an upgrade over Hachimura.

      There aren’t any wing targets that can compete with Watson, beyond a potential Lakers trade for Lu Dort. It’ll be interesting to see if Denver makes a surprising trade or two to allow for the re-signing of Watson, thereby dashing the Lakers’ plans.

    • I think alot will depend on how DEN performs in the playoffs. They feel they were close last year taking OKC to 7 games even with Gordon & Porter at far less than 100%. They spent a ton of money last summer to get over the hump but injuries have bit them again so far. If they get healthy and make a deep run then my guess is they’ll do what it takes to hold on to Watson instead of taking a step backwards.

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Six and a half minutes remained in the second quarter of a dog fight between the Lakers and a shorthanded Dallas Mavericks team. With a timeout, head coach J.J. Redick calls for a switch in their defense from traditional man coverage to zone, leading to three straight stops and pushing a six-point lead to a more comfortable 13 en route to an eventual blowout win behind a triple-double from LeBron James.

      LA heads into the All-Star break ranked 23rd in defense, a position that puts a clear ceiling on any hopeful contender. While it’s not a long-term solution, increased zone implementation has given the team a counter to some of the natural defensive liabilities on the roster while simplifying responsibilities.

      ​When you are a defense ranked in the bottom seven, you clearly need a shakeup not just with personnel but in schematics or style.

      ​Since playing the Raptors on January 18, the Lakers increased their zone usage to 17.6%, a number that would lead the league by a mile, as revealed in the graphic shown below during Amazon Prime’s NBA coverage.

      The team’s zone is allowing stingy 0.86 points per possession and while that’s not a sustainable level of production on that end of the floor, it reveals the new look defense is having some success.

      LA mainly relies on a 2-3 zone defense, featuring two perimeter players and three backside players, moving from man-to-man responsibility to defending an area of the floor.

      Watch below as the Lakers settle into their 2-3 zone against the Mavs following a timeout. LA, who struggles with dribble penetration, forces the offense to keep moving the ball across the perimeter while shutting off driving lanes and eating up the clock.

      It’s a protection against getting beat off the dribble, which happens frequently as the Lakers play a host of slow perimeter players, and it provides certainty about where defensive help comes from. Jaxson Hayes operates from the middle here but shifts across the floor in sync with his team.

      “I feel like it gives all of us a better vision of the offense,” Hayes said postgame. “We are all a little back some more, so we all can see and communicate a little better. We’re not just hugged up on our mans. The paint is a little more crowded, so it’s harder for teams that struggle with shooting to score on it.”

      The Lakers give up the highest field goal percentage at the rim at 72.4%. One way to alleviate some of the damage is to prevent teams from getting there in the first place.

      The Raptors, who came in with the fourth-highest percentage of points in the paint, were held in check and flummoxed by the Lakers’ zone defense.

      One of the points of the zone is to force the offense into multiple passes, creating more opportunities for indecision and mistakes. It can be especially useful for two big lineups that otherwise lack foot speed, helping them stay in front of defenders.

      Watch below as Redick uses it against the Raptors with a Drew Timme and Deandre Ayton frontline, leveraging their size alongside LeBron James and Jared Vanderbilt.

      Once again, as the ball swings on the perimeter, all five guys on the floor shift into their correct positions. The Lakers close out the driving lanes, fly around, and force a tough, contested step back three from Gradey Dick.

      “We’ve ran it a few times a game recently,” Redick said after the Toronto win. “Sometimes it’s hard, both as a coach and as a player, when you run it, and it’s a good possession of defense, and the other team hits an off-the-dribble three, which has happened this week. One game it happened three times and it can kind of deflate you.

      “But we think it could be a weapon for us tonight, we talked pregame about something that I certainly wanted to do and we wanted to do as a staff and the players were bought into it.”

      A zone, no doubt, has loud weaknesses, and there’s a reason teams go to it in spurts as a change of pace. Zone busters, or high-volume 3-point shooters, also exist across the league, waiting for the open shot opportunities they create for offenses. In addition, teams running zone can give up more offensive rebounds as box out responsibilities become disoriented.

      The first hurdle to get over in a defensive scheme is buy-in from the players, something Redick seems to have in this group.

      “Yeah, that thing got us going,” Ayton said of the zone. “I think really just talking and communicating, getting the blood flowing, knowing who got your back out there and the coaches seeing what works here. Just seeing different coverages thrown at the team and seeing what they could throw back at us.”

      This defense has provided an unexpected jolt for the Lakers and even if it has flaws, it might be enough to keep them going for the rest of the season, especially if health allows their high-powered offense to find a similar groove.

    • That zone will get shredded in the playoffs when faced with good teams who have time to prepare and become familiar over a 7 game series. Bad, lazy teams just try to shoot over it during the regular season because it’s the easier path.

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    USA STARS, the first-ever USA vs. WORLD NBA All-Star Champions!

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    Lakers Need LeBron James To Come Off Bench Going Forward

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      If a star needs to be moved to the second unit, it should be LeBron James. Let me explain.

      The Los Angeles Lakers have brought Austin Reaves off the bench during each of the five games he’s played since returning from a December calf injury. Debates have thus raged, undoubtedly fueled by Rich Paul’s controversial comments, about whether or not Reaves should continue playing as the team’s sixth man.

      There’s merit to the belief that the trio of Luka Doncic, LeBron James, and Reaves can’t ideally coexist in the starting lineup, but it’s not Reaves who should become the sixth man if all else fails. It’s James.

      Paul, whose Klutch Sports agency represents Lakers players Bronny James, LeBron James, and Jarred Vanderbilt, has publicly called for a change in Reaves’ role with the team. He’s suggested both a move to the second unit and that Los Angeles should trade him for Jaren Jackson Jr., who has since been moved to the Utah Jazz.

      Though a teammate’s agent publicly calling for a benching and a trade will always be optically questionable, there was a rational line of thinking involved.

      The three-man lineup of Doncic, James, and Reaves ranks in the 27th percentile in defensive rating in 2025-26 and finished in the 14th percentile in 2024-25. Injuries have disrupted their opportunities to develop chemistry, but the signs up to this stage are that the Lakers will struggle to defeat true contenders in the playoffs with all three in the starting lineup.

      Though it may be blasphemous to suggest, there’s only one rational decision if the time comes to move one of the three players to the second unit: Bench James.

      If Lakers must bench a star, it can’t be one who fits the long-term vision

      In a perfect world, the Lakers’ star trio would figure things out on the defensive end of the floor and put these concerns to rest. In a world where past events continue, however, Los Angeles would have a hard time justifying the continued use of Reaves as a sixth man.

      There’s no way around how Reaves playing as the sixth man has helped the Lakers create a more balanced rotation on both ends of the floor, but there’s a future factor to consider.

      At some point in the near future, James will either have retired or joined a new team. That future may be as soon as the end of the 2025-26 season, when his current contract expires—one that the Lakers infamously refused to extend or renegotiate.

      With a seemingly clear intention to move on from James this coming summer, benching the player they actually intend to re-sign would be a baffling decision.

      Austin Reaves’ free agency, LeBron’s uncertain future must be factored in
      Once James has moved on, whether through free agency or retirement, Doncic and Reaves will be the star duo the Lakers build around. That’s as well-known an intention as any in the NBA. Though moving Reaves to the second unit wouldn’t derail that vision, it would certainly delay it.

      Reaves has a known affinity for James as both a player and teammate, but stepping aside to accommodate him when Los Angeles still needs to determine his true value would be ill-advised.

      Reaves played at a star-caliber level before his calf injury and has continued to do so since returning. The sample size of games they’ve played as the definitive star duo is limited, however, and the Lakers need to figure out if they can truly excel as a leading partnership before they pay top dollar to re-sign Reaves.

      Moving Reaves to the second unit and hoping he’ll excel as a starter in the postseason in 2027 just to avoid an uncomfortable conversation with James in 2026 simply wouldn’t be wise if change is truly needed.

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    NBA All-Star Game format, explained

    The 24 All-Stars will be divided into three teams of eight. There will be two U.S. teams (USA Stars and USA Stripes) and one World team.

    Detroit Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff will coach USA Stars, while San Antonio Spurs coach Mitch Johnson will lead USA Stripes. Toronto Raptors coach Darko Rajaković will coach Team World.

    There will be a round-robin tournament of four, 12-minute games. USA Stars and Team World will face off in Game 1. The winner of that game will play USA Stripes in Game 2. The losing team of Game 1 will then play USA Stripes in Game 3.

    Following the three games, the two teams with the best record will face off in Game 4 with the chance to be crowned champions of All-Star Weekend.

    If all three teams have a 1-1 record after the first three games, the point differential from the round-robin games will be used to determine the two teams that advance to the championship game.

    The All-Star Game has a $1.8 million prize pool. Each player on the championship-winning team gets $125,000. Players on the second-place team get $50,000, while players on the third-place team get $25,000.

    How the New All-Star Game Format Will Work

    NBA All-Star Game format, explained

    The 24 All-Stars will be divided into three teams of eight. There will be two U.S. teams (USA Stars and USA Stripes) and one World team.

    Detroit Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff will coach USA Stars, while San Antonio Spurs coach Mitch Johnson will lead USA Stripes. Toronto Raptors coach Darko Rajaković will coach Team World.

    There will be a round-robin tournament of four, 12-minute games. USA Stars and Team World will face off in Game 1. The winner of that game will play USA Stripes in Game 2. The losing team of Game 1 will then play USA Stripes in Game 3.

    Following the three games, the two teams with the best record will face off in Game 4 with the chance to be crowned champions of All-Star Weekend.

    If all three teams have a 1-1 record after the first three games, the point differential from the round-robin games will be used to determine the two teams that advance to the championship game.

    The All-Star Game has a $1.8 million prize pool. Each player on the championship-winning team gets $125,000. Players on the second-place team get $50,000, while players on the third-place team get $25,000.

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    Luka Doncic has changed Jaxson Hayes life

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    Silver would abolish draft and make rookies free agents to stop tanking

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    • Talks about giving large market teams a leg up lol

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    Adam Silver exploring AI-Simulated All-Star Game for Future

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    • …I’m moving to a small island with high cliffs so the riding oceans don’t bother me…this world is rapidly becoming absurd to a degree that seems untenable…

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    Neither Ayton or Hayes are elite rim protectors

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    How Lakers Can Salvage Gap Year! Projected Starting Lineup & Bench

    The NBA Trade Deadline has now passed and, other than waiving a player to add a last minute surprise buyout candidate, the Lakers now have their complete 15-player roster for the regular season stretch run and playoffs.

    Despite delaying their roster makeover until next summer when they’ll have 3 tradable first round picks and $60 million in cap space, the Lakers still need to finish this season strong to save Pelinka’s and Redick’s jobs. Right now, the Lakers are 33–21, #5 seed in the West, and #9 team in the league. To survive this gap year, the Lakers will need to revamp their starting and bench lineups to better optimize and balance their talent.

    Pelinka and Redick face difficult situations as they were not hired by Mark Walter and only have the rest of the season and the playoffs to show they deserve to still be in charge for next summer’s extreme roster makeover.
    Since landing Luka, Pelinka has wasted 2 trade deadlines and 1 offseason without adding an established starter. Meanwhile, Redick has done a good job in the regular season but needs to prove he can win in the playoffs.

    The only solution to salvage this situation is to replace the current no-defense Big Three starting lineup that has a negative net rating and the current inefficient no-offense bench that ranks #30 in points per game.
    Instead of a star-studded starting lineup and weak bench, the Lakers must listen to the data, which says they can build two elite balanced data-driven 5-man lineups, one around Luka and Austin and a second around LeBron.

    Let’s review the Lakers’ 15-man roster for regular season stretch run and playoffs and see what the numbers say are the team’s best options to build an elite competitive starting lineup and rotation to salvage this gap year.


    WHAT DO THE NUMBERS SAY?

    LAKERS NET RATING FOR BIG THREE LINEUPS

    Despite expectations they would be an offensive juggernaut, the numbers say the Lakers’ Big Three of Doncic, Reaves, and James has been a major disappointment, recording a -9.6 net rating in 10 games and 152 minutes.

    The harsh reality is starting Luka, Austin, and LeBron together is not a winning strategy. Playing three offense-first stars who need the ball in their hands to excel is both redundant and doomed to be horrible defensively.
    The above chart not only says LeBron is not a good fit playing next to Luka and Austin but also that he and Luka or he and Austin can’t win the minutes they’re on the court together as a duo. Lakers are losing LeBron minutes.

    The Lakers brain trust has a major decision to make during the All-Star break. Do they really write this year off as a gap year and keep starting the Big Three? Or do they sell LeBron that coming off the bench is the answer.
    Nobody’s saying LeBron’s not good enough to start or that he would not play the same minutes or close games. We’re talking about putting him on the court in winning lineups where he’s the first rather than third option.

    The numbers say the Lakers should create two new star-driven lineups, one featuring Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves to get the team off to a good start and one featuring LeBron James to dominate the middle and end of games.
    Luka and Austin don’t need a third star. They need a bouncy center for vertical space and lethal shooter for horizontal space. LeBron doesn’t need a second star. When Luka and Austin rest, give him the ball, let him work.

    The numbers say it’s time for the Lakers to move on from their offense-first Big Three starting lineup and weak bench and switch to a dynamic Doncic and Reaves starting lineup and elite starter-quality James backup lineup.


    WHO SHOULD START

    LAKERS POST ALL-STAR BREAK STARTING LINEUP

    Building a new starting lineup around Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves should be easy as the duo has an offensive rating of 117.3, defensive rating of 110.6, and net rating of +6.7 in 19 games and 466 minutes together.

    Since the Lakers will start Luka Doncic at point guard and Austin Reaves at shooting guard, they need to add a starting small forward, power forward, and center with good positional size, shooting, rebounding, and defense.
    Strategically, the Lakers should view the remaining 28 games in the season as their ramp up for the playoffs and only invest playing time in players whom they believe can finish the season strong and shine in the playoffs.

    The Lakers best option as a two-way 3&D starting small forward is Jake LaRavia. At 6′ 7″ with a 6′ 10″ wingspan, Jake’s shown promise as a potential future star role player with positional size and elite defensive versatility.
    To better match up against bigger lineups, the Lakers should opt for a two-bigs lineup rather than a traditional power forward and center. They need a pair of versatile bigs who can stretch the floor vertically and horizontally.

    With LeBron James moving to the bench, this is the perfect time to start Jaxson Hayes and move Deandre Ayton to the bench to play with LeBron. Hayes’ play has earned a level of trust at center that Ayton’s simply has not.
    The ideal second big to play next to Jaxson Hayes should be Maxi Kleber, who’s healthy and thriving. Kleber and Hayes played 47 minutes in 9 games with a 114.7 offensive rating, 105.3 defensive rating, and +9.4 net rating.

    The Lakers should revamp their starting lineup for more positional size, 3-point shooting, and team defense. The new Lakers’ starters should be Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Jake LaRavia, Maxi Kleber, and Jaxson Hayes.


    WHO SHOULD COME OFF BENCH?

    LAKERS POST ALL-STAR BREAK BENCH LINEUP

    The numbers say LeBron James’ best 5-man lineup this season was playing with Smart, Vanderbilt, Ayton, and Hachimura, where they posted an elite 124.3 offensive rating, 102.6 defensive rating, and +21.7 net rating.

    While they only played 19 minutes in 7 games, this 5-man lineup or a variation with Kennard replacing Vanderbilt should become the ultimate lineup target as the Lakers organically sub out starters for bench players.
    While they won’t be using hockey substitutions, the Lakers want opposing teams to spend 90% of the game facing their new Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves led starting lineup or their new LeBron James led bench lineup.

    During the final 28 games, the Lakers’ top priority is to develop the kind of chemistry and continuity they will need to salvage and survive the long regular season and then rally and win their way to the conference finals.
    The Lakers need both the Luka and Austin starting lineup as well as the LeBron led bench lineup together to excel and play most of the 48 minutes of playing time in the 28 games remaining in the 2025–26 NBA Season.

    Right now, the Lakers rank #28 in the league in bench scoring at 115.9 ppg. One of the things that makes this new bench lineup so dangerous is all of the bench players except Kennard have experience playing with LeBron.
    The James fivesome will likely be so good that they may steal minutes from the Luka and Austin fivesome. LeBron may ultimately play fewer minutes because of not starting but his impact on closing wins could be greater.

    The Lakers should revamp their bench lineup for more size, shooting, and defense. The Lakers’ new bench lineup should include Marcus Smart, Luke Kennard, Rui Hachimura, LeBron James, and Deandre Ayton.

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      • In terms of the small forward issue…LaRavia needs to recapture his early season impact for me to be all in on him as a starter. His 3 point FG% has fallen steadily and hopefully the break gets his legs back under him. I’m pretty sure this is the most he’s ever played so it’s not surprising he’s hitting a bit of a wall. The great thing about Rui is he recognized quickly that, especially if he wants to stay in LA, he needs to be flexible and work with the staff as to what his best role is. I, too, think he’s best used coming off the bench. Vando is intriguing to me, if he would just hit the corner 3 a little better it’d be a no-brainer. Still, as of now, I’d go with Jake until he shows he’s not going to turn that shooting around because when it comes to intangibles and hustle I give the edge to Vando.

    • Good post Tom. I like the idea of splitting up the trio of Luka, James & Reaves. However, if one of them gets moved to the bench, my suspicion is that it would be Reaves. This would mean replacing him with either Smart or Kennard, IMO. If I’m being completely honest, I’m not sure Reddick or the front office has the cajones or respect to pull this off. Too many agendas and legends. Reaves, Smart, Kleber, Ayton, Hayes, Rui and others are all hoping for extensions or raises from somewhere next season. We can’t give all of them what they want.

      Austin has come off the bench the last few games and it’s brought a ton of stability so your reasoning is sound. I think he knows we’re going to go all out to keep him or he’s going to get his money from us or be signed and traded somewhere he can be the first option, basically. So, in theory and also due to the hamstring/calf injuries he’s sustained, he makes the mistake of sense to get the ask to come off the bench.

      LeBron wouldn’t be asked, he’d have to volunteer. Honestly, with the amount of time and effort he puts in to being NBA ready it would be an affront and all but guarantee he plays elsewhere next season. The Lakers have gone out of their way to signal how important it is to them he retire a Laker. Also, at his age, I think you open the door to increased soft tissue injury if he warms in pregame, sits, and comes back in. Keep those muscles moving.

      • Reaves is obviously the other option but the problem is Luka and Austin win their minutes whereas Luka and LeBron don’t. There’s also the issue of who is part of the future and who isn’t.

        Lakers need the cap space so LeBron is gone for sure imo. Lakers would be making a huge mistake by keeping the big three for the rest of the season or by going with Luka and LeBron over Luka and Austin. Last thing you want is to alienate Reaves so you lose him.

    • Lastly, having Ayton come off the bench means you might as well not play him. He’ll pout and suddenly become just injured enough not to play for stretches at a time. We can’t afford that. He’s been a team guy, not moping about being benched to close a lot of games, so I’m cool with him starting. He can more evenly split the PT with Hayes who has been great as a Laker, especially for the price point. Jax has a lot of holes in his game and he’s not a good playoff center but he is a great regular season center for Luka. Like Rui he’s accepted a role, we can address him starting in the off season if we can keep him.

      • Maybe, but starting him is essentially giving up on the season. Lakers need a rim protection and floor spacing from their future centers. That’s not Ayton imo, although he does some things well.

        The big thing is LeBron and Deandre will be playing with the guys who fit them best and who were the highest net rating of any LeBron lineup. This is really a second starting lineup for Lakers.

        My guess is JJ stays with Big Three and we lose in first or second round as the Lakers turn this into a sure gap year. That would be disappointing and mean the Lakers were ignoring the numbers rather than letting the data drive their decisions. But then that’s old news when it comes to the Lakers.

    • I think Laker upper management knew this season was going to play out pretty much exactly as it has so far. Simply put, we just didn’t have the pieces in place to capitalize on Luka unexpectedly falling into our lap overnight the way he did. Especially since the trade cost us the only viable 2-way players on our roster in AD & Max Christie.They knew we were gonna have to punt on this season and try to load up this summer. Re-arranging the deck chairs can only hide very little of the bad roster construction we currently have. The real killer was that rescinded trade for Mark Williams. At least that would have been a huge help at the center spot while losing a guy like Knecht who can’t even crack this limited lineup….

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    NBA is doing everything in its power to stop teams from tanking

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    Austin Reaves went west to chase his dreams and struck Laker gold

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    If Lakers poach Watson and Kessler, that’s a grand slam offseason!

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    Hayes puts pressure on Lakers to make impossible roster decision

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