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    Lakers are reportedly in “Advanced Discussions” with Kings to acquire Keon Ellis and Malik Monk

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    Lakers In Sudden Midseason Crisis! What Can Redick and Pelinka Do?

    This Lakers season has been as chaotic as any in history. The highs and lows, dreams and nightmares, buzzer-beating wins and blow-out losses have been fast and furious. Suddenly, it’s now JJ and Rob in the hot seats.

    Frankly, the last thing the Lakers should do now is panic and suddenly change their grand strategy because of three straight blow out losses that exposed the current starting lineup and rotation’s defense and chemistry. After all, the 19–10 Lakers still have the 4th best record in the West and the 6th best record in the entire league and their 10–0 record in ‘clutch’ games says something about their ability to exert their will and win close games.

    What’s painfully obvious at this moment is that the Lakers’ young head coach JJ Redick is extremely angry and disappointed in how the team has played the last three games and appears to be ready to make big changes.
    Complicating the situation is the bad news that the Lakers’ rising young superstar Austin Reaves will now be out for at least four weeks with a calf injury which the Lakers have no option but to be extremely careful about.

    The Lakers’ grand plan has been to focus on rebuilding a championship roster around Luka Doncic next summer when they could have three first round picks to trade and $80 million in cap space to sign free agents.
    There’s no question superstar injuries and LeBron working himself back into game shape derailed some of the early-team chemistry and late-game magic that Luka and Austin created that raised everybody’s expectations.

    But that doesn’t mean nothing can be done. Let’s look specifically at what head coach JJ Redick could do right now to help the Lakers win games and what general manager Rob Pelinka could do to quickly improve the roster.


    What Can Head Coach JJ Redick Do Right Now?

    Lakers’ young head coach JJ Redick is obviously feeling the pressure as his defenseless Los Angeles Lakers not only suffered their third straight loss by blowout but also lost rising superstar Austin Reaves for at least four weeks.

    There are definitely moves Redick can make with the players he currently has available that could improve the Lakers’ starting lineup’s defense and bench lineup’s offense and enable them to remain a top-six West team.
    Unfortunately, unless the Lakers are willing to use their one available first round and second round pick, it will be almost impossible for them to find the elite starting 3&D wing and quality backup defensive center they need.

    The silver lining of Reaves’ injury is it gives JJ an opportunity to give a Luka Doncic and Marcus Smart backcourt and a better balanced starting lineup featuring Doncic, Smart, Vanderbilt, James, and Ayton a chance to shine.
    Replacing Austin Reaves and Rui Hachimura with better defenders in Marcus Smart and Jarred Vanderbilt should greatly improve the starting lineup’s defense while Rui’s shooting should boost the bench’s offense.

    The Lakers superstar-driven offense has also become too predictable and easy to defend with everybody standing around. The Lakers must embrace analytics and start running plays designed to get open threes and layups.
    JJ needs to be careful as head coach not to lose this team, which really means not to lose Luka or LeBron. If there is one thing Redick needs to do to keep his job, it’s getting Luka and LeBron to buy in leading the defense.

    The Lakers have an opportunity to see how a starting lineup of Doncic, Smart, Vanderbilt, James, and Ayton with backups of Smith jr., Vincent, Mañon, Hachimura, Hayes could fix some of the Lakers defensive issues.


    What Can General Manger Rob Pelinka Do Right Now?

    Rob Pelinka may have been a better fit as general manager of the smaller, less ambitious Buss family version of the Lakers than the larger analytics and data-driven sports business conglomerate Mark Walter is building.

    In many ways, Rob’s a strange bird who through his relationship with Kobe was able to win over Jeanie. I just don’t see him happy going forward with a lessor role in a much bigger and more sophisticated Lakers’ front office. It wouldn’t surprise me if Rob were to resign as Lakers’ general manager. There’s no question Jeanie made sure he had a lucrative golden parachute as his reward for helping to build the Lakers into a $10 billion company.

    JJ Redick and Rob Pelinka fully understand the extensions they received right before the sale don’t protect their jobs. There’s a reason why Mark Walter has brought in Dodgers’ execs Andrew Friedman and Farhan Zaidi.
    As head coach, Redick has more job freedom than Pelinka, who now has to convince an entirely new team of execs who will be a harder and more challenging sell than Jesse and Joey Buss or Kurt and Linda Rambus were.

    Make no mistake, while Rob Pelinka will have a say, it will be Mark Walter’s team that makes the final decision whether to invest in winning this year versus positioning the team for a blockbuster bonanza next summer.
    In the end, the Lakers have too good of a puncher’s chance with Luka and LeBron not to be willing at least to trade one first and one second round pick to provide an elite starting small forward and backup defensive center.

    If the Lakers would use a first and a second to acquire Andrew Wiggins and Robert Williams, they would have a solid puncher’s chance of winning their 18th championship and still be positioned to pull off a summer bonanza.

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      • Tom, you’re not wrong that this season has been a roller coaster, but calling it a full‑blown “midseason crisis” might be giving chaos a little too much credit. What we’re seeing is a team that knows it’s underperforming and still has the pieces to turn things around if Redick and Pelinka stop treating the roster like a puzzle missing half the box.

        The highs and lows aren’t the problem—they’re the symptom. The real issue is consistency and identity. When the Lakers lean into pace, defensive pressure, and let their role players actually play their roles, they look like a team that can beat anyone. When they fall back into slow, stagnant, LeBron‑centric possessions, they look like they’re stuck in 2018.

        JJ and Rob aren’t in the hot seat because the team is doomed—they’re in the hot seat because the window is still open, and everyone knows it. A smart rotation tweak here, a decisive roster move there, and suddenly the narrative shifts from “crisis” to “course correction.”

        The season isn’t lost. It’s just waiting for someone in that front office to stop reacting and start leading.

        • Thanks for reading and commenting, Buba.

          We’re 29 games into the 82 game season or 35%. We just lost three straight blowouts and our second or third best player just suffered an injury that will likely keep him out for at least 6 weeks. I consider that a major event for Lakers season.

          Austin will be reviewed in 4 weeks and is likely to miss at least 6 weeks, which would take us to the February 5th trade deadline, at which point the Lakers will have played another 20 games to go with the 29 they just played. With 49 of 82 games played, the Lakers will have played 60% of their season.

          Lakers grand plan is to optimize next summer when they will have at least 2 first round picks and 1 second round pick plus up to $80 million in cap space to sign their own free agents as well as other team’s free agents. With luck, Lakers could steal a couple of elite 3&D forwards in Eason and Watson from the Rockets and Nuggets with their cap space and maybe use the picks to sign-and-trade for Walker Kessler.

          I believe they will use their one first round and one second round picks this season to get an elite 3&D starting small forward and a quality backup center who can block shots. Lakers willing to go-all in for this season but top priority will still be pulling off a summer bonanza by adding a half dozen 3&D players.

    • I’m not sure any of the players listed can be had for those price points but I know I don’t have a ton of faith in Rob pulling it off.

      • Not sure what you can get for mostly broken down Gabe Vincent and Rui. Those are our best trade chips. Gets a little more interesting if, due to injury and contract status, they entertain offers for Reaves and one of those guys w/the 2031/32 FRP. Losing Reaves for pennies on the dollar hurts but not sure it hurts more than him signing a big deal and having a chronic calf injury. Trust the medical staff in that one. Which is an area I wish Mark was already throwing money at…

      • I don’t think Rob is going to be making any decisions on his own. I think the free agents added last summer were all approved by Walter’s transition advisors. Mark Walter has Dodgers top two execs overseeing everything that Rob does.

        You also notice JJ referring to the guys upstairs who are feeding lineup data directly to him. Data is going to drive all decisions. The Lakers finally have a vision and direction. Get aboard or get left behind. I’m calling on a future Rob Pelinka resignation for sure. Sooner than expected but before next summer.

        Next summer, Lakers get LeBron’s expiring cap space to sign their own and steal a couple of elite free agents. Mark Walter is going to want his general manager and head coach in place for next season. Rob and JJ are working for their Lakers’ future this season.

        • Not sure he ever did what with the Lakers Cabal that all seemingly had a vote on these kinds of things. Still, with Bob Meyers waiting for the call and right kind of deal, I’m hopeful Rob moves on soon. For every good move there are 3 that utterly backfired.

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    Mark Walter should be looking for his next Andrew Friedman.

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    • I mean..I stopped believing in Rob Pelinka a long time ago. I don’t go around calling him Master Class for nothing. It’s out of sarcasm. Dude has always been out of his depth. He absolutely lucked into the Luka trade, botched most of his other chances prior to that, and will probably fire another coach that isn’t the real issue, again. At least we got Nate or Scotty waiting in the wings to grab the reigns.

      • This is an interesting litmus test for the Mark Williams ownership era. How quickly and decisively he moves will be telling.

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    Austin Reaves has grade 2 left gastrocnemius strain and will be reevaluated in 4 weeks

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    • Bummer that it happened in the midst of a break out season. Need him back solid for the playoffs.

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    LAKERS TEAM AND PLAYERS NET RATING FOR LAST THREE GAMES

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    Lakers are officially in full-blown crisis mode

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      The Lakers are officially in full-blown crisis mode.

      Whatever early-season good vibes existed are gone after a third straight loss, all of them convincing blowouts. Against the Rockets, this was another uncompetitive and frankly unserious performance. Down by 23 midway through the third quarter, the Lakers once again defaulted to what is becoming an unpleasant habit lately, rolling over in a manner far removed from the championship habits preached throughout training camp. What remained was a disconnected group showing no spirit, no fight, and no cohesion, getting demolished on the offensive glass by a bigger and hungrier Houston team on the national stage.

      If the great start and still very respectable 19–10 record have been masking some of the issues evident to anyone watching closely beneath the iceberg, the recent stretch against two contending teams, the Spurs and the Rockets, on the biggest stages has made them impossible to ignore. In those games, this current Lakers team looked a couple of levels below in both physicality and focus compared to what we saw from the Spurs, Thunder, or Rockets.

      After the loss against the Suns, I wrote about a system breakdown. Two days later, it seems the time has come for a system reset.

      digginbasketball is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

      Today’s notes:

      A breaking point?

      The starting five is not the only problem, but the most obvious one

      Redick calling for a bigger reset?

      Rest should start with Luka

      1-A breaking point?

      JJ Redick has been one of the more honest and straightforward coaches when it comes to postgame media sessions, but even by his standards, this one felt different. It felt like a breaking point.

      @ArashMarkazi
      JJ Redick: “”It’a matter of making the choice and far too often we don’t have guys who want to make that choice. And it’s pretty consistent who those guys are. Saturday’s practice is going to be uncomfortable. I’m not doing another 53 games like this.”

      It is impossible to hear that quote and not recognize a line being crossed. Redick was no longer talking about schemes or execution, but about choice, accountability, and going as far as questioning whether some players care enough to be professionals. When a coach goes that far publicly, it signals that boundaries have been crossed and that significant changes are coming.

      From here, the Lakers either change and fight through adversity, or collapse.

      2-The starting five is not the only problem, but the most obvious one

      The first change should be the most obvious one. Last night was one of many exhibits, and the most high-profile so far, of the Lakers’ starting five as currently constructed having no chance of playing competitive basketball against elite units.

      The lineup data for the starting five ranks among the worst in the NBA, and larger sample sizes involving combinations of Ayton, Hachimura, and Dončić, Ayton, Hachimura, and James, or even just Ayton and Hachimura, all tell the same story. It is one I have already written about in both my 10-game and 20-game checks.

      This starting group opens every game and every half at such a deficit in energy, hustle, athleticism, and speed that against the best teams it cannot be overcome by later injections of effort, usually coming from Marcus Smart, Jake LaRavia, and Jarred Vanderbilt off the bench. Last night, Ayton and Hachimura delivered one of the least impactful combined 64-minute stretches I have seen from a starting role-player pairing in quite some time. Each finished with just two rebounds on a night when protecting the glass was the top priority.

      Swapping one of them out of the starting five, most likely Hachimura, for a higher-motor player will not solve the bigger structural issues around the Dončić, Reaves, and James baseline. But if nothing else, it is the message Redick needs to send.

      3-Redick calling for a bigger reset?

      Changing the starting five may amount to reshuffling the same cards and would not solve the bigger underlying issues. Listening to Redick over the last few postgame sessions, with how open and direct he has been in his criticism of the players, gives the impression that he recognizes that as well and is calling for a bigger reset.

      Can that reset come internally (see more in my last point)? Or will the front office rethink its conservative and patient approach, originally aimed at a larger overhaul next summer, after seeing how uncompetitive this roster has looked against the best teams?

      We will see in the coming days as we get closer to the trade deadline, but Redick ending the presser with “we’ve given everybody a chance” felt like a telling final note.

      Until then, the first move in crisis management should be to get back to the basics and to the connectivity this group showed early in the season, despite its limitations. Lakers had it last season and earlier this season, but as Redick noted, trying to trick the system can cause the culture to snap quickly.

      4-Rest should start with Luka

      This loss was even more frustrating for the Lakers as two of their stars, a duo that dominated together earlier in the season, were dealing with lower leg issues that got worse as the game progressed.

      Austin Reaves stayed in the locker room and did not return for the second half after aggravating his calf injury from last week. He will undergo an MRI later today.

      Dončić, who returned after missing the previous game with a calf contusion, was visibly limping by the end of the game, both during timeout huddles and as he walked to the scorer’s table for his final substitution in the fourth quarter. But even at the start of the game, things did not look better for Dončić. He opened the night poorly, committing four turnovers in first five minutes, and was not the tone-setting, dominant offensive force the Lakers in their current state need him to be. Postgame, the Slovenian superstar again took responsibility and acknowledged the need for change.

      Luka Doncic:

      “I don’t know what has to change, but something definitely has to change.”
      Dave McMenamin
      @mcten
      Luka Doncic: “Everybody has got to give better effort, starting with me”
      8:25 PM · Dec 25, 2025 · 51.1K Views

      But listening to Redick’s postgame rant, and this is strictly an observation from afar, it was hard to escape the feeling that some of that frustration was also directed at his superstars. James was involved in several defensive and rebounding breakdowns and had one of those ‘is he fully engaged’ games. But James turns 41 in a few days and is clearly not this team’s long-term future. Dončić is.

      And that places a different level of responsibility on him. After a high-profile body remake in the summer and an impressive start to the season, he has unfortunately arrived at the exact same spot he was a year ago at this time. Banged up and not at the physical level required to compete with the best. If he wants to be the building block of this franchise, to remain in the MVP conversation, and ultimately to be the best player on a title team, that has to change. He needs a reset, not a remake that the summer is starting to resemble.

      Watching him grind through games lately has been difficult, and fair or not, this roster, along with his style of play on both ends and everything that cascades from it, cannot function without its superstar being at the top of his game.

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    ROCKETS CRUSH LAKERS FOR THIRD BAD LOSS IN A ROW

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    Lethargic Lakers might need roster shakeup if they can’t ramp up energy

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      PHOENIX — The Los Angeles Lakers, we’ve known for some time, are prone to nights like this. The nights that skew their point differentials, the nights when they look nowhere close to a team that can contend, the nights when their worst habits shine brightest and their biggest strengths retreat to the background.

      It’s why they’ve won 19 total games with just a plus-eight point differential.

      As the Lakers pulled their healthy regulars early in the fourth quarter against the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday, everything the Lakers aren’t on the defensive end — aggressive at the point of attack, consistently communicating, constantly covering for one another — had fully eclipsed anything good happening on the other side of the floor.

      They had no chance of winning this game, not with this energy, not with this focus, not with this mindset. It didn’t matter that Austin Reaves and Deandre Ayton, who had missed time over the last week, were back. It might not have mattered if Luka Dončić, Rui Hachimura or Gabe Vincent were there.

      The Lakers’ 132-108 loss had nothing to do with talent and everything to do with DNA, one team firmly established as a group that plays with physicality and toughness always and another that has to focus its attention and effort on those things.

      Last year, Dorian Finney-Smith and Jordan Goodwin played with enough infectious energy to give the Lakers more than enough attitude on a nightly basis. Asked by The Athletic if they have those kinds of players this year, coach JJ Redick issued the obvious response.

      “No,” he said.

      Redick said the team’s success hinges on a series of choices. While injuries and revolving lineups have slowed continuity on the defensive end, the real challenges stem from mentality. And while players can get healthier, they don’t usually get tougher or more energetic.

      “We practice this stuff enough,” Redick said. “We review this stuff enough. We show film on this stuff enough that to me … it comes down to just making the choice. It’s making the choice.

      “There are shortcuts you can take, or you can do the hard thing and you can make the second effort. Or you can sprint back or you can’t. It’s just a choice. And there’s a million choices in a game, and you’re very likely not gonna make every choice correctly. But can you make the vast majority of ’em correctly? It gives you a chance to win.”

      That the Lakers have to choose to play with the right kind of energy is, in itself, an indictment. For other teams — including some they’re chasing in the Western Conference like Oklahoma City and the surging San Antonio Spurs — that energy is the default.

      “The theme with our team, again, is like these young teams that move, we just can’t move,” Redick said. “So it’s like we’re stuck in mud.”

      The NBA and NFL are dreaming of a green Christmas, and that’s not cool. Never mind the TV overload. Think of all the people working them.

      Publicly, Lakers players are saying that the team can and will find the right gear defensively so they can work together to get stops. Privately, sources inside the locker room acknowledged that the current roster will have to grind its way through the regular season instead of setting its cruise control at 85 and ignoring the brakes.

      “We had a guy the other day who hasn’t played a lot, who didn’t know what a flood was in the middle of a game,” Redick said, referencing a common term for overloading the defense to the strong side of the court. “We clearly have some room to grow in that area.”

      Internally, there’s some skepticism that the answers to this problem exist inside the locker room. Last year, Redick and the Lakers’ coaching staff called their hardest-playing role players “banshees.” This year, he’s barely uttered the phrase.

      This team, the Lakers believe, has a higher ceiling than last year’s. There’s clearly more talent on the roster. But the ways in which it feels incomplete are so clear on nights like Tuesday, especially when a former Laker, Goodwin, is sparking his new team in ways the Lakers so badly need.

      Last year, president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka traded for Finney-Smith. He signed Goodwin to a two-way deal. And the team’s defense improved — even as it lost its anchor Anthony Davis in the Dončić deal.

      No one has gone as far as to say the Lakers need to make those same kinds of moves this year. But Redick did say that, for the Lakers to be better more regularly on defense, they’re going to have to approach the game differently.

      And it might be easier to change the roster than it is to change a player’s mentality.

      “That’s why I said it’s the hard choice. And it’s not the easy choice,” Redick said. “It’s human nature. We all do it. We do it on a daily basis. We make easy choices cause it’s comfortable. Comfortable doesn’t win.”

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    Iztok Franko: Lakers Game Preview: Game 29 vs Rockets

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Merry Christmas! Hard to beat a holiday filled with NBA basketball, especially with the Lakers on the main stage hosting the Rockets.

      There is more good news: Luka Dončić is expected to play after missing the last game with a lower leg contusion, as is Rui Hachimura, so both the Lakers and the Rockets should have their main players available.

      This should be a fun matchup between two teams sitting neck and neck in the standings, but with almost opposite advanced profiles. Houston has been one of the league’s best teams by point differential all season. At +8.7, the Rockets rank second in the NBA, behind only the Oklahoma City Thunder. And yet, they’ve also been the league’s most high-profile underachievers late in games. Houston is just 6–8 in clutch situations, with four of those losses coming in overtime. Three overtime losses have come in their last five games, and eight of their ten total losses this season have been decided in the clutch. So far, the clutch process has been too much Alperen Sengun, and too little Kevin Durant, who was brought in to provide shotmaking when things get tight. The result is a league-worst -2.9 win differential—nearly three fewer wins than expected based on how dominant their point margins have been. The Lakers, on the other end, have made their money in the clutch, where they are a league-best 10–0 and own the NBA’s top +4.9 win differential.

      So, you could say this is a battle between the league’s biggest underachievers and overachievers.

      That shouldn’t matter too much tonight, as both teams have a lot to prove and redeem themselves. Both have been struggling lately, especially on defense, with both coaches questioning their teams’ effort. Over the last three weeks, the Lakers are 3–3, with their defensive struggles well documented. They rank 27th defensively over that stretch. The Rockets’ defensive collapse is much more surprising. They are 2–5 over the same stretch and rank even lower, 28th on defense, after Ime Udoka’s squad was the league’s second-best defensive team before that.

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      Lakers (19-9) vs Rockets (17-10) game facts
      Rest: LAL on 1 day of rest; HOU on 1 day of rest

      Ranking: LAL 16th in Point Diff (+0.4), HOU 2nd in Point Diff (+8.7)

      LAL vs HOU 2024-25 record: 2-1

      LAL injuries: Luka Dončić (questionable), Jaxson Hayes (questionable), Gabe Vincent (OUT), Rui Hachimura (probable)

      HOU injuries: Fred VanVleet (OUT), Alperen Sengun (questionable), Dorian Finney-Smith (questionable), Jae’Sean Tate (questionable)

      LAL projected starting five: Luka Dončić (G), Austin Reaves (G), Rui Hachimura (F), LeBron James (F), Deandre Ayton (C)

      LAL key reserves: Marcus Smart, Jake LaRavia, Jaxson Hayes, Jarred Vanderbilt, Maxi Kleber, Dalton Knecht, Nick Smith Jr., Adou Thiero

      HOU projected starting five: Amen Thompson (G), Josh Okogie (G), Kevin Durant (F), Jabari Smith Jr. (F), Alperen Sengun (C)

      HOU key reserves: Reed Sheppard, Steven Adams, Tari Eason, Aaron Holiday, Clint Capela

      Key storyline: How will the Lakers handle another long and very physical team?

      The book has been out on the Lakers this season: stifle them with athleticism, length, and pressure, and they can very possibly turn the ball over, get run over in transition, and eventually roll over.

      Despite their and Udoka’s reputation, the Rockets haven’t been a heavy on-ball pressure team. They rank just 21st in opponent turnover rate and ninth in opponent free-throw rate, a profile more in line with a conservative defense. That could change with Tari Eason and Dorian Finney-Smith potentially returning to the rotation.

      But where the Rockets’ aggressiveness really comes into play is on the glass. They are the NBA’s best offensive rebounding team, collecting nearly 40% of their misses in the half-court. Their starting lineup is massive, with three players at 6’11”, and only Josh Okogie standing shorter than 6’7”. They also often play two-big lineups, with Steven Adams and Sengun overwhelming opponents on the offensive boards.

      Rebounding has been one of the rare bright spots of the Lakers’ defense, but the Rockets will present a challenge they haven’t seen before. Houston is typically a slow-paced team (third slowest pace) that doesn’t run much (24th in transition frequency), but this feels like a matchup where Udoka could change his approach. Expect his athletes—Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., Eason, and others—to push the pace at every opportunity, trying to expose the Lakers’ biggest weakness: lack of speed.

      The test will be very difficult, but also an opportunity for the Lakers to change the narrative and prove they can hang with young, physical teams on a big national stage—after failing to do so in their last attempt, an NBA Cup quarterfinal loss against the San Antonio Spurs.

      This is where the Lakers’ hopes lie, and where the key tactical battle for tonight will unfold.

      It feels like for the Lakers to have a chance, their offense, especially their two primary pick-and-roll operators, Luka and Reaves, will need not only efficient scoring nights, but also to force Udoka into more aggressive hedging or blitzing coverages, then punish those looks by making plays in 4-on-3 situations. After a stretch in the middle of the season when teams tried to stop Dončić by getting the ball out of his hands with more aggressive tactics, we’ve seen opponents reverse course. That shift followed the Suns showing a template built around a big playing in drop coverage, combined with aggressive shrink and stunts from the sides to reduce the pocket space Dončić likes to operate in with his snake and hostage dribbles.

      The Rockets have strong on-ball defenders suited for this approach in Amen Thompson, Josh Okogie, and Tari Eason. The challenge comes on the back line, where their slower-footed bigs are not the same rim and lob deterrent that Mark Williams was. So far this season, Udoka has been among the more aggressive coaches when it comes to blitz frequency against top ball-handlers. The Rockets have shown those looks against Jamal Murray, Cade Cunningham, James Harden, and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. We’ll see whether he goes to that coverage from the start against Dončić, or instead tests his calf and streaky shot early before reverting to showing two on the ball.

      Regardless of the coverage, this is a night when the Lakers’ half-court offense will have to be efficient, and Dončić, Reaves, and James can’t afford to turn the ball over at a high rate. Because of the Rockets’ size and offensive rebounding, the Lakers will likely face a possession deficit, and they can’t afford to make it worse by giving the ball away.

      The most likely, and most feasible, Lakers path to success is highly efficient scoring with Luka and the rest being the aggressors, dictating the terms on offense and forcing Udoka, Sengun, and the rest into a reactionary rather than proactive approach.

      Rockets on offense | Lakers on defense

      Here is where things get tricky for LA. Despite their recent struggles, the Rockets have been scoring at a high rate and rank as the third-best offense in the NBA.

      The hope for a Lakers defensive resurrection lies in the fact that Houston is not the fast, downhill attacking team that has given them the most problems. Apart from Thompson, the other two key threats, Durant and Sengun, are more methodical, back-you-down or shoot-over-you types of players. That’s the profile the slower Lakers tend to contain better, rather than explosive drive-by attackers.

      The Rockets’ shot profile also suits the Lakers better. They rank second in the NBA in mid-range frequency and last in three-point frequency, a much more manageable profile than aggressive rim-attacking or three-point-heavy teams. There is one caveat. The Lakers tend to shrink and show help off corner shooters, or are simply late on close-outs there, and the Rockets are top three in corner three accuracy at 43.5 percent, while also ranking second overall in three-point percentage.

      Again, the offensive glass is where the Rockets are elite, especially when Steven Adams is on the floor. To match the Rockets’ size and bulk, the Lakers will need to repeat what they did on March 31 last season, when they collectively fought and gang-rebounded with smaller lineups against Sengun and Adams. That was one of their better hustle wins of the season, and they’ll again try to expose the Rockets’ slow foot speed on the other end.

      Are the Lakers ready for zone and switching?

      Udoka potentially going all in on size and trying to crush opponents on the glass is another interesting layer of this matchup. The Rockets have already logged 521 possessions with both Sengun and Adams on the floor (see orange blocks in the chart below), and have also paired Sengun with Clint Capela at times.

      Source: pbpstats

      With those lineups, Udoka often reverts to zone defense, and the Rockets currently rank second in zone defense frequency. The Lakers haven’t faced much zone this season, so Redick and his team will have to be ready and sharp against it tonight.

      Personally, I would be more worried if the Rockets go small, with Durant, Smith Jr., Eason, and Thompson in long, switch-everything lineups, than with them having several targets for Dončić, Reaves, and James on the floor. The Lakers have excelled this season against hedge and aggressive schemes, but they tend to get too stagnant, too ISO-heavy, and too reliant on hero shots against switching defenses.

      The Rockets’ ability to change styles, and how the Lakers deal with it, adds another interesting layer to this already intriguing matchup.

      Final thoughts

      After the last disappointing blowout loss against the Suns, I wrote about system breakdowns and the Lakers’ need for deep introspection. Their flaws feel so evident and so hard to overcome that a major reshuffle seems necessary to address them.

      Will tonight’s game prove me wrong and bring hope? Or will it deepen those concerns and reinforce the belief in that diagnosis?

      Let’s see how it plays out on the biggest NBA regular-season stage.

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    Lakers doing something other West contenders refuse to do

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      Surprise, surprise…The Los Angeles Lakers are shopping for an upgrade. While other contenders are standing pat, confident in what they already have, the Lakers are actively searching for help despite sitting at 19–8 and fourth in the Western Conference.

      Right now, the Lakers are winning, and they have made some good pick ups in the offseason. Deandre Ayton has been stellar. Even Marcus Smart has been better than expected. But even with that being said, they know that the pieces that make up their current roster just are not enough.

      Marc Stein captured that contrast clearly on The Stein Line, writing, “Really only the Lakers loom as a clear-cut playoff team like Minnesota that is known to be shopping for a particular need.”

      In a conference loaded with top talent, the Lakers are the rare playoff team openly acknowledging a weakness and trying to address it midseason, which is obviously a good thing.

      Why the Lakers are operating differently than other West teams

      That weakness is no secret. The Lakers lack a true 3-and-D wing. They desperately need a perimeter defender who can stay on the floor offensively while taking on elite scorers.

      Right now, they do not have a player who reliably checks both boxes. And the truth is, against top teams in the West, that gap shows up quickly, especially when the matchup turns physical. If you know anything about playoff basketball, every matchup gets physical.

      The Lakers are way more desperate to make a move in the West than the other top dogs. The contrast with Oklahoma City could not be sharper.

      The defending champions are off to an absolutely blistering 26–3 start, and their roster looks complete. There is no incentive for the Thunder to disrupt chemistry that is already producing dominant results. Stability is a luxury they have earned.

      Other West teams feel similarly comfortable. As Stein noted, “Denver, meanwhile, is said to be pleased with the offensive boost provided by newly acquired Jonas Valančiūnas while remaining bullish on Cam Johnson… The Rockets are starting to regularly see the sort of production they hoped for from Reed Sheppard… San Antonio, too, has every reason to watch its young core continue to blossom rather than chase an older star.”

      Each team has a reason to wait. The Lakers do not because their margin is thinner. Stein also cautioned that solutions may be limited, writing that “it’s equally unclear… if a player who can help address the Lakers’ need for a 3-and-D wing… becomes available between now and the Feb. 5 trade buzzer.”

      The market may not cooperate, and the Lakers’ asset pool certainly will not make things easy. The Lakers have zero second-round draft picks between 2026 and 2031. Their first round draft capital is not a pretty sight either.

      Still, effort matters. The Lakers are going to need to pick up the phone and hope for a taker, especially with the weaker, rebuilding teams in the league.

      An example of a team they could call is the New Orleans Pelicans. The Pelicans’ instability makes them an obvious target, and the Lakers should explore every possible opening.

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    HAVE A MERRY LAKERS CHRISTMAS!!!!

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    LAKERS VS ROCKETS ON CHRISTMAS DAY

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    Luka Doncic is EXPECTED to play tomorrow on Christmas

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    It took one game without Luka to prove Lakers must make trade

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      The Lakers don’t have a choice.

      The Los Angeles Lakers were without Luka Doncic on Tuesday night, and the team was blown out by the Suns in Phoenix. The NBA’s leading scorer has a calf injury that could be problematic. It is difficult to win with a superstar on the sidelines in the NBA, but the Lakers’ weakness was on full display in the Valley of the Sun.

      The Lakers were without Rui Hachimura, Gabe Vincent, and Luka. Austin Reaves was returning from a three-game absence, so he was on a minute limit. Head coach JJ Redick had to get creative with his rotation, but Los Angeles started Nick Smith Jr. on a two-way contract and had only one trusted player coming off the bench. That can’t be the case for a team with title contention dreams.

      The Lakers desperately need a 3-and-D wing, but depth is also a problem. When fully healthy, LA has just seven trusted players. They can’t enter the postseason without more help, or it will be another quick exit for the Lakers.

      Lakers’ lack of depth is on full display without Luka Doncic
      Luka is one of the five best players in the world right now, so he makes up for a lot of issues. The five-time first-team All-NBA selection is an elite offense by himself and keeps the Lakers in games. Los Angeles looks like a serious contender with Doncic on the floor, but the weaknesses get magnified with the superstar out.

      LeBron James is rounding into form, and Austin Reaves appears to have leaped into superstardom. The Lakers have the top-end talent to compete with any team, but they are lacking role players and depth to make a playoff run.

      LA is light on tradeable assets. No team will be eager to acquire Dalton Knecht, Bronny James, or Adou Thiero after the shaky starts to their NBA careers. Nick Smith Jr., who was released by the rebuilding Hornets in September, started over the Lakers’ three young players on Tuesday night. They have just one tradeable first-round draft pick. Rob Pelinka will have to use it to land an upgrade before the deadline.

      The Lakers should look to add however possible. Even if it means taking on a slightly overpriced contract. Los Angeles needs a perimeter defensive upgrade and just more options that head coach JJ Redick trusts in the playoffs. They can’t enter the postseason with this roster. That was clear in the blowout loss to Phoenix and will be evident whenever Luka Doncic is out of the lineup.

      The Los Angeles Lakers have issues to solve and do not have the personnel needed. They have until Feb. 5 to make a trade, and Rob Pelinka must remake things on the fly again. He did in 2023 when the Lakers reached the conference finals and made the Luka blockbuster at last year’s deadline.

      Hopefully, the GM has another trick up his sleeve because the Lakers desperately need it. All fans can do is stay tuned to find out.

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    System breakdown: the Lakers need deep introspection

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      I don’t often stray from my usual game observations format. I like the consistency, and some readers have asked me not to disclose results in the titles since they watch games the day after. I did it once earlier this season, writing about the Lakers’ free-falling defense after the Celtics loss, when I subtitled it “when a game recap turns into a concerning trend.” Six games later, here we are again.

      Sometimes a game feels different. Not just one of the 82 you sweep under the rug. This one felt like either a breaking point or a rally point going forward.

      The Lakers lost their first consecutive game of the season, but more concerning is that this was another blowout collapse decided in the middle of the third quarter. Another entry in a growing list of troubling signs and uncompetitive losses we’ve seen all season.

      The fact that the Lakers still hold a very solid 19–9 record and sit fourth in the West should not obscure what we’ve been talking about since the start of the season. Their +0.4 net rating, which ranks 16th in the league, paints a much more accurate picture of this team. An average one.

      In his season-opening press conference, team GM Rob Pelinka said the 25-game mark would be a milestone for evaluating what this team really is. We are now three games past that point, and one thing is clear. What this team is not, despite the record, is physical and connected enough to keep up with the current top-tier teams.

      digginbasketball is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

      Today’s notes:

      Lack of a clear identity

      No Rui, no Luka: same structural issues 📈

      Deandre Ayton over Mark Williams second thoughts?

      When or why Vando is not the answer (🎞️VIDEO)

      Driving home for Christmas

      1-Lack of a clear identity
      Why this game felt bigger than just one loss is because it gave the Lakers a mirror. On one end, you have a team that has been up and down all season. A team where you never quite know what level of effort and focus you are going to get, not just game to game, but quarter to quarter. A team still searching for answers on both ends of the floor.

      On the other end are the Suns. A team with a clear identity. More organized. More structured on both ends. More disciplined, even while playing an aggressive brand of basketball. And with more three in their 3-and-D role players.

      The Suns are far more comfortable and disruptive executing their base pick-and-roll defensive scheme. They build a tight pocket around the ball handler through aggressive shrinking and gap help, with Mark Williams anchoring the back line. By contrast, the Lakers repeatedly gave up switches that allowed Devin Booker and Dillon Brooks to attack smaller defenders like Austin Reaves and Nick Smith Jr., holding them hostage (literally with hostage dribbles) often with little to no help.

      Room for the pick-and-roll operator: Lakers vs. Suns
      The little defensive success the Lakers have had this season has mostly come from individual playmaking rather than consistent, systematic resistance or disruption.

      2-No Rui, no Luka: same structural issues 📈
      What made this performance especially frustrating, and a clear sign of deeper structural flaws, is that it came without Luka Dončić and Rui Hachimura. This was the worst defensive showing of the season despite both starters being out, even though those two are often the starting point when the Lakers’ defensive issues are discussed. The Lakers’ previous worst defensive performance also came without Dončić and LeBron James in the lineup.

      The Lakers gave up an astonishing 152.6 points per 100 possessions in non-garbage-time minutes, dropping them to 25th in the league in defensive rating, ahead of only five bottom-feeder teams.

      Postgame, a JJ Redick looked visibly deflated and was very frank about his team’s lack of effort and composure. Redick also admitted that this team’s margin for error on defense is not very high, which makes detailed execution of the defensive game plan essential. However, the Lakers have shown all season that they cannot maintain that level of focus for more than a few possessions, and certainly not for an entire game. At some point, that has to be pinned on personnel rather than willingness.

      Lakers Daily
      @LakersDailyCom
      Reporter: “Does this group have enough guys who make the choice to play hard (like many guys on Phoenix eg. Goodwin)?”

      JJ Redick: “No.”
      8:47 PM · Dec 23, 2025 · 110K Views
      34 Replies · 98 Reposts · 1.97K Likes
      Redick answering the question of whether the team has enough high-IQ, high-effort defensive players with a quick, decisive “no” was a clear message. These defensive issues may be beyond fixing with the tools he currently has.

      However, the current state is a consequence of the decisions the Lakers made in the offseason when they signed Deandre Ayton and chose to pair him with Hachimura, James, and Dončić. They did bring in Marcus Smart and Jake LaRavia, replacing Dorian Finney-Smith and Jordan Goodwin, but right now those moves feel more like patchwork than the kind of systematic retooling this team needs around Dončić.

      3-Deandre Ayton over Mark Williams second thoughts?
      Ayton has exceeded most expectations for the Lakers as a great, low-cost pickup on the buyout market this summer. His attitude has been strong, his effort mostly solid, and his already elite finishing efficiency has climbed to new career highs catching lobs and pocket passes from Dončić, Reaves, and James.

      But what has also become clear watching Ayton up close over the first third of the season is that he is not a game-changing defensive big. He is not the defensive backbone, the anchor archetype who erases mistakes and increases the margin for error Redick talked about, something this team, as currently constructed, desperately lacks. That’s not an indictment of Ayton, but rather of the roster as a whole, as the sum of its parts.

      Williams, on the other hand, is thriving in a defensive scheme designed around him and his massive standing reach. Questions about his durability and his adaptability to the different coverages often required in the playoffs will remain. These three matchups against the Suns have shown that Williams has been the more impactful defender and rim deterrent compared to Ayton. That said, I’m not fully convinced Williams would look the same in purple and gold had the February trade not been rescinded, largely because of the Lakers’ system and, more importantly, the current personnel. But what I think there is less and less doubt about is that a team built around Dončić and Reaves needs an impactful defensive big on the back line to have any hope of a competent defense.

      4-When or why Vando is not the answer (🎞️VIDEO)
      Jarred Vanderbilt is one of the most polarizing players on this roster. At his best, he is the chaos-creating, relentless energy dynamo we saw in the previous matchup between these two teams, when he flipped the game with pure effort. Those kinds of hustle plays are why fans, myself included, have been calling for more banshees and more Vando in the rotation.

      However, the challenge with Vanderbilt is that while his motor and hustle are never in doubt, his defensive composure and fundamentals are. He is an effort defender who will force loose balls, create havoc, and generate deflections while playing loose, but he is also a defender who can be undisciplined, too often gets burned on cuts, dies on screens, or ends up out of position while gambling for a steal.

      That is why he is not an All-Defense–level player, and combined with his shooting limitations and turnover-prone play, it’s hard to justify a role much larger than 15 to 18 minutes off the bench.

      5-Driving home for Christmas
      This game closed out a four-game road trip, and now the Lakers head into a five-game homestand. Despite another disappointing loss, it should not be all doom and gloom. The strong start to the season bought them some margin and some time, allowing for patience after nights like this. The hope is that they can regroup at home and prevent a deeper slide.

      That reset begins on Christmas Day against the Rockets. If time permits, I’ll have a detailed preview tomorrow. The Rockets have hit a rough patch of its own, losing four of its last five games, three of them in overtime. Christmas games are always fun, and this will be a great opportunity for the Lakers to respond and show they can keep up with the league’s best when fully motivated and locked in.

      And to close, I want to wish all of you a Merry Christmas. Thank you for reading, for the support, and for being part of the digginbasketball community.

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