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    AUSTIN REAVES TONIGHT!

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    Luka Doncic With Triple Double on Off Night

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    BRONNY CATCHES THE LOB FROM AR

    FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

    You can’t make an omelette without breaking a few eggs. That has increasingly become NBA teams’ mindset when it comes to chasing extra possessions and the potential costs of doing so.

    Let’s back up a bit. With a bit more than a quarter of the season complete and most teams on mini-hiatus for the next 10 days while the NBA Cup plays out, it’s a good time to exhale and take a look at some league-wide trends.

    One notable shift that stands out is that fouls and free-throw attempts have both sharply increased from a year ago. While this can change over the course of a season as both players and officials react to each other — most notably in the “no paint fouls” era in the second half of the 2023-24 season — I suspect this one is likely to stick around, because it’s driven by bigger stylistic changes that we’re seeing league-wide.

    First, the data on fouls. League-wide free-throw attempts per field-goal attempt are up by 14.8 percent from a year ago; league-wide fouls per 100 possessions are up 13.4 percent. That comes in the wake of a flat half-decade-long trendline in the post-COVID-19 era:

    The 2022-23 season stands out as something of an outlier, and 2023-24 was trending the same way before an abrupt reduction in fouls and free throws after the All-Star break. Still, even those seasons pale beside what we’ve seen in 2025-26. To have double-digit percent increases in foul rates in one season is a fairly extreme shift.

    Pedants will note that pace is also up this year, which would affect personal fouls per game, but it’s only a 1.2 percent difference, and the foul rate has increased more than 10 times that amount. That isn’t the cause here.

    What is? The first instinct is to blame the refs somehow, but that quickly leads to dead ends. I’ve been in a lot of arenas in the last month, and nobody is really talking about changes in the officiating this year. (As opposed to, say, March 2024, when everyone was talking about it). To my own eyes, I haven’t seen play types officiated differently than previous years. And anecdotally, post-game officiating rants have been an uncommon sight.

    A more possible boogeyman would be the Oklahoma City Thunder, who nearly set a record for defensive efficiency last season while finishing 26th in opponent free-throw rate. The team that finished just behind them in the defensive stats, the Orlando Magic, was 29th in opponent free throws.

    What those two teams mastered was “possession-ball,” something I wrote about earlier this year as teams have leaned into it more. Both Oklahoma City and Orlando forced heaps of turnovers and controlled the boards, limiting opponent field-goal attempts.

    The flip-side of that is the Houston Rockets’ approach, which is to go nuts on the offensive glass and attempt to win the possession battle that way. This is basically a new paradigm in the league, replacing the previous 2010s orthodoxy of limiting rebounding attempts to avoid surrendering transition. This more aggressive approach has increased offensive rebound rates across the league. (Well, except in Milwaukee.)

    Meanwhile, teams have also leaned into using ball pressure to generate more turnovers — again, I discussed this at length earlier in the season. That’s a direct response to both the ridiculous efficiency some modern offenses have achieved if they’re just allowed to play pop-a-shot … and, ironically, to the increased physicality allowed on the perimeter since the middle of the 2023-24 season.

    Perhaps as a reaction to the success of teams like Thunder, Magic and Rockets, both offensive rebounds and turnovers are way up this year. The league-wide offensive rebound rate this season is 26.2 percent, and the league-wide turnover rate is 13.0 percent. The rebound rate has seen an 8 percent jump just in the last two years and an 18 percent jump from the league’s low ebb of a 22.2 percent rebound rate in 2020-21. Meanwhile, the turnover rate of 13 percent hasn’t been exceeded in the last decade and is a 7.4 percent jump from last season.

    Some individual teams have been wild outliers: Oklahoma City and the Phoenix Suns are turning teams over on more than 15 percent of their possessions, while Houston has an unthinkable 38 percent offensive rebound rate.

    So, back to our omelette: Possession-ball isn’t possible without fouls, and often fouls on both sides. Increasing offensive rebound attacks also increases the number of contested rebounds, which adds to the number of loose-ball fouls in both directions. One sight that’s been especially common, however, is a ref on the baseline blowing their whistle, raising both arms and then pointing their fingers at the floor, in an exaggerated “stays here” motion after the defense fouls an opposing offensive rebounder.

    For instance: Just try uprooting Steven Adams without getting a whistle. Watch as Denver’s Bruce Brown leans in with his full body weight and two arms, doing his best Sisyphus impersonation to roll this human boulder out of the way:

    This happens nearly every game with Adams, whose 25.4 percent offensive rebound rate leads the league among players with at least 300 minutes played; the dude is drawing fouls and earning free throws without even touching the ball.

    Of course, that’s only part of it. Putbacks, as a shot type, also tend to generate a lot more shooting fouls than jumpers, putting even more pressure on the league-wide foul rate.

    The same applies to a lesser extent with ball pressure. Not only does it increase the risk of fouls 50 feet from the basket (in theory, at least, although the league has been reluctant to call all but the most egregious hand-checks), it also increases the possibility of offensive fouls from frazzled dribblers.

    Which takes us to the next question: Are foul rates about to escalate even more? It’s a copycat league, and the copying seems to be working. As much as teams such as the Rockets have rediscovered the value of crashing the glass to their offenses, many are seeing the foul-turnover tradeoff seems to favor the defense.

    It’s not just the Thunder. The Detroit Pistons, for example, have the league’s third-best defense despite the worst opponent free-throw rate; they are third, however, in opponent turnover rate at 14.6 percent and second in offensive rebound rate at 31.5 percent. Phoenix has been less extreme, but it’s another surprise team that has benefited in a big way from owning the possssion war despite a high foul rate. (The Thunder, I will note, have dialed back the fouling quite a bit in 2025-26; they’re now just awesome at everything).

    Again, we’ve seen the ebbs of flows of league-wide trends pivot before; the NBA could decide to call the game differently, or other factors we can’t even conceive of yet could convince teams to tilt their focus in a different direction. Nonetheless, the possessions-and-fouls shift is one of the most notable stylistic changes we’ve seen in the league this season. Now the question, for the last three quarters of the season, is whether the trend only accelerates from here.

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    MARCUS SMART TONIGHT

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    Join us in wishing Jake LaRavia of the @Lakers a HAPPY 24th BIRTHDAY!

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    Wire-to-wire Win for Lakers

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    Deandre Ayton out due to back spasms

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    Mark Walter: "I'm not done yet."

    FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

    Spurs at Lakers. 10 p.m. ET on Prime Video: We’re all hoping for a surprise return by Victor Wembanyama; more realistically, he might have a chance to play in Vegas, if San Antonio gets there. The Lakers have done this before and would love to add more prize money.

    Who should carry the Spurs? De’Aaron Fox. His second-highest career scoring average (24.4) is against the Lakers. He’ll need to start the attack to get himself going and set up teammates.

    Who should carry the Lakers? Luka Dončić. He could set the tone early with a 20-point first quarter and leave the Spurs’ perimeter defense scrambling as Austin Reaves gets going later.

    Who is the X-Factor for both teams? Let’s go with Stephon Castle. His activity on both ends needs to disrupt the Lakers’ perimeter attack. And then LeBron James for the Lakers. If he looks like his old self, that’s too much for a Wemby-less Spurs team.

    Who needs this trip to Vegas more? San Antonio could use this as a young core to keep momentum going.

    Who wins? I’ll take the Lakers in their quest for a second Cup.

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    Lakers At Home Looking for 3rd Straight Win

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    Doncic & Reaves Breakout Gives Lakers’ Championship Blueprint

    The Lakers should thank the basketball gods as the silver lining of LeBron James’ injury turbocharged Luka Doncic’s and Austin Reaves’ breakout to gave the Lakers the perfect blueprint for winning the NBA championship.

    That blueprint is to stagger the Lakers’ talented young point guards Doncic and Reaves so the ball’s in one of their hands all 48 minutes of each game and frees a well-rested high IQ James to be their off-ball jack-of-all-trades. With Luka’s and Austin’s elite shot-making and playmaking on the ball and LeBron’s savvy picking, rolling, cutting, rebounding, and posting up off the ball, the Big Three should transform the Lakers’ offense into a juggernaut.

    Despite injuries plaguing lineups and rotations, the Lakers’ defense also showed promising signs, especially from Marcus Smart, Jarred Vanderbilt, and Jake LaRavia plus steady play from Rui Hachimura and Deandre Ayton.
    The Lakers still need LeBron James, Gabe Vincent, Maxi Kleber, and Adou Thiero back from injury. They must also swap $30-$40 million in expiring contracts for players who’ll be under contract and tradable next summer.

    Before the start of the season, the Lakers were believed to be a starting small forward and backup center away from being a championship contender. The ascension of Doncic and Reaves has changed that.
    While they still need a starting small forward and backup center, Luka’s and Austin’s breakouts have already transformed this Lakers team into a championship contender, although still a tier below the OKC Thunder.

    The goal now is to win games, hone the offense and defense, develop team chemistry, and figure out what they’re missing that LeBron James and the other injured can’t answer, and who and for whom do they want to trade.


    WHOM ARE LAKERS LIKELY TO TRADE?

    Right now, the three players most likely to be traded by the Lakers are Rui Hachimura ($18.2M), Gabe Vincent ($11.5M), and Maxi Kleber ($11.0M), who are on expiring contracts and together earn $40 million per year.

    Right now, the Lakers have 14 players under contract and are $1.1 million below the first apron, which means they won’t be able to sign a 15th player until after January 18th, when they could fit a prorated minimum salary.
    Since they’re so close to the first apron, the Lakers need to trade three players earning $40 million per year for two players earning $35 million before the deadline to open up cap space to fill the two open roster spots.

    Strategically, breakouts by Luka and Austin without LeBron should push the Lakers to go-all in to win the championship this season as it may be their best opportunity in the next decade versus the Thunder and Spurs.
    Watching Luka play like an MVP and Austin like an All-Star should also put an end to any doubts LeBron may have had about the Lakers being able to compete for a championship this season. Look for James to return soon.

    The big question facing the Lakers right now is whether to use their one tradable draft pick before the trade deadline or wait until next summer when they would be able to offer three first round picks on draft day?
    With Doncic and Reaves taking their games to new levels, the Lakers may already have their second superstar and should not hesitate to trade their pick for the right player(s) who would fit their championship blueprint.

    Look for the Lakers to trade Hachimura, Vincent, Kleber, their 2031 first round pick, and their 2033 second round pick for an elite 3&D starting small forward and backup center who can protect rim or stretch floor.


    WHOM SHOULD LAKERS TRADE FOR?

    The early season ascensions of Doncic and Reaves doesn’t change the Lakers’ core need for an elite 3&D starting small forward or impact backup center but it could lower the bar for what the team needs from the trade.

    What if the Lakers could fill their starting small forward and backup center needs without having to give up Rui Hachimura? What if they could fill the backup center need with a combination of Jaxson Hayes and Maxi Kleber?
    With LeBron primarily playing off the ball this season, one idea the Lakers should pursue is James as the team’s backup stretch five center. Luka and Austin running pick-and-rolls with LeBron as the center would be lethal.

    While the Lakers may decide to improvise when it comes to backup center, they clearly have a major need for an elite 3&D bigger wing who could start at small forward and defend the bigger wing and guard scorers in the West.
    The top three trade candidates to fill the Lakers’ need for an elite 3&D starting small forward who can be a lockdown defender are the Heat’s Andrew Wiggins, the Suns’ Dillon Brooks, and the Pelicans’ Herb Jones.

    Wiggins earns $27.2 million, Brooks $21.1 million, and Jones $13.9 million so Lakers could trade Hachimura and Vincent or Kleber for Wiggins, or Vincent and Kleber for Brooks, or Vincent or Kleber and Knecht for Jones.
    Trading for Wiggins would probably also cost the Lakers their one tradable first round draft pick while they might be able to get Brooks for a second. Jones could cost more than the Lakers first and second round picks.

    Look for the Los Angeles Lakers to trade for Rui Hachimura, Gabe Vincent, and their 2032 second round pick to the Phoenix Suns for Dillons Brooks to be their starting small forward with Jaxson Hayes as their backup center.

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    New Season from Jack Perkins!

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    LAKERS' FLOOR & CEILING HAVE GONE UP!

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    LAKERS COME BACK FROM DOWN 15 TO BEAT GRIZZLIES

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    Iztok Franco: Lakers Game Preview- Game 6

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    • FROM ABOVE ARTICLE:

      After a nail-biting win on Austin Reaves’ game-winner, the Lakers head to Memphis for their first game of the third edition of the Emirates NBA Cup. The Lakers, of course, lifted the inaugural trophy back in 2024, before the Milwaukee Bucks claimed it last season. This year, they’ll compete in West Group B, alongside the Grizzlies, Mavericks, Clippers, and Pelicans.

      source: https://www.nba.com/nba-cup/2025/standings

      Even more than the Cup excitement, Lakers fans were likely encouraged by Luka Dončić and Marcus Smart being upgraded to questionable on the latest injury report. Even if Dončić doesn’t return tonight, JJ Redick hinted the expectation is for him to be back in the lineup within the next couple of games. Both teams enter at 3–2 and will be missing several players. In their first five games, the Grizzlies beat the struggling Pelicans, a depleted Pacers team, and the Suns, but lost convincingly to the Warriors and Heat.

      Given the added NBA Cup stakes, I’ve chosen this matchup as the Game of the Week. Both the preview and post-game observations will be free for everyone to read. For other games, full insights are available to paid subscribers. If you enjoy the coverage, please consider subscribing and supporting the work.

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

      Lakers (3-2) @ Grizzlies (3-2) game facts
      Rest: LAL on 1 day of rest; MEM on 1 day of rest

      LAL vs MEM 2024-25 record: 3-1

      LAL injuries: LeBron James (OUT), Gabe Vincent (OUT), Adou Thiero (OUT), Maxi Kleber (OUT), Luka Dončić (questionable), Marcus Smart (questionable)

      MEM injuries: Brandon Clarke (OUT), Zach Edey (OUT), Ty Jerome (OUT), Scotty Pippen Jr. (OUT)

      LAL projected starting five: Austin Reaves (G), Jake LaRavia (F), Rui Hachimura (F), Jarred Vanderbilt (F), Deandre Ayton (C)

      LAL key reserves: Dalton Knecht, Jaxon Hayes, Nick Smith Jr., Bronny James

      MEM projected starting five: Ja Morant (G), Kentavious Caldwell-Pope (G), Jaylen Wells (F), Jaren Jackson Jr. (F), Jock Landale (C)

      MEM key reserves: Cedric Coward, Santi Aldama, John Konchar, Javon Small, Cam Spencer

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    Shams says keep eye on Giannis, Trae, & LeBron situations

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