This week was a mixed bag for the Lakers.
On the plus side, they won a pair of games and got Austin Reaves back. On the negative side, they lost to the top two teams in the West, Luka Dončić got hurt and LeBron James said they weren’t a championship team.
Add it all up, and you get a 2-2 week and a team that needs some rest and time away from the game before the most important stretch of the season.
Luckily, the Lakers have the All-Star break coming up. Hopefully, they use it to reset and get healthy
so they can finish the season strong.
5 things I liked and didn’t like
1. Failing the test
The Lakers competed hard against the Thunder, but still lost 119-110. It was a harsh reminder that even when they are playing hard, they don’t measure up to the cream of the crop in the NBA. As mentioned before, LeBron put it bluntly after the game, saying that OKC was a championship team and LA is not.
With 53 games played, the Lakers are as good as their record states. At 32-21, the Lakers are not a great team and dreams of a championship this season are just that.
2. Luka’s injury
It may be up for debate how good the Lakers can be this season, but the one thing that’s clear is they need Luka healthy to maximize their chances of success.
Which is why Luka injuring his hamstring against the Sixers was such a bummer. He’s now missed four straight games, and it is very much up in the air whether he plays at the All-Star Game.
If he keeps missing games, it could also make him ineligible for All-NBA and other NBA awards. After being ruled out against the Mavs, Luka can only miss five more games the rest of this season.
It would be a shame if Luka loses his All-NBA spot due to a few injuries, but those are the rules, at least for now.
3. Luke Kennard is here
Despite what Lakers President of Basketball Operations Rob Pelinka tries to tell you, the Lakers weren’t aggressive during the trade deadline. However, they did get better.
LA traded for Luke Kennard, and he is exactly what the Lakers needed: a player who can consistently knock down shots from deep.
In his first shift in purple and gold, he wasted no time showing off his jumper.
Kennard ended the game with 10 points, going 4-7 from the field and knocking down a pair of threes. LA went on to beat Golden State and will continue to benefit from Kennard’s ability to make 49% of his 3-point attempts.
The trade to acquire Kennard may not rock the NBA world, but it was an improvement on the margins that in no way jeopardizes their future. So, while the move might be sexy, it sure was sensible and the Lakers are a better team for it.
4. Austin Reaves is back
Reaves missed 19 games due to a calf strain, but he returned this week, and boy was he missed. He’s been on a minutes restriction and has come off the bench, but was marvelous against the Sixers.
It was a vintage Reaves performance featuring jaw-dropping 3-pointers, incredible playmaking near the rim and some gaudy production mixed in with his unmistakable charm.
Reaves scored 35 points in the win and reminded everyone just how good he is.
5. Lakers still need a center
When the Lakers signed Deandre Ayton, the thought was that they got the center they needed, upgrading from Jaxson Hayes. Well, Ayton might be better, but he’s not good enough.
He is averaging 13.2 points, 8.5 rebounds and 0.9 assists, which are all career lows. Recently, it’s become commonplace for him to sit out during the fourth quarter of games, and with injuries keeping him out of contests, it’s not looking like he is the long-term fix for the five spot in LA.
Ayton will have to do for now, but another change will be necessary in the summer.
Stat of the Week
This week’s stat is 30, the number of assists LeBron had across the Lakers’ three games this week.
As the season has progressed, LeBron has gotten better. An aspect of his game that’s been much sharper is his passing. This is also the first time LeBron has been LA’s assist leader for three consecutive games since early April of last year.
Luka, as the team’s primary ballhandler, will often be dominant in this category, but James still has the vision and basketball IQ to put his teammates in advantageous scenarios. And this week, no Lakers were moving the ball better.
Play of the Week
Not all threes are created equal. The one Reaves hit in the fourth against the Sixers was sensational.
The play started with LeBron driving to the paint. As James got near the rim, Joel Embiid helped, and Trendon Watford dropped down to cover Jarred Vanderbilt, freeing up Maxi Kleber.
LeBron saw this and kicked it to Maxi, but so did VJ Edgecombe as he rotated out to the wing, forcing a pass to Austin. The problem was that Reaves had just one second to get his shot off and was closer to the logo than the 3-point line.
Luckily, none of that made a difference, as he knocked down the deep three to give LA the lead.
The Sixers played solid defense, but Reaves was just too good for it to matter.
Player of the Week
Even coming off the bench, Reaves was the best player for LA. He averaged 22.3 points and shot 40% from three as he returned from injury.
His best game occurred against the Sixers where he scored 35 points in just 25 minutes.
After the game, Lakers head coach JJ Redick joked that he would keep Reaves’ playing time down if it meant he’d perform this well.
Once Reaves starts, the Lakers will be able to field the best lineup possible, and his career year can pick up where it left off in December when he was fully healthy.
Stories of the Week
“Inside the ugly split between Jonathan Kuminga and the Warriors” – ESPN
I prefer the basketball far more than the drama that comes with it, but even I must admit I can’t look away from something as spicy as the Jonathan Kuminga-Warriors saga. Was Kuminga good enough to warrant all this attention? No. But was it entertaining to hear just how bad the breakup in Golden State was? Absolutely.
He knew management wanted to ding him for missing a team-requested event and alert him that someone around him was taking too much food from the family room. The gripes between player and organization, as multiple sources said, had become “petty” in the fifth year of a relationship many believed should’ve ended years before.
Kerr never had much success reaching Kuminga on a deeper level, typically one of his coaching superpowers. He’d given him handwritten notes, sent long text messages, tried to connect. But Kuminga rarely reciprocated. Kuminga normally responded dispassionately and sporadically.
“NBA Hall of Famers. A Splash Father. Inside the single 3-pointer club” – The Athletic
Klay Thompson and Mychal Thompson are one of the great father-son NBA duos in NBA history. In this feature, we learn more about them and how a father who never shot threes raised one who is among the best to ever do it.
In a brief interview, Klay told The Athletic it was his dad who taught him how to shoot. Whether he was young and too small to shoot from over his head, or as he matured into a teenager and young adult, Klay was taught to start his workouts under the basket and gradually step back, keeping his elbows in with each shot.
Mychal, meanwhile, insists his son learned all on his own. Klay came to be such a great shooter, and he is unarguably in the rarest of company when it comes to knocking down 3s.
But Klay’s dad is also in exclusive company among NBA players.
Representing one of the greatest ironies in league history, Mychal Thompson, father of one of the greatest 3-point shooters ever, is one of a handful of players to have played at least one full NBA season and made only one 3 since the league instituted the 3-point line in October 1979.
You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.









