Facing the Clippers on Friday and Sunday for the first times since his Mavericks eliminated them from the playoffs last spring, Luka Doncic picked up right where he left off, leading the Lakers to a pair of hard-fought victories over their Los Angeles rivals.
Doncic scored 31 points in Friday’s win, then put up 29 points, nine assists, and six rebounds on Sunday. In that second victory, the Lakers were a +19 in his 37 minutes on the court and were outscored by 13 points in the 11 minutes he didn’t play. Head coach J.J. Redick loved what he saw from his newest star, as Dan Woike of The Los Angeles Times writes.
“It just seemed like throughout the game, when we needed a bucket, when we needed him to draw a second, third defender at times, he was able to make the right play — minus the six turnovers. But he played fantastic,” Redick said after Sunday’s win. “And again, it was that verve and that spirit of competition. But also just something that is — maybe it’s an inner demon, I don’t know — but it comes out and it’s fantastic for us when it does.”
The Lakers’ defense has been a revelation during their recent hot streak — the team ranks first in the NBA with a 107.5 defensive rating since January 15 and has won 18 of 22 games during that time. But Doncic’s recent play has shown just how dangerous the team can be an offense as well.
“You’ve got a guy in your corner going Super Saiyan, for lack of a better word,” Lakers guard Gabe Vincent said. “And making great plays, hitting shots, it’s a lot of fun. It can give us a lot of life and we’ve been creating a lot of energy on the defensive side. And when he gets hot offensively, we feel like we can’t be stopped in that regard.”
Here’s more on the Lakers:
- Doncic briefly left Sunday’s game after being kneed in the right knee, explaining after the game that he has taken multiple shots to that area within the past week. “Third straight game, the same spot,” he said (Twitter link via ESPN’s Dave McMenamin). “So, I was kind of struggling on that right leg. But I’m good.”
- Only two teams in the NBA – the Cavaliers and Thunder – have a better home record than the Lakers’ 23-7 mark, which is why it’s encouraging that they’ve climbed into the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference, writes Dylan Hernandez of The Los Angeles Times. If they hold that spot, they’d have home-court advantage for at least the first two rounds of the postseason. After Sunday’s win, Doncic referred to the atmosphere inside of Crypto.com Arena as “unbelievable.”
- In a separate column for The L.A. Times, Hernandez writes that Redick has been everything the Lakers could have hoped for when they hired him as a first-time head coach. The Lakers players are buying what Redick is selling, according to Hernandez, who says the new coach has successfully instilled a positive culture and identity more effectively than any of his recent predecessors.
- Cap expert Eric Pincus breaks down the Lakers’ options for promoting Jordan Goodwin and Trey Jemison from their two-way contracts to the standard roster, noting that giving them standard deals will be necessary if the team wants to have the duo available for the playoffs. While Cam Reddish seems likely to be the odd man out if just one of the two is promoted, it’s unclear who else might be waived if the Lakers want to elevate both — Pincus suggests recently signed center Alex Len, who struggled in limited minutes and quickly dropped out of the rotation, could be a release candidate.
- Pincus also points out that the Lakers wouldn’t be able to sign a new two-way player to replace Goodwin or Jemison unless a promotion occurs today, since March 4 is the deadline for two-way signings.
The Luka trade becomes more laughable by the day.
the most laughable thing is the Mavs were told by the lakers not to tell anyone about the negotiations and they did. Seriously if you have a franchise talent available wouldn’t you want a bidding war for his services to get the most out of a trade
That’s not right. It’s the Mavs that absolutely had to have it be done in secret. Had the rumor gotten out the Dallas fan uproar would have prevented the trade from ever going forward. The mavs were NEVER going to pay him that super max so he had to go… they were going to get boxed into having to pay that 70mill per.
Obviously the lakers benefitted from this, but the Mavs were also secretly talking to a couple other teams as well.
Fans were going to find out anyway. Mavs GM did the biggest blunder ever by a GM.
Except they didn’t find out, did they?
Well, literally a center away from having a complete team now. They just need a 7fter on the roster that isn’t a complete stiff. They’ll undoubtedly take one in the 2nd round. Plumlee is a probable FA target on the min.
Moses Brown and drop Len.
Luka and Bron’s games fit seamlessly. It’s beautiful to watch. With Luka as lead ball handler and LBJ as “a big,” they’ve gotten way way way better. If only they’d found a top ten pg to put with AD and James, they would have been unstoppable. LBJ should never have been allowed to be the “point guard/forward” these past few seasons. With him freed up off ball, he looks devastating.
How lucky are lakers? On a scale of 1-10, i’d say a 1,000. Elite superstars just happen to fall into their laps. Cant think of any other franchise in any Sport like that
Drop Len for sure. I thought he couldn’t be as bad as everybody said but I was wrong.