Playing his first game of the season after undergoing offseason surgeries on both feet, Lakers forward Jarred Vanderbilt injected Los Angeles with a shot of adrenaline, observes Dan Woike of The Los Angeles Times. The Kentucky product made an immediate impact on the defensive side of the ball in his 12 minutes of action in a 118-108 victory over Golden State on Friday.
“Vando was awesome,” first-year Lakers head coach JJ Redick said. “Did all the things that we need him to do.”
Vanderbilt scored just two points on 1-of-2 shooting from the field, but he collected four rebounds and three steals while handing out two assists.
“I knew I might be a little rusty coming in and as far as rhythm and knowing the plays and all that stuff,” Vanderbilt said. “So my main goal was just to go in there and play hard. Bring the energy and then everything else — just control the controllable and everything else will play its hand.”
Vanderbilt has played sparingly since inking a four-year, $48MM contract extension with the Lakers in the summer of 2023. That deal just kicked in this season. The 6’8″ forward missed all but 29 games in 2023/24, and sat out for L.A.’s first 42 bouts this year. But Saturday’s performance was a reminder of what he can bring to the team when healthy.
“It looked like he didn’t miss a beat,” teammate LeBron James said. “I mean, he’s flying around. What he does don’t even always show up in the box score.”
There’s more out of Los Angeles:
- Vanderbilt’s return has given the Lakers some additional optionality as the NBA’s February 6 trade deadline approaches, writes Jovan Buha of The Athletic. At 25-18, Los Angeles is firmly in the middle of the Western Conference playoff race. Players like Vanderbilt have mid-sized contracts that could be movable — alternately, Vanderbilt’s return to the court could improve L.A.’s ceiling on its own. Buha notes that the Lakers have significant draft equity they could leverage in trades, but wonders what kind of appetite the front office will have for sacrificing future assets.
- Clippers star guard James Harden racked up 40 points in L.A.’s 127-117 victory over the Bucks on Saturday night, but it was the savvy plays beyond his scoring that helped the Clippers register a big win, per The Athletic’s Law Murray. As Murray details, Harden managed to control the ball (he had just one turnover) and played enthusiastic defense on Milwaukee All-Star forward Giannis Antetokounmpo.
- In case you missed it, the Clippers have relied on their depth beyond star players Harden and the oft-injured Kawhi Leonard to help L.A. secure a 26-19 record on the season so far.