**LA LAKERS THREAD** Sitting on 17! 2023-2024 offseason begins

Something just crossed my mind if we get one of them 2 dudes I'm not going to name because I don't wanna jinx anything. IIIIFFFF... it were to happen, it would be ANOTHER unearned feather in Pelinka's cap. "He got us Lebby!" Man Lebby was coming regardless. Everyone and their mom knew it. If we were to get one of these 2, it's because Qyrie is forcing Brooklyn's hand. But it would be all "He got you Lebby, he got you (whoever)... he's doing his job!"

Nah.

-foe
Don’t forget Klutch doing most of the work via free agency… insert Office Space “what exactly do you do here” meme 😂
 
I like who we've signed so far. No big names but added 4 players with wingspans between 6'10" - 7'"4"

Jones 6'11" and long
JTA 6'6" and long
Brown 6'6" and long
Walker 6'4" and long

THT is now highly expendable to get another wing or stretch big.

I think we keep Nunn as backup PG cause Westbrick bout to get traded in a three team deal to bring Kyrie to LA
 
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SOON:
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Lol that’s even worse and doesn’t make me feel better. That means wings in the market scoffed at the TPMLE. Which I’m sure they offered to everyone before Monk



Who did we miss out on?
 
i remember a few years back i had lonnie walker on my nba 2k team. he was a good 3point shooter back then 🤣
 
If House was dead set on reuniting with the 2019 Rockets in Philly, I would've split the TMLE between Christie, Juancho and Donte if possible. Or split between Christie and Porter, but I think Porter is searching for more money.
 
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If House was dead set on reuniting with the 2019 Rockets in Philly, I would've split the TMLE between Christie, Juancho and Donte if possible.
Complainer!

Bend over and takes Pelinkas moves like a real fan
 
You're not answering the question. What impact or just wing hit did we miss out on?
Remains to be seen. Free agency just started.

I said I assume we offered it to all wings and all declined days ago. Using the TPMLE so quickly leads me to believe however they really saw Walker and thought! Perfect, let’s get him! Vs what we did with Nunn where he just kinda fell to us


Or at least I hope. Oh and also doesn’t feel good that the top 5 players salary wise on LA are all Klutch clients

Lebron
Ad
Tht
Walker
Nunn.
 
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Remains to be seen. Free agency just started.

I said I assume we offered it to all wings and all declined days ago. Using the TPMLE so quickly leads me to believe however they really saw Walker and thought! Perfect, let’s get him! Vs what we did with Nunn where he just kinda fell to us


Or at least I hope. Oh and also doesn’t feel good that the top 5 players salary wise on LA are all Klutch clients

Lebron
Ad
Tht
Walker
Nunn.
grittyman grittyman
 
Just throwing it out there, but it ain't no sense getting emotional over these latest rumors, going at each other and what not... especially since opening night still gonna be Bron, Russy, AD, Melo, & GOAT.

-foe
 
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Did Kevin Durant’s trade request give a Kyrie Irving Lakers deal new life?

Kevin Durant shocked the NBA world a few hours before free agency began, requesting a trade from the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday afternoon according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

The ripple effects of the Durant trade demand have the power to reshape the league — including the Los Angeles Lakers’ future. Only two days have passed since fellow Nets co-star Kyrie Irving decided to opt into the final year of his deal, with the league-wide rumblings about a possible Durant trade request dying down as a result and many league observers assuming (incorrectly) that Brooklyn’s situation had been stabilized for the coming season.

Yet now that Durant has formally asked for a trade, a natural next question has emerged: Does this mean the possibility of Irving reuniting with LeBron James and the Lakers is alive again?

Yes. Very much so.

A source close to the situation indicated as much in the aftermath of the Durant trade request, and it makes all sorts of sense that the Durant decision ups the Lakers’ odds here. As The Athletic reported on Monday, Irving was hyper-focused on landing with the Lakers in the days and weeks leading up to his opt-in decision.

As The Athletic reported earlier this week, the Lakers are currently planning on beginning next season with Russell Westbrook on the roster. They have been reluctant to attach a first-round pick (2027, 2028 and/or 2029) to Westbrook’s $47.1 million expiring contract, which has been the league-wide minimum asking price.

But the chance to add a player of Irving’s ilk could certainly change that internal calculus, as it could elevate the Lakers’ ceiling and return them to contender status.

A one-for-one Irving-Westbrook swap doesn’t work financially. The Nets would either have to throw in an extra contract to make the math work, or include a third and/or fourth team to iron things out.

The framework of a deal could look something like this: Irving and a second Nets player (Seth Curry, the newly acquired Royce O’Neale or Day’Ron Sharpe) in exchange for Westbrook and the Lakers’ 2027 and 2029 first-round selections. If the Nets don’t want to take on Westbrook’s salary, a third team could enter the mix, with one of the Lakers’ picks and potentially Talen Horton-Tucker and/or Kendrick Nunn being involved.

Irving would be a much cleaner fit alongside James and Davis than Westbrook was last season and projects to be this season.

Irving is an annual 50-40-90 threat. He’s a career 39.3 percent 3-point shooter who’s shot better than 40 percent on 3s in six of the past eight seasons. His elite shooting and ability to navigate screens and move without the ball make him tailor-made to adapt to life as a third option – something he did, at times, in Brooklyn alongside Durant and James Harden.

Irving’s gravity would alleviate some of the Lakers’ spacing concerns (especially in comparison to Westbrook). He’s already proven his on-court chemistry with James, famously leading the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 3-1 comeback in the 2016 NBA Finals. He would make for a dynamic pick-and-roll partner with James, who acted as a roller more than ever last season as he shifted more to center, and Davis, who hasn’t meshed with Westbrook and Dennis Schröder the way he would with Irving, considering the two former names were non-threats as shooters.

Defensively, Irving and Westbrook are close to a wash. Both players are minus-defenders. Irving doesn’t have the size or athleticism Westbrook has, but he’s generally shown more focus on that end, and makes fewer glaring and costly mistakes. Irving can move his feet well and pressure the ball at the point of attack, and his quick hands help him poke the ball loose and deflect passes.

As for the prospect of the Lakers trying to get in on the Durant sweepstakes themselves, perhaps by making Davis available in the process, a source close to the situation put the chances at “zero.” Their focus, it seems, is on Irving. And vice versa.

The Lakers addressed some of their roster concerns on Thursday, getting younger and more athletic with the additions of Damian Jones, Juan Toscano-Anderson, Lonnie Walker IV and Troy Brown Jr. But overall talent, size and 3-point shooting are still glaring weaknesses. Irving would address two of those three needs, giving the Lakers a legitimate third All-Star and one who fits much better than the incumbent.

Irving would not arrive free of drawbacks. There is the previous fallout with James in Cleveland, his acrimonious exits in Cleveland, Boston and now Brooklyn, the off-court madness of last season, his day-to-day availability and the general drama that has followed him around the past few seasons. But the Lakers, backed into a corner by their own doing, are out of better alternatives.

The Irving trade could blow up in their faces like the Westbrook deal did, but the basketball fit is much cleaner. Irving is much better than Westbrook at their respective stages of their future Hall of Fame careers.

The Lakers are the most logical Irving destination. Irving wants to be there. Whether the Nets are interested in taking back Westbrook’s contract – with a couple of future first-round picks attached – remains to be seen.

But with a narrow championship window – James will be entering his 20th season in the fall – this is the time for the Lakers to go all-in on making this season’s team as competitive as possible and righting their wrongs from last offseason.
 
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Something just crossed my mind if we get one of them 2 dudes I'm not going to name because I don't wanna jinx anything. IIIIFFFF... it were to happen, it would be ANOTHER unearned feather in Pelinka's cap. "He got us Lebby!" Man Lebby was coming regardless. Everyone and their mom knew it. If we were to get one of these 2, it's because Qyrie is forcing Brooklyn's hand. But it would be all "He got you Lebby, he got you (whoever)... he's doing his job!"

Nah.

-foe

I hear you but this is how things get done. Especially in FA. Even with the warriors who have done it "the right way". It was Dray calling KD after they got chased down by Bron not warriors management. The players run this league.
 

Did Kevin Durant’s trade request give a Kyrie Irving Lakers deal new life?

Kevin Durant shocked the NBA world a few hours before free agency began, requesting a trade from the Brooklyn Nets on Thursday afternoon according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania.

The ripple effects of the Durant trade demand have the power to reshape the league — including the Los Angeles Lakers’ future. Only two days have passed since fellow Nets co-star Kyrie Irving decided to opt into the final year of his deal, with the league-wide rumblings about a possible Durant trade request dying down as a result and many league observers assuming (incorrectly) that Brooklyn’s situation had been stabilized for the coming season.

Yet now that Durant has formally asked for a trade, a natural next question has emerged: Does this mean the possibility of Irving reuniting with LeBron James and the Lakers is alive again?

Yes. Very much so.

A source close to the situation indicated as much in the aftermath of the Durant trade request, and it makes all sorts of sense that the Durant decision ups the Lakers’ odds here. As The Athletic reported on Monday, Irving was hyper-focused on landing with the Lakers in the days and weeks leading up to his opt-in decision.

As The Athletic reported earlier this week, the Lakers are currently planning on beginning next season with Russell Westbrook on the roster. They have been reluctant to attach a first-round pick (2027, 2028 and/or 2029) to Westbrook’s $47.1 million expiring contract, which has been the league-wide minimum asking price.

But the chance to add a player of Irving’s ilk could certainly change that internal calculus, as it could elevate the Lakers’ ceiling and return them to contender status.

A one-for-one Irving-Westbrook swap doesn’t work financially. The Nets would either have to throw in an extra contract to make the math work, or include a third and/or fourth team to iron things out.

The framework of a deal could look something like this: Irving and a second Nets player (Seth Curry, the newly acquired Royce O’Neale or Day’Ron Sharpe) in exchange for Westbrook and the Lakers’ 2027 and 2029 first-round selections. If the Nets don’t want to take on Westbrook’s salary, a third team could enter the mix, with one of the Lakers’ picks and potentially Talen Horton-Tucker and/or Kendrick Nunn being involved.

Irving would be a much cleaner fit alongside James and Davis than Westbrook was last season and projects to be this season.

Irving is an annual 50-40-90 threat. He’s a career 39.3 percent 3-point shooter who’s shot better than 40 percent on 3s in six of the past eight seasons. His elite shooting and ability to navigate screens and move without the ball make him tailor-made to adapt to life as a third option – something he did, at times, in Brooklyn alongside Durant and James Harden.

Irving’s gravity would alleviate some of the Lakers’ spacing concerns (especially in comparison to Westbrook). He’s already proven his on-court chemistry with James, famously leading the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 3-1 comeback in the 2016 NBA Finals. He would make for a dynamic pick-and-roll partner with James, who acted as a roller more than ever last season as he shifted more to center, and Davis, who hasn’t meshed with Westbrook and Dennis Schröder the way he would with Irving, considering the two former names were non-threats as shooters.

Defensively, Irving and Westbrook are close to a wash. Both players are minus-defenders. Irving doesn’t have the size or athleticism Westbrook has, but he’s generally shown more focus on that end, and makes fewer glaring and costly mistakes. Irving can move his feet well and pressure the ball at the point of attack, and his quick hands help him poke the ball loose and deflect passes.

As for the prospect of the Lakers trying to get in on the Durant sweepstakes themselves, perhaps by making Davis available in the process, a source close to the situation put the chances at “zero.” Their focus, it seems, is on Irving. And vice versa.

The Lakers addressed some of their roster concerns on Thursday, getting younger and more athletic with the additions of Damian Jones, Juan Toscano-Anderson, Lonnie Walker IV and Troy Brown Jr. But overall talent, size and 3-point shooting are still glaring weaknesses. Irving would address two of those three needs, giving the Lakers a legitimate third All-Star and one who fits much better than the incumbent.

Irving would not arrive free of drawbacks. There is the previous fallout with James in Cleveland, his acrimonious exits in Cleveland, Boston and now Brooklyn, the off-court madness of last season, his day-to-day availability and the general drama that has followed him around the past few seasons. But the Lakers, backed into a corner by their own doing, are out of better alternatives.

The Irving trade could blow up in their faces like the Westbrook deal did, but the basketball fit is much cleaner. Irving is much better than Westbrook at their respective stages of their future Hall of Fame careers.

The Lakers are the most logical Irving destination. Irving wants to be there. Whether the Nets are interested in taking back Westbrook’s contract – with a couple of future first-round picks attached – remains to be seen.

But with a narrow championship window – James will be entering his 20th season in the fall – this is the time for the Lakers to go all-in on making this season’s team as competitive as possible and righting their wrongs from last offseason.

Kyrie and Seth would dramatically improve our shooting. :lol: We'll see.
 
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