Five questions the Lakers are facing in training camp
Welcome back to the Lakers newsletter. Iâm Dan Woike with the Los Angeles Timesâ free inbox drop that takes you inside the Lakers and, judging by the responses to last weekâs email, makes you angry about my TV takes.
The preseason is in full swing, the âHow was your summer?â and the âCan you believe the season is back?â having been replaced by, âWill this thing just start already?â
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While itâs still technically early in the preseason, the Lakers are 1-1 after two games, weâve already started to see some of the big questions develop. Hereâs what weâve got so far:
What are the Lakers going to get out of LeBron James?
There havenât really been many surprises with LeBron Jamesâ energy and approach to the first days of training camp. Heâs been like a Mountain Dew-fueled teenager at times, restlessly bouncing around the court. During a timeout Saturday in the preseason opener in San Francisco, James jogged onto the court and jumped up to grab the rim â despite being in street clothes for the night.
After ending last season by questioning his basketball mortality in a way heâs never publicly done before, some people wondered if James would actually call it quits.
But a few people close to James told The Times that night that they thought he was just physically and emotionally exhausted. They predicted any retirement thoughts would soon pass, which we know they did. Now heâs back with the Lakers, with insiders telling The Times that James has been extra engaged in camp, particularly from a leadership perspective.
How will that energy fare if the Lakers struggle early in the season for the second year in a row? Or how will it hold up if his foot starts to get sore or his ankle gives him problems? Will another round of rehabbing and managing an injury again zap those reserves?
On the court, the Lakers have reasons to be excited that they have the talent to best maximize Jamesâ all-around skills as a player. In the opening week of training camp, coach Darvin Ham said James would be the Lakersâ quarterback, allowing him to set up offensive weapons like Anthony Davis, Austin Reaves, DâAngelo Russell, etc.
The questions there mostly have to do with Jamesâ three-point shooting â can he return close to the 36% he shot in 2020-21 and 2021-22?
Whatâs the next step for Austin Reaves?
I asked Ham this question in the Lakersâ locker room before their preseason opener and he didnât hesitate before saying âAll-Star,â Ham doubling down on comments he made over the summer when he said Reaves has that potential.
Itâs not as crazy of an outcome as you might think, though if the Lakersâ stars are healthy, getting a third All-Star will mean that a ton of stuff wouldâve had to go right. Reaves should get even more opportunities with the basketball in his hands â his play as a point guard in an opening week scrimmage had people buzzing.
Reaves has had some minor injury issues in his first two seasons and teams will definitely try to attack him physically over the course of the year, but there are no reasons to think his offense is going to show signs of regression. He averaged almost 17 points a game in the playoffs, and with his increased usage and an increased free-throw rate, 20 points isnât totally out of the question.
Will the Lakers get the best out of Christian Wood?
There was a moment in the first half of the Lakersâ preseason opener with the Warriors when Christian Wood did exactly what he was supposed to do. He set a good screen for rookie guard Jalen Hood-Schifino, popped back to the three-point line and waited for the pass to come.
It didnât.
Hood-Schifino, playing in his first NBA action, was a tick slow with his decision making and missed the big man, who was in a perfect spot for a rhythm three. That kind of shot never materialized for him again.
Instead, Woodâs buckets came off tough one-on-one shots â a skill he 100% has. But itâs probably not the skill they need most.
The decision to sign Wood late in free agency came after a lengthy recruitment, one to get Wood to accept the minimum contract the Lakers could offer and, more quietly, one to make sure everyone in the building was on board with the addition. The word early has been favorable when it comes to Wood, but the questions will be there throughout the next few months.
Thatâs not to mention the struggle you can probably anticipate Wood will go through finding out how to best fit with the Lakers. Thatâs not an easy process for any scorer, and it probably wonât be an easy one here.
Is Darvin Ham as good of a coach as his biggest fans think?
In the aftermath of the Lakers coaching search, Hamâs biggest fans in Milwaukee all said the same thing about him. Somehow, no matter how good or bad things would get around him, Ham would approach each day with the exact same attitude and energy, setting the tone for the kind of consistency a team needs to make it through a grueling season.
While things got rocky during his first season â and did they â Ham was usually the calmest figure, rarely showing any signs of frustration. His approach and willingness to work with his staff to cook up playoff game plans, earned him really high marks inside the locker room last season. Before the preseason opener, I asked Ham about how he evaluated himself after one year, and he pointed to that collaboration.
âIâve never really doubted myself, but again, a smart man knows he canât be the smartest man in the room,â Ham said. âAgain, thatâs why you surround yourself with the type of coaching talent that I was able to surround myself with.â
There are plenty of people inside the Lakersâ organization who think the team has the right coach and are excited to see what he can do in Year 2 with a more stable roster.
Which of the wild cards is going to hit?
The Lakers have had a lot of success at the back end of their roster, whether itâs been with late draft picks (or undrafted ones) or minimum free agents. Itâs one of their biggest advantages â the Lakers offer a massive stage for players to showcase themselves and launch into a bigger contract/role somewhere else.
While people are pretty unanimous on Max Christieâs potential as a rotation player this season, donât count out the impact Jaxson Hayes could make in a role off the teamâs bench.
His energy in the opener as a screener and rim-runner â basically a player who sets a pick and dives with force toward the basket â opened up a lot of stuff for the Lakers offense, with the teamâs guards excited to play with such an explosive athlete.
When he signed with the Lakers, some league insiders felt like the Lakersâ best passers would really unlock Hayesâ game. Like a lot of players on minimum deals, consistency, both in performance and opportunity, will be crucial. But he looked like a player who could maybe matter in the Lakersâ first live basketball action.
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Song of the week
âBadâ (âSongs of Surrenderâ version) â U2
I spent my Sunday in Las Vegas ahead of the Lakersâ second preseason game monitoring ticket prices for U2âs concert at the Sphere, hoping they would somehow dip to a price I felt was reasonable. But by show time, I still hadnât found what I was looking for. U2 is a strange band for me â I know theyâre good and, obviously, theyâve got a ton of iconic songs. But when I told my wife I wanted to maybe go to the concert, she said, âDo you even like U2?â I had to pause before I said, âUm, yeah.â Rarely do I seek U2 out, but the âSongs of Surrenderâ versions of so many of their hits strips things down and is a good reminder of how anthemic U2 can be.
In case you missed it
Lakers drop preseason opener to Warriors without LeBron James and Austin Reaves
Lakers-Warriors takeaways: Anthony Davis is aggressive in limited minutes
Lakersâ Anthony Davis on what position he plays: âIâm a big manâ
Veteran guard Gabe Vincent ready to adapt to new role with Lakers
âMax Christie is a dog!â Lakersâ second-year guard may be forcing his way into rotation
Lakers expecting more from Rui Hachimura. Good thing LeBronâs his teacher
LeBron James back to looking like a âfreight trainâ after last seasonâs foot injury
Until next time...
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