Luke Kennard Discussion

Discussion in 'Lakers Discussion' started by KareemtheGreat33, Feb 5, 2026.

  1. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    He can be a piece going forward for another 6 years or more as his game will translate. Not a high flyer and doesn't beat himself up going to the rim, though he can with an opening if he gets a step, or stop and put up that little semi fall back mid range J. With that beautiful stroke from deep he'll never lose. Turns 30 on June 24. He's kind of a throw waay back with his decent handles in that he really stays on top of the ball without all the modern half or whole carries players do, and isn't out there back and forthing it between his legs. Korver played until he was 40, just checked. Dude LOVES the Lakers, is playing for a young coach that gets him and is another Dukie. I really feel confident that even if another team offered him an extra 3-4M a year starting, that if the Lakers tell him they'll take care of him later, plus him wanting to play on such a great roster as we are building that can use his expanded skills .... he will choose the Lakers.
     
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  2. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    Luke Kennard once lit up Ohio. Now he’s doing it for LeBron James’ Lakers
    Luke Kennard once passed LeBron James on the Ohio high school basketball scoring chart. Now he's LeBron's teammate and powering the Lakers.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
    By Dan Woike
    April 28, 2026 3:00 am PDT
    By the winter of 2015, the buzz had made it to Loveland, Ohio, where 13-year-old Jaxson Hayes knew he needed to see it for himself. Word of a high-school junior hanging 51 points on Edgewood, 45 on Valley View and 53 on Bellbrook had people talking, and Hayes and his friends wanted in.

    “This was a really big deal,” Hayes told The Athletic.

    A group of Hayes’ friends, AAU teammates, middle school friends and some basketball-crazy dads piled into cars and made the 40-minute drive to Franklin, squeezing shoulder-to-shoulder into sold-out gyms. Like so many others in the area, Hayes packed in to watch the smooth lefty from tiny Franklin High School chase down LeBron James’ high school scoring marks.

    Luke Kennard was the main event. The star of “LukeMania.” The reason the Franklin Wildcats moved games to college arenas and traveled with police escorts to small-town gyms in southwest Ohio.

    “Luke’s games?” Hayes remembered. “Oh my gosh, you couldn’t stand.”

    The NBA is filled with origin stories like this. So is the G League. So are leagues across European leagues and South America. Some players, like James, ride that momentum all the way to the top of the sport. Most, like Kennard, have to be OK with leaving all of that behind as they figure out how to survive.

    “The reality of 99 percent of NBA players is that they were the best player on their high school and AAU team and a star in college, or, you know, a star overseas, or whatever it may be,” Los Angeles Lakers coach JJ Redick said, “And you get to the NBA, and you got to be able to start anew.”

    But circumstances have placed Kennard in a moment where the Lakers have needed him to be a little nostalgic. Injuries to Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves created a void for a star ballhandler, a perimeter scorer, a playmaker. And the guy who filled it up in Franklin knew exactly what to do.

    “ It’s a big jump in intensity and the way I play, obviously, the minutes and being more involved in actions and all that,” Kennard said. “It was a quick change, obviously. But just knowing, like I had an idea of what it was gonna be like.”

    The Lakers lead the Houston Rockets 3-1 in the first round of the playoffs, having survived the potentially season-altering injuries to Dončić and Reaves, thanks in part to Kennard turning back the clock.

    “When I’m out there, I mean, I’m playing within the flow of the game and stuff, but I’m obviously doing things that I haven’t done in the last few years, just turnaround shots, crazy shots sometimes,” Kennard said. “Stuff I did back in high school. And I don’t feel any pressure right now to do this. I’m having a lot of fun, and I’m enjoying it, and it’s exciting.”

    [​IMG] https://www.nytimes.com/athletic/72...unlocked_article_code=1.eVA.OCLI.RDgSyS1l7SbT
     
    Last edited: Apr 28, 2026 at 12:29 PM
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  3. VincePT

    VincePT - Lakers 6th Man -

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    given that we get tons of shooters that are good elsewhere and they join Lakers, shrink under the bright lights and start shooting league average or worse, I think we should not assume we can easily replace Kennard, even if we have to slightly overpay to keep him
     
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