2023-24 Team Developments: Trades / Free Agents / News / Rumors / Ideas

Discussion in 'Lakers Discussion' started by TIME, May 23, 2023.

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  1. wcsoldier81

    wcsoldier81 - Lakers All Star -

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    It definetely is , some teams and some fans got caught in all the running , jumping around and shooting from 30 feet deep in the regular season but playoffs ball stay the same : defense and rebounding first then halfcourt execution and the importance of the midrange shot for prolific scorers on the offensive end .
     
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  2. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    i've harped on this part for years. yes, it's less efficient, but it's also the shot that is hardest to defend against. the very best scorers have all had killer midrange games and still do. the best defenses can take away good three looks and dunks, so the teams that can beat them need to have guys that convert at a high rate in between. note jamal murray's big shots against us and how and where they came from.

    now that edwards is becoming a midrange terror, minny has all three things: stifling defense, team rebounding, and a guy who can score efficiently from the spot that's hard to defend. it's still a legit formula. teams went away from it because it's easier to operate under run and gun models, imo.
     
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  3. wcsoldier81

    wcsoldier81 - Lakers All Star -

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    Definetely and because players are asked to play/modelling their game to this style and teams have had regular season success running and gunning.

    The perfect example of this is Boston , they can't execute in the clutch because they live and die by the 3
     
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  4. DeeZee

    DeeZee - Rookie -

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  5. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    kidd and lue will have us to thank for lucrative extensions!
     
  6. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    Well obviously he's interested, they can and seem willing to overpay him more than anyone else. As a vet and leader and sometimes 3 point shooter, he'd fit well. But I think that sticker price is going to be UGLY.



    So Ky is happy. He and Luka also are getting along great, it appears. Spider's team is succeeding and he has eyes for the Big Apple if he leaves. The only one of our star targets who I haven't seen anything from that regarding staying put or looking at another team is Trae. Instead it's been more of the opposite. Bron ranting about him on his pod, pops liking Laker related and Trae to LA related tweets.

    Anything? Anywhere? Anyone?
    [​IMG]

    At this point I'll take a report that he likes the cheesestake in Philly. I'm desperate.
     
  7. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    no way philly brings in trae with maxey there. they already had to clear out harden so that he could shine.

    we could be saved by SA (though i've read they're not interested) or by atlanta moving murray for a different b-level star who fits better with trae (ingram, randle, etc.). i think the latter will have real legs, too. we all think atlanta should build with murray's two-way play and lower salary, but that also makes him a valuable trade piece. and he just doesn't excite the casuals like trae, imo. i could totally see them letting the trae headline go and just quietly shopping murray.

    the only concern there is if trae really just doesn't want to play there. but i think if they move murray for a guy who doesn't play the same position but is similarly valuable, he'd be fine.
     
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  8. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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    Oh I agree, Philly doesn't want. There's just not a catchy headline I could think of with SA. In fact, I can't think of the last time SA was in the rumor mill concerning a player. Real quiet ship they have over there.

    I was hoping they'd save us, it's the best fit for him when I saw the reports of early indications being they don't want him that was a real bummer. also least amount of assets that'd have to be given up... just give them back their picks or get creative with the protections.

    Yeah, I just wonder about acquiring team's ability to sell that deal. Maybe NY cause Murray would definitely be a Thibs guy. But he's rotted in ATL and somewhat SA, two tiny NBA markets unless you're a star coming into the league. He's a lesser name than most #2 options in the league.

    That's my fear. Plus Klutch factor is real. Historically they've been the go to for player's who want to rent a Uhaul. If Trae, his daddy, Rich Paul, Bron, Rob and Jeanie drool too much over this "3 star" idea... it's concerning.
     
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  9. Slick2021

    Slick2021 - Lakers MVP -

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    Does rebounding really matter anymore? Interesting article...


    In this pace and space NBA, I’d like to offer a question: Does rebounding still matter?

    Of course, any coach will tell you it does, that one failed rebound can lead to a possession that swings the margin of a game. But in the grander scheme of things, does rebounding still matter? Is it that essential to success, or is it just a nice thing to have as an add-on? Or worse, is it a contrarian indicator that your team is too bully-ball to succeed in this era?

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    I bring that up because of the two diametrically opposite approaches to rebounding that we’ll see in the second round of the playoffs. On the one hand, we have Oklahoma City; the Thunder start a 208-pound center, often don’t play a center at all when he leaves the court and frequently play lineups with four guards. They ranked 29th in the NBA in rebound rate this season, topping only the lowly Washington Wizards … and yet they won 57 games and earned the top seed in the Western Conference.

    On the other hand, we have the New York Knicks. They play a true center all 48 minutes, no matter what, and although they are small on the perimeter, they crash the boards with such wild abandon that they recovered a league-leading 29.4 percent of their missed shots. In the playoffs, New York smashed Philadelphia on the glass by grabbing 32.2 percent of the available offensive boards, earning 23 extra possessions (compared to Philly’s total) that were critical in their white-knuckle six-game series win.

    Let’s start delving into this question with Oklahoma City. To be frank, yes, the Thunder suck at rebounding. Here’s a clip from a midseason game against Utah, where four OKC players are in the paint but nailed to the floor while the one nearby Jazz player collects the rebound.

    Look hard enough in an 82-game season and you can find a clip like this for any team; the thing about the Thunder was that you could find it almost every game, especially in the first half of the season. At least this one is of a big guy getting the board and not, say, Collin Sexton or Dennis Smith Jr. (both of whom had a field day on the offensive glass against the Thunder).

    It’s not hard to put together how the Thunder might be at a disadvantage on the glass. Their starting center, Chet Holmgren, recovered just 15 percent of missed shots, which is above the league average of 10 percent but very low for a full-time starting center. (Most of them get around 18 to 20 percent; Phoenix’s Jusuf Nurkić led the league at 22.8 percent, including a 31-rebound game against the Thunder.)

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    Their backup centers, to the extent the Thunder played a center when Holmgren was out, were worse, with Jaylin Williams at 14.5 percent and Kenrich Williams at 11.3 percent. As far as plus rebounders go in OKC’s rotation, there’s one: Josh Giddey, who recovered a respectable 14.2 percent of missed shots. But he often finishes games on the bench.

    The eye test shows pretty quickly why they have problems. That Brooklyn clip is worth a thousand words; none of the Thunder’s players are really instinctive rebounders who chase balls outside their zone except reserve guard Aaron Wiggins. Two starters, Jalen Williams and Luguentz Dort, are strong and athletic but weirdly bad at rebounding.

    And yet, in terms of results, this scarcely impacted the Thunder. What’s amazing is that even with all those offensive boards (Oklahoma City was 29th in defensive rebound rate), the Thunder ranked fourth in the NBA in opponent 2-point shooting percentage. You’d think all those put-backs would goose the numbers against them, but their opponents were actually last in shooting percentage in the restricted area at 65 percent.

    It played out that way in the first round of the playoffs too. Oklahoma City ceded 53.5 percent of the available rebounds to the Pelicans, with New Orleans’ two centers, Jonas Valančiūnas and Larry Nance Jr., grabbing 33 offensive rebounds in just four games. But the Pelicans shot just 59.3 percent in the basket area for the series, and their anemic offense led to a sweep for Oklahoma City.

    Those extra rebound possessions did, in fact, hurt Oklahoma City in the regular season to some extent. The Thunder were 17th in opponent points per play after an offensive rebound, according to Cleaning the Glass; they were the second-best team in half-court possessions otherwise.

    Put-backs, in general, are massively more efficient: For the Thunder defense, it was 1.12 points per play versus 0.95. Usually, giving up so many second shots ends much worse for the defense than it did for the Thunder, and we’ll explore that in a second.

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    But that’s where we get to the other part of the story: Offensive rebounds are sufficiently infrequent enough that they don’t necessarily tip the scales completely. Even for an awful defensive rebounding team, we’re talking about fewer than 12 possessions out of the 100 or so (OK, 98.5 this season) that make up an average NBA game. Similarly, the Thunder’s ineffectiveness on the offensive glass was rendered moot by their second-ranked half-court offense before a shot went up; all those balls going through the net reduced the need for an offensive board in the first place.

    Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault often talks about trade-offs involved in his lineup choices, and in that sense, the bad rebounding feels more like a feature than a bug. The way the Thunder can force gobs of turnovers and wreck teams in transition is by playing smaller, faster, more skilled lineups. The obvious area to surrender in pursuit of that is rebounding.

    [​IMG]
    Jaylin Williams, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder focus on other aspects besides rebounding. And it’s worked. (Alonzo Adams / USA Today)
    Don’t tell that to the Knicks, though. New York has weaponized its offensive rebounding in a different way, frequently turning offensive boards not into layups or dunks but kickout 3s. As our Fred Katz recently detailed, the Knicks coached their bigs to look first to the corner and then the wing for an open 3-point shooter when they get an offensive board and don’t have an easy layup or dunk awaiting. That helped them offset the fact that their main offensive rebounders weren’t particularly nimble operators at putting the ball back in; New York ended up at the league average in points per play on an offensive rebound.

    In the big picture, it seems like offensive rebounding is a dying art; the league rate was 31.1 percent 20 years ago but just 27.1 percent this season, and the differential between put-back plays and regular offensive plays isn’t quite as large as it used to be either. (A second-chance play was worth about 0.2 extra points versus a regular offensive play two decades ago, according to Cleaning The Glass, and only about 0.15 now.)

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    And yet, the Thunder seem like the far greater anomaly than the Knicks. Going through the Cleaning The Glass leaderboards for put-back points per 100 possessions, it’s amazing how well it correlates to success at both ends.

    On the defensive boards, for instance, the Thunder are the only team in the bottom eight of that category in either of the last two years that wasn’t also a bottom-10 defense overall. Last season, they were last in this category and eked out a 16th-place finish in efficiency; this season, they were 25th but landed fourth in efficiency overall.

    Look at the other teams next to them in the table. Yikes:

    NBA Defensive Rankings, 2023-24
    TEAM DEF. EFF. OPP. PUTBACK PTS.
    Washington 29th 30th
    Toronto 27th 29th
    Indiana 24th 28th
    Charlotte 28th 27th
    Atlanta 26th 26th
    Oklahoma City 4th 25th
    Portland 23th 24th
    Detroit 25th 23th
    Go back through other recent seasons and you’ll see 2023-24 wasn’t an anomaly. The worst teams in defense tended to also be bad at giving up put-back points and vice versa. There are occasional outliers — Golden State was No. 1 in defensive efficiency in 2016-17 despite ranking 23rd in put-back points per 100 — but they’re rare.

    Similarly, offensive put-back points correlate strongly as well. While a few lucky teams are able to overwhelm with skill and not really bother with offensive rebounding — the 2022-23 Mavs, for instance, or this year’s Clippers and Thunder — the overall trend line says Knicksian efforts still make a significant difference at the margin.

    So what are we supposed to think? Does rebounding matter or not?

    On the one hand, the Knicks are all-in on rebounding and used it to eke out good offense despite very average half-court offense (just 16th in points per play, according to Cleaning the Glass); they basically won a playoff series because of it. On the other hand, the Thunder don’t really bother with it and instead build their team to maximize the other facets, owning the turnover and shooting percentage battles.

    In reality they likely represent two different life hacks on the same phase of the game. Rebounding is inconsequential enough that you can, in fact, build a team that’s so strong in other elements that it can be near the bottom of the league and it won’t matter. History shows that it’s very hard to do that; usually a bad defensive rebounding team is indicative of other deficits (size, athleticism, hustle etc.) that point to bad overall defense, and the news on the offensive side isn’t much better.

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    Oklahoma City just built the right roster to take advantage of this paradox. On the other hand, the Knicks are a different twist: They’re a recognition that teams had stopped going to the boards as aggressively to protect themselves in transition over the last two decades but might have been overdoing it. Oklahoma City, for instance, was 27th in offensive rebounding and usually committed more players to retreating on defense than crashing the glass; as a result, the Thunder were impregnable in transition (second in defense off live rebounds, according to Cleaning the Glass). But the Knicks, despite their massive effort, weren’t much worse; New York was still better than league average at defending a live opponent’s defensive rebounds.

    Again, that perhaps owes as much to the uniqueness of the how as the what. You can crash the boards with a tireless 6-foot-4 ball of energy like Josh Hart and still get numbers back; it’s a different story if you’re trying to do it with a pair of lumbering giants.

    So yes, both teams are rare. But in closing, let me leave you with this anecdote that shows both the power of Oklahoma City’s approach and the rarity of New York’s: The team with more offensive rebounds usually loses on any given night. Remember, you can’t get an offensive rebound unless you miss a shot, and even the best rebounding teams recover less than a third of them. New York played Oklahoma City twice this season, grabbed 24 offensive rebounds in the two games compared to Thunder’s 12 … and lost both times.

    Might we see another meeting in June to settle the rebounding question once and for all?

    Required reading
    (Top photo of Donte DiVincenzo and Chet Holmgren: Dustin Satloff / Getty Images)
     
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  10. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    can't remember where i read it, but SA's non-interest seemed legit to me when i saw it.


    i think NO would be an excellent fit for murray, and the fans would embrace him there, sort of for that reason. he's a better fit than ingram.


    i think the media must have been explicitly asked by adam silver to not play up agency connections, but man, behind most deals it's sitting right there. and it's not just klutch. all agencies. ny is CAA. we're klutch. certain agents/agencies and certain teams do and do not get along/work together.

    both murray and trae are klutch, and one of them is moving this summer. i think we're likely to be involved somehow--at least in creating/providing leverage if not directly involved.

    btw, i keep mentioning jerami grant because he's klutch and fits our needs.

    taurean prince is klutch, btw--ham wasn't the only reason he probably took a slight pay cut to play here last year.

    darius garland is klutch--watch for us to kick tires there if mitchell's moved.

    anyway, long story short, whenever i hear trade rumors, i look up agents.
     
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  11. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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    I think our chances of keeping Reaves with a Trae and Klutch wanting Lakers and Lakers only are much better than a trade for Murray. So there's that at least. Austin is a really good player and hasn't peaked yet by any means. Not to mention the fabulous bang for the buck of his contract.
     
  12. Weezy

    Weezy Moderator Staff Member

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    Why does stuff like this always happen for this Nuggets team, they always seem to catch necessary breaks

     
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  13. JSM

    JSM - Lakers Legend -

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  14. karacha

    karacha Moderator Staff Member

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    What sticks out is that people know how important Bron is for the team, and they don't like Spence for some reason.
     
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  15. KuzmoBall17

    KuzmoBall17 - Lakers Starter -

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    Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert is questionable for Monday's Game 2 due to personal reasons after becoming a father for the first time.

    The baby boy was delivered Monday morning, sources told ESPN.

    It is uncertain whether Gobert will be able to travel to Denver in time for the tip-off against the defending champion Denver Nuggets.
    If he plays expect something like Jordan flu game
     
  16. abeer3

    abeer3 - Lakers Legend -

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    i hope for rudy's family's sake this was at least close to the expected timeline.
     
  17. 52years

    52years - Rookie -

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    I’d be looking at Milwaukee as a trade partner.They need to upgrade their Defense which the Lakers could help them with and I don’t believe DLO would have a problem going there either
     
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  18. 432J

    432J - Lakers All Star -

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    sounds like riles might be fed up with butler

     
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  19. LTLakerFan

    LTLakerFan - Lakers Legend -

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  20. Kenzo

    Kenzo - Lakers All Star -

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    Pat will send him to a s*** hole. Forget about Philly Jimmy...
     
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