Carmelo to the Lakers is a terrible move

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

There have been many reports of late that New York Knicks superstar Carmelo Anthony may be playing in the famous purple and gold strip of the Los Angeles Lakers next season, teaming up with fellow superstar Kobe Bryant.

As a basketball fan, such a move would be fascinating.

As a Lakers fan, I am completely horrified that the hierarchy of the franchise would consider signing Melo.

In fact, I’m happy to go on record and state if the Lakers sign the current Knicks small forward, it will go down as one of the most horrendously stupid moves in the history of the NBA.

There would be no logical, sensible or intelligent reason to team Melo and Kobe together.

Any way you look it, the pairing is a very bad fit, as the partnership would simply not work.

Not from an offensive point of view. Not from a defensive point of view. Not from an ego point of view. And not from a salary point of view.

But hey, other than that, it would be a great move!

Melo is a free agent at the end of the season, and has already expressed his desire to test the free agency waters. That is his right, his entitlement and, considering how woeful the Knicks have been for most of this year, it’s also an astute move on his behalf.

Meanwhile, the Lakers are struggling for relevance at the end of the Kobe Bryant era, and are looking to make a splash by signing a high quality free agent this off-season with the cap space they will have.

Nothing wrong with that plan at a holistic level, but said free agent still needs to be a good fit with the Lakers and, more specifically, Kobe Bryant.

Melo does not tick those boxes, to say the least.

For starters, both Melo and Kobe need the ball in their hands to be effective. In fact, enough with the diplomacy: both players are ball hogs who like to shoot the ball. A lot.

Though there have been examples of having two elite level scorers on the same team, it has rarely resulted in a championship.

Furthermore, for the sake of balance and offensive spacing, having two high scorers should ideally consist of an inside/outside presence, and while both Kobe and Melo can be lethal in the low post, they’re really both wing scorers, if we’re honest.

In conversations I’ve had on this topic, some people have thrown the names LeBron James and Dwyane Wade at me as an example of two high level scorers that have achieved success together.

Debunking that ‘evidence’ is an article all by itself, but the comparison does serve as a nice base to evaluate why Melo and Kobe is not a good idea.

Firstly, LeBron is an unselfish player who would rather pass the ball to teammates than shoot. Neither Melo or Kobe fall into that category consistently, if at all.

The Heat only really achieved success – in the form of championships – when LeBron embraced playing in the low post on a consistent basis. Neither Melo or Kobe is capable, or willing, to do this.

Wade, on offense, is primarily a slasher, while LeBron is almost the complete offensive weapon, able to post-up, pass, drive, and shoot from the perimeter. Though it did take some time, they eventually meshed into a cohesive offensive partnership. Melo and Kobe are versatile offensive players, but remain primarily perimeter jumpshooters.

A large part of the Heat’s success came after Wade realised LeBron is the best player on the planet, and began playing ‘second fiddle’ to him, allowing LeBron to be ‘the man’, thus providing Miami with its best chance of winning. I’m not sure Melo or Kobe are capable of this kind of self-awareness or selflessness.

LeBron and Wade are excellent on-ball, help and transition defenders. I’ll be gentle here, but Kobe can no longer be described this way, and Melo has rarely shown the desire to ever be that type of player.

LeBron and Wade both took pay cuts in order to play together, with their salaries at $19 million this season, and $16 million their first year in Miami, well below their market value. This enables the Heat to sign quality free agents with the available cap space, not to mention a third All Star in Chris Bosh.

Meanwhile, Kobe has already signed a max contract for the next two years, well above what he’s worth as a player, and it’s hard to see Melo signing for anything less than the maximum as well. Which is great for their individual bank accounts, but not great for the Lakers ability to build a good roster around them.

This last point is potentially the most important, because with roughly $50 million tied up in two players, it doesn’t leave a lot of cash to sign other quality players, which means depth and roster balance will be a considerable concern for the Lakers.

And when one of those two players is 36 years old, coming off an Achilles injury, currently sitting out with a knee injury, and therefore may never be a ‘star’ again, you’ve got some major issues.

While those major issues actually started when the club signed Kobe to a large contract, that mistake shouldn’t be compounded by signing another star – who is an ill fit – to a max contract.

Any way you look at it, Melo to the Lakers is a bad, bad move.

The Crowd Says:

2014-01-15T12:29:04+00:00

Tavis

Guest


Ryan, unfortunately, you're right. I think this hole was mostly dug when Kobe maxed out. Been a Lakers fan all my life, and Kobe has been my favourite for as long as I can remember, but I now find myself struggling to like what he's been doing, and struggling to argue in his defence against my ever-hating Lakers mates... Kobe is a Laker for life, great, he's also made sure he doesn't need a second hand for his rings! The idea of another huge ego, which may or may not be able to live up to his own hype scares me greatly! I have a small theory that maybe the Lakers only want Melo so that they have a "big time" franchise player, if and when Kobe finishes up? A Lakers team without a top 10 player sounds baffling. I've never been a Dwight fan, and still am not, however if Nash, Kobe, Pau, Dwight can at least challenge the West, I'm beginning to think while Kobe is in LA, I will see a Gold Coast Suns Premiership before I see a Lakers championship... Having said all of that, I'll be on of those guys rocking the purple and gold Anthony #7

AUTHOR

2014-01-15T01:28:15+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Gaz, Melo is certainly capable of playing in the post, I don't think that was ever in question. A great point guard would help everyone, but really, Melo is such a versatile and dangerous offensive weapon all by himself, that a great point guard wouldn't have the positive effect on him that it would on someone who needs to be set-up more. We'll have to disagree on the last point, as I certainly don't think Melo would be a great pick-up for LA. Furthermore, we can't look at the potential signing of Melo in a vacuum; the reality is that LA have signed Kobe to a big contract.

2014-01-14T23:37:16+00:00

Gaz

Guest


Melo is a much more rounded offensive player than some seem to suggest, he is very capable of playing in the post. Last year he spent a lot of time doing just that because his supporting cast were actually hitting open shots to keep defenders honest. Give him another superstar (a PG would be better than a SG, obviously) and you will see a more efficient and effective Melo. Not to mention a better offensive coach, Mike Woodson does a decent job but his offensive sets constantly consist of isolation plays. Literally give the ball to Melo and get out the way; some offensive sets can do a world of good. I think Melo would be a great pick-up for LA, the problem is Kobe getting so much would limit what else they could do. Kobe and Melo can't win anything on their own, Miami have shown in recent years that depth is crucial.

2014-01-14T07:14:09+00:00

mushi

Guest


Can the IRS monitor Russian accounts? Maybe he just said I'll have you killed like the previous owners of my assets?

2014-01-14T05:05:19+00:00

Nemo ohh ha ha

Guest


Love this. Down with the lakers

2014-01-14T05:00:06+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Guest


They'd be a great NBA Jam combo though.

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T04:57:32+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I think the IRS would be wise to keep an eye on Kirilenko's bank balance. Something tells me that contract was dodgy!

2014-01-14T04:51:40+00:00

mushi

Guest


Not Amnesty on Kobe now, but they could petition the league for inability to perform

2014-01-14T04:50:46+00:00

mushi

Guest


Better ball... but given where they were starting from that's like getting the MVP for the UConn MBA alumni leauge

2014-01-14T04:48:56+00:00

mushi

Guest


I don't think Kobe could penetrate against the elite PGs to run an NBA offence either. I honestly just have no clue what their plan was with the extension.

2014-01-14T04:48:00+00:00

mushi

Guest


I'd think if you did this for more than a hand full of possessions they just switch a onto kobe whenever he goes searching for position taking away his strength advantage. Also I think people forget that this isn't the jordan era, it is much harder to run post plays as the staple of your offence, and if Kobe ain't get the touches on offence then watch out for the backlash.

2014-01-14T04:43:38+00:00

Swampy

Guest


Andrei Kirilenko took a 76% paycut to join the Nets! Would Melo be Kobe insurance? Can the Lakers amnesty Kobe if he comes back as a fossil? The UCLA boys in 2015 would be the ticket. Kobe would probably play for the minimum the following season to get that 6th ring to make him Jordan's equal (in his mind anyway). -- Comment from The Roar's iPhone app.

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T04:38:49+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


He very well may. The Knicks playing better ball of late will help too.

2014-01-14T04:26:04+00:00

astro

Guest


The exact reason why Melo will stay a Knick!

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T04:09:25+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I wouldn't hold your breath! Considering each of those guys could command over $20 million (at least) a season, I can't see them taking a 75% paycut! I don't think anyone has ever left $15 million on the table in the NBA.

2014-01-14T03:40:53+00:00

Eliot Bingham

Roar Pro


One year I want to see 3 or 4 super players such as Melo, LeBron, D12 and maybe Rondo all take a one year deal for $5 million and go to say Charlotte for example and try to win a title.

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T02:19:34+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I'm not sure the Lakers brass are all that smart, to be honest, WB.

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T02:18:51+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Such hatred, Astro! Haha!

AUTHOR

2014-01-14T02:17:32+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I'm not sure it's the greatest offensive strategy to have your shooting guard playing the majority of offensive possessions out of the low post. It's fine for limited possessions, but in the long-term, you just hurt your offensive rebounding percentages. And what does it do for spacing? Where do your bigs play? Kobe certainly showed a stretch of games last year that he could be a great passing threat, but if he is then forced to defend point guards on D in return, that's not a great trade off for the Lakers. I'm also far from convinced that Kobe would be willing to play that role for a full season, but I could be wrong.

2014-01-14T01:48:57+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


The thing about the Lakers is they never seem to go into full on rebuiling mode, they generally rebuild on the fly and aren't down for long. Kevin Love would be a terrific signing. Still think the Lakers will be thinking post Kobe era and make a play for Lebron.

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