The King comes to Hollywood

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

Yesterday, NBA superstar LeBron James signed with the Los Angeles Lakers on a four-year deal worth $153.3 million.

It was the third time that the man aptly nicknamed ‘The King’ had changed teams via free agency, having departed the team that drafted him, the Cleveland Cavaliers, for the Miami Heat in 2010, before then announcing he was returning back to the Cavs in 2014.

Both of those moves were surprising at the time and caught a number of people off-guard. This move didn’t come as a complete shock – as the rumour of James joining the Lakers had been swirling around for over a year – but it was still a nervous wait for the Lakers organisation and their fans.

In the first 24 hours of free agency, there was a flurry of activity and signings, but nothing from LeBron himself. It ensured that a number of fan-bases held their breath, and everyone wondered where the league’s best player would land.

All-Star Paul George had long been considered an almost certainty to sign with the Lakers, which would make it easier to attract LeBron, as it would provide him with a high-quality teammate.

LeBron James in his time with the Cavs (Image: via ESPN)

That ‘certainty’ felt appropriate. Apart from the fact George is from Los Angeles, he’d also literally made his intention to move home clear, asking his former team – the Indiana Pacers – for a trade to LA. They instead shipped him to Oklahoma City, who gambled that a season with the Thunder could entice George to sign and stay with them instead.

The Thunder’s gamble paid off, as 15 minutes before free agency commenced, the news leaked that George would indeed be staying in OKC, much to everyone’s shock. This caused anxiety in Los Angeles, and they wondered if LeBron would be reluctant to join a young core without an All-Star.

Though it was a long 18 hours later, in the end, the Lakers had nothing to worry about. Magic Johnson, Lakers President of Basketball Operations, got his man, with the announcement LeBron would be signing with Los Angeles.

With plenty of free agents still available, and more player movement expected via trades, the dust is far from settled on the rosters for the 2018/19 NBA season. However, the biggest chess piece has revealed his landing spot, and it will have ramifications across the league.

The Lakers do not, however, have enough talent right now to challenge for the title next season.

Though the addition of LeBron immediately places any team in the NBA’s elite echelon, the Warriors remain a standard that few can even hope to match. If LeBron wants more rings, the Lakers will need more talent around him to have any confidence of victory over Houston, Philadelphia, Boston, etc, let alone Golden State.

Given that George definitely won’t be coming, attention has now moved to the Lakers obtaining other stars. Namely, Kawhi Leonard.

(AP Photo/Darren Abate)

Leonard has made it clear that he wants out of San Antonio, and to move to LA. The question is, with a year still to go on his contract, will the Spurs trade him to their nemesis, and if so, how much will they want from the Lakers?

More pertinently, how much do the Lakers want to give up? If Leonard wants to sign with LA in a year’s time, should the Lakers really give up young players like Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma and Josh Hart? Or is it better to just wait it out, and have Kawhi join without giving up any assets?

Wait, or pounce now? It’s a dangerous game either way, as history has shown us the pitfalls of either strategy.

In 2011, with the trade deadline approaching, the Denver Nuggets’ Carmelo Anthony made it clear he intended to join the New York Knicks in the off-season. However, the Knicks got impatient, scared, worried – or all three – and traded four good young players, plus draft picks, to the Nuggets for Melo.

Though they were happy to get their man, and Melo eventually signed long-term with them, the gutting of their team meant the Knicks sacrificed any chance of being a true contender, as they had to give up so much to get him.

Conversely, if you wait, you run the risk of plans going awry. Things change quickly in the NBA, and 12 months is a very long time.

Look no further than the very recent history of the Oklahoma City scenario with Paul George. Everyone thought he was going to the Lakers, so Los Angeles was always hesitant to give up any assets in order to get him. That hesitancy gave the Thunder a season-long chance to convince Paul he should stay with them, and that’s exactly what happened.

So how badly do the Lakers want Kawhi? How much do they want to give up? Do they want to give up anything at all? Can the Spurs even be tempted with an offer anyway? How sure are the Lakers that Kawhi will still sign with them in 12 months’ time?

Can the Lakers risk the Spurs possibly salvaging their relationship with Kawhi, or another team making him feel welcome? Can the Lakers afford to essentially ‘waste’ a season of LeBron’s prime without another superstar? Are there other players the Lakers should look to sign?

Questions, questions, questions.

If you thought LeBron’s move to Los Angeles would equate to the end of the off-season speculation and rumours, along with sentences that start with the words “sources say”, you’re sorely mistaken.

If anything, things are just heating up.

However, one thing is for certain, and it’s sure to make any Lakers fan giddy with childlike excitement . . .

The King is coming to Hollywood.

The Crowd Says:

2018-07-04T21:55:53+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


To be fair I think he has lost some physically and declined, but he’s already had that peak to shoulder decline. I’d think the next sharp drop is 38/39 where he probably becomes just an above average starter (which is basically Kyrie Irving when he’s on the court….).

2018-07-04T21:54:21+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


So you’re worried about injury risks for poor old LeBron but Boston is the best team in the league with: - a point guard who has been injured every single year, including college - A 32 year old big man who average less than 70 games a season because of injuries - A small forward coming back from a season ending injury Yep that’s some consistent logic from the cowboy

2018-07-04T21:20:06+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


An elite player on max contract is never a bad deal. The most valuable contract is top 10 at his position or above guy on a rookie scale contract or an elite guy (a 6+ wins above replacement) guy on a max contract. The value of the wins above replacement contributed by the elite guys is also exponential as the further away from the average you get the harder it is to improve the wins. The good folks at 5-30-8 have Lebron forecast as the 4th most valuable player per minute right now and 3rd overall. It also puts his 4 year forecast as being an MVP candidate level player during the life of the contract. A max contract for that output is an outright steal.

2018-07-04T20:51:49+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Cowboy his two articles is still a higher number than the sensible posts you put up on the NBA in a year. Ryan used to be a full time NBA writer on here I beleive before having to shift to being free lancer due to external commitments

2018-07-04T03:34:44+00:00

astro

Guest


As much as I personally dislike the Lakers, I love the move of Lebron going there. Its great to have the Lakers back as a powerhouse in the NBA. Really hard to know what's best in the Kawhi trade. Makes sense to try to trade for him while they can, but on the other hand, giving Ball, Ingram and Kuzma a year alongside Lebron might make them more valuable assets in the longer term. I actually think Lonzo will be fantastic next to LBJ...he's so good off the ball. Anyway, I guess its a bit of a no-loss situation for the Lakers right now. Sign Kawhi and they have the best wings in the game...don't trade for him, and they have a talented young core to play with Lebron.

2018-07-04T03:27:49+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


To be fair they vetoed the trade as the owner of one of the franchises involved

2018-07-04T03:20:32+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


They can only offer Boogie something like 6m next year. If he plays up to 90% of potnetial I think he'll find a decent offer next year.

2018-07-04T03:18:40+00:00

mushi

Roar Guru


Only really get him for half a year. But gee... that's a pretty important half

2018-07-04T02:59:19+00:00

astro

Guest


That's true for every single contract in the league...

2018-07-04T02:10:29+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


Yeah, he's 33, not 38, and in such good shape that he can "play the most minutes in the league" and play every minute of a playoff game and carry his team to victories. He's certainly well into veteran status, but he's a long way from reaching the state of decline. In fact, this is the point in the career where he hasn't lost anything physically but has all the benefits of so many years of experience that it probably puts him right at the peak. He's got at least another 3-4 years of top level ball in him.

AUTHOR

2018-07-03T22:51:44+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


*they’re

AUTHOR

2018-07-03T22:50:48+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I’ve got no idea if I know more about basketball than you. Mainly because I don’t know you. But I’m more than happy to back myself. Especially if you try to tell me that the team that has the following ISN’T the strongest team in the league: - won 3 of the last 4 Finals - are the two-time defending champions - have 2x MVPs on their roster - 4x All Stars (5 if you include Boogie) - Plus one of the best defenders in the league in Iguodala, and the steadiness of Livingston, from the bench. Boston has a great roster, and plenty of room for improvement with their potential, but I think it’s silly to say their the strongest team when the Warriors are in the middle of a dynasty.

2018-07-03T22:21:30+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


Ok your write one or two articles on the NBA a year, so naturally you must know more. Granted the Warriors have bigger name players but the Celtics have more growth from their younger players, a deeper bench and the best coach in the League.

2018-07-03T12:17:34+00:00

Worlds Biggest

Guest


Tend to agree, how does the League allow an All Star to join the best team of the last 15-20 years with 4 All Stars in there starting 5 !! No one apart from the Rockets maybe will get close to the Dubs next season.

AUTHOR

2018-07-03T11:44:44+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


You may want to Google “Golden State Warriors”. Look them up, their roster goes OK.

2018-07-03T10:00:45+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


Thirty-three year old and who played the MOST minutes in the league last year. Hmm yer I’m sure this is going to turn out just great!

2018-07-03T09:57:56+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


Yep IMO they are. Three established all stars with some crazy talented young wings coming through. Assuming Smart resigns, we have him, Rozier, Morris n Baynes on the bench. Now throw in Coach Stevens and to me, nothing can stop us!!!

2018-07-03T09:54:39+00:00

Kingcowboy

Guest


Yep, they Lakers are paying for what he is done and not what he is going to do.

2018-07-03T09:42:00+00:00

Ryan OConnell

Guest


I agree. They should go all out.

AUTHOR

2018-07-03T09:40:55+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


As a fan of a team that had a trade vetoed by the league because they were worried about "competitive balance", I hate that Boogie signing. Hate it!

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