Lakers newsletter: Max Christie showcases the strengths of the teamâs systems
Hey everyone, Dan Woike here with another Lakers newsletter, where weâve tried our best to explain the mostly unexplainable â the 2022-23 Lakers. With the team heading toward the trade deadline next month without any real answers (or any real clear path) thanks, in part, to a series of injuries, weâre going to use this space for a small bit of big-picture optimism.
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Set up for success
Forty minutes or so before the Lakers played Denver on Monday night in Colorado, rookie Max Christie found out heâd be getting the first start of his NBA career. Naturally, he texted his mother.
âCatch me in the starting lineup,â he wrote.
It was maybe a surprise, but it couldnât have been a shock. With the injuries, illnesses and suspensions suffered, the Lakers had to use their 22nd different starting lineup in their 41st game. The chance for Christie, for anyone really, statistically was on its way.
But the way the Lakers have played over the last four weeks has enabled players like Christie â who scored 14 points on six-for-eight shooting against the Nuggets â to more easily fill-in and contribute, a testament to the Lakersâ comfortability in the systems theyâve installed.
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âI think guys, again, 41 games in, after offseason workouts, open gym, training camp, theyâre really getting their arms fully around what weâre doing on both sides of the ball,â coach Darvin Ham said after practice Wednesday. âSome nights it works out, some nights it doesnât. Thatâs the nature of the NBA and the nature of the NBA season. But I think guys are feeling more comfortable because they are more familiar with the principles and everything that we expect from ourselves instead of just scouting an opponent or whatever. We have to know what we want to do and what we want to get done as a team. And I think theyâre fully embracing whatâs been throw at them.â
Since the Lakers have hit their biggest stretch of injury problems, players like Christie, Wenyen Gabriel, Thomas Bryant, Kendrick Nunn, Cole Swider and Juan Toscano-Anderson have stepped into new roles and performed well.
Earlier in the season when the Lakers were short-handed, the team looked disjointed. Now, as theyâve navigated moderate-to-serious injuries for Anthony Davis, Lonnie Walker IV, Austin Reaves and Troy Brown Jr., theyâve been more confident and organized.
âIf you kinda create a culture, create a way weâre supposed to play, the next guy just kind of gets in line. Should at least,â Russell Westbrook said Monday. âAnd I think that itâs something weâre kinda establishing. Thatâs why weâre giving ourselves a chance to win games regardless of who is playing. And I think thatâs the best part about it.â
Davis back sooner than later?
The Lakers have continued to be very careful when it comes to setting expectations publicly for Davisâ return from his foot injuries, but itâs becoming pretty clear that things are moving in the right direction.
Friday will be four weeks since he suffered the original injury, and Wednesday, Ham said âeverything is going according to planâ with Davis.
Itâs not unreasonable to think Davis could be back on the court sometime this month, helping give the Lakers a little clarity as the trade deadline looms.
Song of the Week
âLearning to Flyâ by Kurt Vile (LIVE)
In honor of Philadelphia coming to Los Angeles this Sunday, I wanted to pick a song from a Philly musical. And while this space is routinely reserved for the War on Drugs, I stumbled upon this awesome cover from Philly singer/songwriter/guitarist Kurt Vile. Granted the Lakers havenât exactly been flying â they havenât been .500 this year â but theyâre learning.
In case you missed it
âThomas Bryantâs forceful emergence has Lakers thinking of frontcourt dominance
âNBA roundtable: Where Lakers and Clippers fit among seasonâs surprises and disappointments
âLakersâ five-game winning streak ends with loss to the Nuggets
âLakers top Kings for fifth straight win, keep rolling after LeBron Jamesâ rallying cry
âDennis Schroder was surprised he got foul call before clinching Lakers win
âLeBron James returns and leads injury-riddled Lakers to fourth consecutive win
âInjuries will sideline Lakers guards Austin Reaves and Lonnie Walker IV indefinitely
âDennis Schroder scores season-high 32 points as Lakers hold off Heat to extend win streak
Until next time...
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