Mike Bresnahan
Mike Bresnahan previously covered the Lakers for the Los Angeles Times. He started the beat in 2004, a month after Shaquille O’Neal was traded, and covered several seasons of mediocrity before the Lakers won back-to-back championships in 2009 and 2010. Now they’re back to mediocrity. Bresnahan is from Los Angeles, started with The Times after graduating the University of Wisconsin in 1994, and has also covered the L.A. Kings, pro beach volleyball and numerous colleges and high schools. He left The Times in 2016.
Latest From This Author
Tex Winter, the innovator of the “triangle†offense used by teams that won 10 of the last 19 National Basketball Assn. championships, died Wednesday.
Somewhere, Shaquille O’Neal is smiling.
Tim Duncan didn’t always get his way.
Brandon Ingram will play in the NBA’s summer league, by far the No. 1 reason to watch the Lakers in Las Vegas over the next week or so.
The Lakers acquired veteran Jose Calderon from the Chicago Bulls, adding a point guard near the end of his career with three-point touch and solid passing skills.
Larry Nance Jr. is not a talent evaluator by nature.
Kobe Bryant’s nameplate has been removed from his locker at the Lakers’ training facility.
The Lakers made one of their last big free-agent deals of the off-season, adding another veteran Saturday by agreeing to a four-year, $72-million deal with former All-Star Luol Deng.
The Lakers stayed connected with one of their own on the first full day of free agency, agreeing to terms with guard Jordan Clarkson on a four-year, $50-million deal early Friday.
Luke Walton’s coaching staff has a familiar ring to it.