Tag Archives: Los Angeles Lakers

Lakers issues with officiating come to a head after crucial no-call in Boston: ‘We got cheated’

BOSTON — LeBron James sat in front of his locker with his knees wrapped in ice, staring blankly ahead, searching for an answer to a problem that has plagued him for weeks, if not the entire season.

“I don’t understand,” James kept repeating to himself after the Los Angeles Lakers’ 125-121 overtime loss to the Boston Celtics at the TD Garden on Saturday.

For several weeks, James’ frustration with the way he’s being officiated this season has been bubbling. In the seconds after regulation ended against the Celtics, it erupted on one of the game’s biggest regular-season stages: a primetime matchup between the league’s fiercest rivals.

With four seconds remaining, and the game tied at 105, James drove past Malcolm Brogdon and easily got to the rim. As James extended his left arm for a layup, Jayson Tatum rotated over and swiped down, smacking James’ arm and causing him to miss the point-blank attempt as time expired.

To James’ disbelief, there was no whistle.

He immediately stomped around, gesticulating with his left arm to highlight where the contact occurred. James then hopped around in an uncharacteristic display of emotion. As his frustration overwhelmed him, he crumpled to the floor, struggling to contain his anger.

“You saw my reaction,” James said matter-of-factly when asked about his reaction to the no-call.

Patrick Beverley, who prides himself on having his teammates’ backs, took a nearby camera from a baseline photographer and showed the image to the referee, earning a technical foul before overtime even started and igniting a chain of memes.

In a pool report after the game, crew chief Eric Lewis admitted that the referee crew missed the contact from Tatum on James’ layup attempt.

“There was contact,” Lewis said. “At the time, during the game, we did not see a foul. The crew missed the play.”

Anthony Davis, who also spoke to the media in front of his locker, a few feet away from James, sounded off on the no-call and the overall officiating.

“(Tatum) fouled him,” Davis said. “He fouled him. Clearly. Clearly. It’s bulls—. … It’s unacceptable. And I guarantee nothing is going to happen to the refs. We got cheated tonight, honestly. It’s a blatant foul. … It’s unacceptable, to be honest. The refs were bad. They were bad tonight.”

The locker room scene postgame was tense and distressed. Players cleared out quickly. Every conversation included questioning and criticizing the final possession, as well as wondering why referees can’t be strongly penalized for missing a call that costs a team a game.

Beverley and Russell Westbrook declined to speak to the media postgame.

Even Lakers coach Darvin Ham, who is typically measured with his analysis of officiating, was palpably disappointed as he spoke.

“As much as you try not to put it on the officiating, it’s becoming increasingly difficult,” Ham said.

The Lakers have had several recent losses in which critical crunch-time calls did not go in their favor, including against Dallas, Philadelphia and Sacramento.

In their double-overtime loss to the Mavericks, James was fouled by Christian Wood on a similar play at the end of the first overtime, but the foul wasn’t called.

If those calls had correctly gone in the Lakers’ favor, as well as the final possession against the Celtics, the 23-27 Lakers, who are 13th in the West, would likely be 27-23 and fourth in the conference.

“I watch basketball every single day,” James said. “I watch games every single day. And I don’t see it happening to nobody else. It’s just weird.”

The Celtics (39 free-throw attempts) shot nearly twice as many free throws as the Lakers (20). James attempted only six free throws, nearly half that of Tatum (12) and Jaylen Brown (11).

“The best player on Earth can’t get a call,” Ham said. “It’s amazing.”

James, who finished with 41 points on 15-for-30 shooting, nearly willing the Lakers to victory, said he feels he isn’t officiated the way other stars are.

“It’s challenging,” James said. “I don’t get it. I’m attacking the paint, just as much as any of the guys in this league that’s shooting double-digit free throws a night, and I don’t get it. I don’t understand it.”

Ham hypothesized that the discrepancy is due to James’ style of play, referencing Giannis Antetokounmpo and Shaquille O’Neal as players who were similarly difficult to officiate given their strength, power and physicality.

“He’s a guy that decides to play the right way … plays a strong, physical brand of basketball, and, just because he doesn’t flop or he doesn’t fail or he’s not screaming when he’s shooting the ball, like I see a ton of other players doing, he gets penalized for it,” Ham said. “… Those guys that play physical and really try to focus on finishing plays, sometimes it doesn’t go in their favor. But then you see other guys wimpering on every shot or everything they get bumped … and they are the ones getting the whistles.”

James acknowledged that his visceral reaction was due to emotions that have been brewing throughout the season — and the irritation from the calls seemingly leading directly to losses.

“Nah, it’s been building,” James said. “It’s been building, because you guys seen some of the games we’ve lost this year with late game missed calls. We had an opportunity to literally win the game. I had the second one in the last few weeks for myself: Against Dallas, had an opportunity to win on a foul call. K-Nunn the other day had an opportunity to tie the game (against Sacramento) if the four-point play is called. I don’t understand.”

The Lakers still had a chance to win in overtime, but the Celtics raced out to six-point lead within the first minute as the Lakers were clearly still processing what had just happened.

The emotional carryover was ultimately too much for the group to handle, at least in a hostile road environment against the league’s best team.

“You’re still thinking about that,” Davis said. “You’re not even supposed to be in that situation, to be honest. You’re not supposed to be playing overtime.”

The Lakers have already communicated with the league, but with the officiating counting to occur, they’re not sure what the best course of action is moving forward.

“I mean, we have different avenues where you can … I think Monty McCutchen, he’s definitely transparent and there are different mechanisms where we have access to where we can voice our concerns and they give good feedback,” Ham said. “But after the fact, it’s like all you can hope is for it to become more consistent.”

James said he will not be communicating with the league.

“Nah, I don’t get into that,” James said. “Our organization decide they want to do that, it’s cool, but it ain’t gonna change s—.”

The Lakers aren’t strangers to heartbreaking losses. They’ve been one of the league’s worst teams in crunch time this season, losing a dozen or so times in excruciating fashion. That’s what makes Saturday’s loss so difficult to accept. They were right there. They led for much of the game — and they needed this win badly.

Perhaps if the Lakers had a better record, their reaction would’ve been milder to the blown call. But this is the type of loss that can come back to sting the Lakers in April when they’re jockeying for playoff and Play-In positioning.

Los Angeles was a foul call away from potentially beginning their five-game road trip with a statement win. They went toe-to-toe with the best team in the NBA for the second time this season.

But instead, they’re left seeking explanations as to why so many calls continue to go against them in pivotal moments, and waiting for the moment that they finally turn the corner and cement themselves in the postseason picture.

“Like I’ve told you guys, we don’t have room for error,” James said. “And it’s one of the best games we’ve played all year, and for it to fall on somebody else’s – to fall on somebody else’s judgement or non-judgement is ridiculous. It’s ridiculous.”

(Photo: Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)



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Lakers are wasting LeBron James’ greatness and loss on Christmas is another reminder

Christmas has long been the marquee day of the NBA regular season. The slate of games showcases the league’s best teams and brightest stars and franchises.

The Christmas slate is also one of the biggest narrative drivers of the year. And those who tuned in to the Lakers during their 124-115 blowout loss to the Mavericks in Dallas on Sunday witnessed a tragic reminder of the manner in which James’ Hall of Fame career appears to be ending in Los Angeles.

James scored 38 points (on 13-for-23 shooting) against Dallas, one shy of his season-high set against the Spurs on Nov. 26, adding six rebounds and five assists in his record-breaking 17th Christmas Day game. When he checked out at the 2:32 mark of the fourth quarter, the Lakers were plus-2 in the 34 minutes he played and minus-18 in the 12 minutes he sat.

Individual plus-minus isn’t always reflective of the story of a game, but in this case, it was.

Without Anthony Davis, who is out indefinitely with a stress injury in his right foot, the Lakers simply don’t have much of a chance when James is off the floor. They have lost four straight games — allowing at least 124 points in each loss — and are 1-4 since Davis’ injury, dropping to 13-20 overall and 13th in the West.

The final score wasn’t indicative of how close the game actually was for much of the second half. And with four more games left on their five-game road trip, they are in jeopardy of plummeting further down the standings.

When asked if he believes the Lakers are resilient enough to climb out of their predicament, James offered a bluntly candid assessment.

“I think I look at it that way,” James said. “I look at it the other way, too, like, how many times are you going to try to dig yourselves out until it’s too much dirt on you?”

James, who has occasionally voiced concerns with the roster throughout the season, has become increasingly critical in recent postgames sessions since Davis’ injury.

“Reality is, without AD, we lose a lot of length, which we don’t have already,” James said. “So we have to make up in ways that, without AD, is very difficult, very challenging. So, I think at one point we had a lineup of I think (Austin Reaves) was the tallest guy on the court. So, you don’t have to be a rocket scientist to figure it out.”

James has been direct about the team’s lack of shooting and size. There’s been subtle jabs at the team’s collective talent as well. The subtext to his messaging, of course, is that the Lakers’ roster could benefit from a much-need upgrade from the front office via a trade (or two). And it’s difficult to disagree with James’ judgment or his application of pressure.

After a slowish start, James is surely doing his part, scoring 30-plus in seven consecutive games, the longest active streak in the NBA.

He continues to break and set records with an unprecedented longevity. Among many notable examples to choose from this season, he has already passed Magic Johnson in career assists, and will likely pass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar on the all-time scoring list within the next month and a half.

But James’ 20th season, much like his 19th, is essentially being wasted on a seemingly lottery-bound Lakers squad. There have been glimmers of optimism, but like last season, the team has largely underachieved relative to the expectations set forth in the first two seasons of the James-Davis partnership.

Lakers coach Darvin Ham, who trends glass-half-full in most instances, acknowledged the “tough circumstances” James, in particular, is facing amid the team’s struggles.

“Phenomenal,” Ham said of James’ play. “My hat’s off to him. He competed his ass off. It’s tough times right now, tough circumstances. But at the end of the day, you know, we just have to keep mashing forward. He’s the prime example of that. Just his ability to come out game after game after game and put up the type of performances he’s putting up, really try to coach and teach guys in the process of being in the floor, playing with them. Throwing ideas our way. Allowing himself to be coached.

“A lot of guys in that position, everyone doesn’t allow themselves to be coached. My hat’s off to him. His leadership has been showing.”

The game started in an encouraging manner for the Lakers. They doubled Luka Dončić, limiting his offensive output and forcing the rest of the Mavericks to try to beat them. Dallas shooters bricked open look after open look, air-balling several of them. The Lakers played with fire and got away with it. They led 54-43, rotating fairly well and corralling the Mavericks’ offense, for the most part.

But the third quarter, which has been the Lakers’ worst quarter this season, featured a volcanic eruption of historic proportions. Dallas scored 51 points, the highest-scoring quarter on Christmas in NBA history and a league-best mark this season.

Dončić (32 points, nine rebounds, nine assists) picked them apart from the post, Tim Hardaway Jr. (16 of his 26 points in the quarter) drilled several 3s and Christian Wood (30 points, career-high seven assists) dominated in the paint as a roller, passer and offensive rebounder. Dallas made nine of 13 3s in the quarter, shooting 72 percent overall.

The Lakers unraveled, as they often have in second halves and critical moments this season. Within 12 minutes, they went from up 11 points to down 19.

“They countered what we were doing at halftime,” James said. “We didn’t make the proper adjustments once they made their adjustments.”

Part of the remarkable run stemmed from Dončić’s brilliance and the impossible problems he contorts a defense into facing. The Mavericks have loaded their roster with shooting to complement Dončić’s style of play.

“If you see the same coverage over and over and over, at some point you’ll figure it out when you have a high basketball I.Q. Which Luka has, obviously,” said James, who referenced the team’s lack of second-half adjustments multiple times.

But a large part of the Mavericks’ success also came from the fact that the Lakers’ supporting cast is largely unreliable — and there aren’t many players that Ham trusts that are larger than 6-foot-5.

Ham continues to deploy the 6-foot-1 Patrick Beverley alongside the 6-foot-1 Dennis Schröder as the starting backcourt, a combination that just hasn’t worked. The Lakers are already undersized, but Ham tends to favor his smaller players in an attempt to stop the bleeding, even if it yields too many offensive rebounds and easy points in the paint.

One such extreme was when Ham used Westbrook (6-foot-3) at center, along with Reaves (6-foot-5), Lonnie Walker IV (6-foot-4), Schröder and Beverley. That is likely the smallest lineup any team has used this season. The group went -1 in roughly two minutes in the fourth quarter.

“You throw everything up against the wall and see what sticks,” Ham said. “It’s one of those types of situations. AD’s not here, not in the lineup. We’re not going to start using that as an excuse. Hell yeah, it’s a big hole in our lineup. But now, we’re pros. We’ve got to step up.”

Regardless of the circumstance, Ham has maintained a confident exterior. To him, there is always something more the coaching staff or players can be doing to fix things.

But James’ patience seems to be wearing thin as the clock winds down on his legendary battle with Father Time.

This season, James is averaging 27.8 points — 0.4 more than Davis — on 49.6 percent shooting, along with 8.1 rebounds and 6.6 assists. He’s doing so in 36.1 minutes per game — tied for the 14th-most in the league. For reference, Kobe Bryant averaged 28.2 minutes per game in his 20th season. Abdul-Jabbar averaged 22.9 minutes in his 20th. Vince Carter averaged 17.7 minutes in his.

Basically, James is in unprecedented territory not only with his production but his workload as well.

It’s difficult to bet against James with the way he’s defied traditional athlete aging, but at some point, the toll inevitably will affect him. If Davis misses several more weeks, the increased burden that will be needed to withstand his absence is too much to place on James, who will be turning 38 on Dec. 30. There just isn’t another star player or grand adjustment for Ham to turn to.

Reinforcements via trade would obviously help, and the Lakers are still evaluating their options on a dormant trade market. At the same time, it becomes increasingly challenging to justify trading a first-round pick if the group continues to struggle. The front office doesn’t want to compound its previous mistakes with more win-now moves.

There are many slices of the blame pie to be shared. Among them, James obviously bears some blame for part of the roster construction considering his notable input — like supporting the Westbrook trade — he’s had over the past few seasons.

It’s just tough to watch one of the game’s greatest players, with so much greatness still left in the tank, go out with a whimper instead of a bang.

“At the end of the day, I love to play the game of basketball,” James said about how this year has been for him. “I’m still enjoying going out there and playing in front of fans, either at home or on the road. And I’m just trying to control what I can control.

“I show up, try to lead these guys and try to lead to victories and obviously there’s been times when it’s been frustrating. There’s been times that I’ve been happy. There’s been times where I’ve been like, ‘OK, we can do better here,’ or whatever the case may be. But I always try to stay even-keeled.”

(Photo of LeBron James: Jerome Miron / USA Today)



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Hollinger’s Showcase notebook: Suns’ $4 billion sale renews NBA expansion buzz

LAS VEGAS — Usually the G League Winter Showcase marks a beginning point for a big chunk of the NBA’s trade conversations. Even in our networked/texting/Zooming world, face time matters. Nearly every exec in the league spends at least a day here hobnobbing.

Front office members and staffers see each other at the two courts where the event is held, and perhaps at the bar at the end of a long day, too, since virtually everyone is in the same hotel. Relaxed without the prying eyes of fans around, they trade bits of information and crop up conversations. Next thing you know, there’s a three-team, eight-player deal on the table. It still takes the urgency of the trade deadline in February to actually get these conversations to the finish line, but this week is often the catalyst.

This year has felt … different. The overarching theme is that things seemed quieter than usual.

“Quiet” isn’t the same thing as “dead,” of course, and flickers of trade market life could be detected if one looked closely enough. Teams spent the week kicking the tires on Chicago’s situation. Phoenix’s exiled Jae Crowder remains a target for several contenders. Oh, and have you heard Atlanta’s John Collins is available?

Nonetheless, the cold math remains: It’s tough to have buyers without any sellers, and there just aren’t many sellers right now. That may change as we get closer to the trade deadline and more teams see their preseason hopes collide with the realities of their rosters. Right now, however, the potentially interesting sellers are either straddling .500 or, in a few cases, clinging resolutely to the delusion that they can get there. Instead of actual trade talks, we’re left speculating about guys who might, maybe, at some point, want to be traded. Fun times.

Instead, it was a different transaction that got everyone’s attention this week.

Four billion dollars? Now that got people talking. That was the valuation Mat Ishbia agreed to this week in purchasing a controlling stake of the Phoenix Suns and the WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury.

It’s one thing when the LA Clippers go for billions, but Phoenix? A growing but transplant-heavy market, with a tired arena and lots of pro and college sports competition? That’s news. In October, Forbes rated the Suns the 13th-most valuable NBA property, at a value of $2.7 billion. Ishbia went much higher than that.

The sale of the Suns and Mercury should have a big impact on NBA business in two areas. First of all, it could precipitate moves in other markets. The working presumption by many insiders is that we would see a raft of sales after the new collective bargaining agreement and next TV deal are finalized, since secure labor peace and a potential TV money bonanza would likely increase valuations. (As would expansion fees that might happen concurrently, but more on that below.)

However, economists who believe in efficient market theory would tell you this knowledge should already be baked into bidders’ valuations. The Suns’ sale seems to be a perfect example. At first glance, it seems like a wild overvaluation, but it makes a lot more sense if one is looking at the post-2026 market.

So the question becomes: What other owners might realize that they don’t need to wait and can cash out right away? Certainly, Portland comes to mind. There may be other reasons for Paul Allen’s estate to wait a while longer, but getting a price in the $3 billion to $4 billion range right now could easily trump them.

Similarly, Michael Jordan in Charlotte has been whispered about for ages as a potential seller. Though the Hornets haven’t exactly set the league afire, he bought the team for relative peanuts in 2010 (a reported net price of $175 million) and would make a mint on a sale, perhaps 10 times what he paid. New Orleans is another franchise that many insiders mention as a sale candidate, although the search for a local buyer could stymie a transaction. Those are the known knowns, in Rumsfeld-speak.

But what about the known unknowns? Are there other owners who weren’t really thinking about selling a week ago, but now might suddenly be tempted if they can get a number like $4 billion?

And whither the T’wolves? The bizarre multi-installment sale from Glen Taylor to Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore is still creaking along toward its Dec. 31, 2023 completion date, but should anything go amiss, Taylor could seemingly make a lot more money from another buyer. Needless to say, if the new dudes so much as misplace a comma in a document, Taylor is massively incentivized to nuke the deal and start over. The valuation on that Timberwolves sale was $1.6 billion, so Taylor might make an extra billion if the team went back on the market! Fortunately, this is the Minnesota Timberwolves, so nothing crazy like that could possibly happen.

However, even that pales in comparison to the other important piece of the Suns’ sale news: what it means for expansion.


The chances of the NBA returning to Seattle keep growing. (Joe Nicholson / USA Today)

Basically, it makes it seem almost inevitable that we’ll have two new teams within the next half decade. (Not breaking any news here, but every single person I asked thinks those teams will be in Seattle and Las Vegas. My personal crusade for Bali and Kauai appears to have gained little traction.)

If you want to understand why the Phoenix sale is so important to this, do the math. The biggest obstacle to expanding from 30 teams to 32 is not a lack of available markets in which to sell tickets or pipe in local TV broadcasts. It’s because they dilute the national TV money.

The league’s national TV deal has become an increasingly large portion of teams’ budgets, and that amount is only expected to rise in the next TV deal. Adding two new franchises dilutes each one’s share of that piece by roughly 1/16, and does so in perpetuity. That would be fine if adding teams grew the TV pie proportionately, but it doesn’t, because the NBA already has more games than ESPN and TNT can possibly air. Sure, they might get slightly higher ratings in Seattle and Las Vegas than many other cities, but that’s a barely noticeable blip on a national level.

The only thing offsetting the loss of national TV money is the expansion fee, which is shared by the 30 current owners. That fee, alas, is only paid once, and not year after year, and thus needs to be many multiples of the lost annual TV revenue for the league’s owners to come out ahead — and thus, presumably, vote in favor of expansion. This is why some of my spies were pouring cold water on expansion speculation: The financial math wasn’t guaranteed to pencil out for the 30 owners.

The exact break-even point is a complex calculation based on projections of future TV revenues, future interest rates and investment returns, an estimate of the expansion fee and what economists call the discount rate for the time value of money, accounting for the fact you’d rather have your money today than 10 years from now.

Instead, let me make some grossly simplifying assumptions to walk you through the exercise. I have an economics degree and I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night. This should go great.

The last TV deal was $24 billion over nine years. Let’s say the next one is $75 billion over nine years, which some have estimated.

Now, for some math. (Sorry). Divide by 30 and you have each team’s share of that package ($2.5 billion). Divide that number by nine and you have each team’s annual share ($277 million). That share, in turn, is diluted 1/16 by expansion. The dilution, then, is worth about $17.3 million annually. If an owner’s financial mandarins end up with a 10 percent annual discount on future revenues (this is a quasi-reasonable ballpark), they will want the expansion fee to be at least 10 times the diluted revenue to justify a yes vote.

And that is why an expansion fee in the $4 billion to $5 billion range is so important. It’s so much easier to pencil out the owners coming out ahead than if the fee were, say, in the $3 billion to $3.5 billion range.

Which, in turn, is much easier to imagine happening if an existing franchise just sold for $4 billion. Most observers I spoke with see a Vegas team as being of similar or slightly greater value than Phoenix, and a Seattle team as being worth considerably more. Suppose, for argument’s sake, it was $4 billion for Vegas and $5 billion for Seattle. That’s an instant $300 million windfall for every owner … and a roughly 17x ratio to the diluted TV money.

Yes, my math here involves sweeping assumptions and simplifications. Nonetheless, let’s exit the financial weeds here and conclude with the big-picture takeaway from this exercise. If the expansion fees were $3 billion, it would seem like a close call for the league’s owners to approve it.

If it’s at $4 billion? It’s a no-brainer.



The Knicks’ punishment for tampering with Jalen Brunson was as tame, as expected. (Brad Penner / USA Today)

Some other thoughts from the Showcase:

That’ll show ‘em, huh?

The other hot topic in league circles was the collective eye roll at the NBA’s decision to penalize the Knicks a 2025 second-round pick for tampering in signing Jalen Brunson. As many have already noted, giving up a second-rounder to sign a max-level free agent is a trade every team in the league would make in a nanosecond. Once you’re dealing with All-Stars and max players, there is no amount of second-round picks the league could penalize a team to disincentivize them.

On the flip side, league personnel I talked to recognized the impossibility of the league’s situation. The underlying issue isn’t that the Knicks (or Sixers, for that matter) cheated the letter of the rule this summer, but that the current rules on free agency are virtually unenforceable. There is only one rule most execs really care about: Tampering with a player whose team is still playing games remains an absolutely uncrossable red line, one that should be punished with a decades-long banishment to a dank, windowless cell, containing only a bed made of carpet from the visiting locker room in Oracle Arena and a big screen TV showing games from the 1998-99 lockout year.

As for jumping the July 1 deadline on contacting free agents by a few hours (or days, or weeks) …. whatevs. There are rules written on paper about audits and commandeering phones and whatnot, but nobody wants to actually do that.

In reality, the league’s de facto policy is “just don’t embarrass us.” Which is hard to write about, because we’ve become part of the problem.

News flash: Teams have been jumping the gun on free agency for years and years and years. The news just didn’t get out nearly as fast in the past. It worked in 2012. It doesn’t in 2022.

You can see the problem: The league doesn’t want news leaking of complicated sign-and-trades mere seconds into the alleged start of free agency, nor does it want breathless coverage of back-and-forth free agent negotiations on June 26. Well, good luck with that. Unless every social media outlet simultaneously fails while cutthroat reporters throttle back to Andrea Bargnani-esque tameness, it’s virtually impossible to keep the genie bottled.


The Elam ending factored prominently in the Showcase, even if the word Elam was never mentioned.

The G League has used it in overtime all year to generally positive reviews, requiring teams to score eight points rather than playing for a specified amount of time. That change got a thumbs-up from NBA personnel I spoke to, with the consensus being that NBA overtimes are too long right now and deflate drama from the end of the fourth quarter. The target score also eliminated the chance of multiple overtimes and the crazy player minute situations they can engender. The G League staffers all love it, too.

However, using it for the entire fourth quarter generated opposite reactions. Playing a fourth quarter with a “target” of 25 points more than the leading team’s score, rather than a set time, created a host of new issues. For starters, coaches were left guessing on substitutions without a clock to indicate how long players had played (or rested).

This was particularly true in lower-scoring games, a couple of which became interminable as teams struggled to hit the target score. And this was in today’s more open, offensive era! Imagine my Grizzlies playing, say, Utah in 2016, and try to figure out how long they’d need to play for one team to get to 25.

Secondarily, the target score produced some interesting strategy of its own. If your opponent is three points away from the target score, do you foul to eliminate losing on a 3-pointer? Concede a layup to do the same? (I saw a couple of teams in this situation hug all the shooters and leave gaping holes down Main Street). What about in a one-point game? Would any ref dare call defensive three seconds?

For those reasons, the Elam ending seems much more likely to gain eventual NBA-wide adoption in overtime than in regulation. Regardless, kudos to the league for continuing to use the G League as a lab to experiment with improvements to the game.

(Top photo: Lucas Peltier / USA Today)



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NBA’s City Edition jerseys for 2022-23 are out. Here are some of their backstories

The NBA released its newest slate of City Edition jerseys, the ones teams will wear for the 2022-23 season. These uniforms, from jersey to shorts, usually carry some kind of thematic tie to the franchise’s home city.

The Athletic spoke to Jesse Alvarez, Nike’s product director of men’s basketball, to get a sense of how some of the most notable City Edition jerseys were designed and the details fans should look for when watching their teams play.


I want to start with the Spurs jersey. Can you walk me through the design and the inspiration for it?


Photo courtesy of the NBA.

The Spurs, I think, as a lot of people remember, have one of the most iconic All Star Game uniforms that we’ve done, just in the world of jersey culture. So you can see some pretty clear nods to that in terms of just the color and the vibe. That was really the focus for that one, to be able to tie that in. You asked about some of the details: I think the belt buckle ‘SA’ and the Spur logos on the belt hook was just like a really nice way to round out and add a subtle detail to highlight the All Star uniform that they’ve been synonymous with.

So I recognize the coloring for that when I’m looking at those jerseys. The Pistons ones are green, a color I don’t associate usually with Pistons colors. What happened there?

Detroit has an amazing story. One of the things about that story is St. Cecilia. So St. Cecilia is really a place where players used to go run and play pickup basketball. And so that color, the green, is inspired by the actual St. Cecilia. That, coupled with the iconic details of the short patch, you’ll actually see like a stained glass or a grab that’s inspired by the stained glass that shows up at St. Cecilia, with a 313 logo at the center of it just as a way to weave those stories together. The mantra of St. Cecilia was ‘Where stars are made, not born.’ So it just really packages that story all together to bring that to life.

GO DEEPER

Isiah. Magic. Gervin. How a Detroit church gym became the birthplace of legends

Did you guys send people there to kind of look through the gym and just walk through it?

Yeah, so we actually partner with the team, and so the team was over there. They’re sending us pictures, you name it. Anything that we needed, we got to be able to really bring that to life. Like with any uniform, really, it starts with the team. They know their fan bases the best. And so that’s where all those points of inspiration are coming from.


Photo courtesy of the NBA.

For you, do you have a favorite jersey?

You know, it’s funny, I was just telling someone it’s hard to have a favorite. Especially, they all feel like your kids. But I think, just right behind you, Chicago. I really like Chicago. I think how the municipal Y shows up in a number of different ways. And the symbology behind it, like uniting a city and how the Bulls at the center of the the Y on the side profile. I think this is a great representation of how a team is at the heart of a city. So Chicago is where I live.

I liked the color pattern on the Timberwolves one, but obviously it’s not something that’s associated with the Wolves. What is that about? What makes that unique?

One of the unique things about City Edition (jerseys) just in general, before I answer your question, is that with each story from an organization, they get to take it to wherever place they want to go. So Minnesota is known as being a creative hotspot for artists of all sorts. That (jersey) is a nod to some of the creative community. So one of the things that makes that uniform unique is that the pattern that you see in the uniform, it actually gets cut in a different way for every uniform. So every uniform is a unique one, just kind of as a way that each creative is unique in their own way. So that’s really how that story comes to life.

So you guys have like a big pattern of all these colors. Each swatch is different for each uniform?

Think about it more in in terms of when you think about how a uniform was made, each piece gets cut, so no two pieces are the same. So when they’re sewing those things together, every uniform is going to be slightly different, just like a fingerprint.


Photo courtesy of the NBA.

I know sometimes you guys collaborate not only with teams but with like certain individuals on creating the jerseys. Is there anyone notable here that helps you with the creation, with the ideation of some jerseys?

Yeah, Detroit’s a great example. Big Sean is the creative director with the Pistons, so he’s somebody who helped bring that to life. Right behind you, you have KITH with the New York Knicks. Those are those are the two teams that are top of mind. Just kind of highlight some of the names that also work with organizations to bring their city edition uniforms to life.

I was looking at the Hornets’. That’s the angriest hornet I’ve ever seen in my life.

It’s an aggressive hornet. Really cool story, I think, centered around the Mint. So one of the cool things — I’m not sure if you were able to take a look at it — but the pinstripes are actually a nod to the Mint. The Mint is, you know, the source of inspiration for that uniform. The gold lettering with the mint trim, just harkens back to the financial inspiration with the Mint being in Charlotte.


Heat City Edition jersey” width=”1022″ height=”1024″ /> Photo courtesy of the NBA.

And the last one, I heard you talking about the Heat jersey. Can you kind of walk me through that one, especially the rope on the side. That seems to be a really cool detail.

So if you’ve ever turned on a game for the Heat, you’ll see that there’s actual yellow rope that surround the cord. They use the yellow piping to be able to be inspired by that yellow rope that you will see during the game. Their concept is kind of their chapter two of their mashup that they introduced last year.

This year, they flipped the color to white and then they took different components from previous iconic elements of their identity and mash those up together to be able to have this customized look. So you’ll see elements of their Floridians, their white hot, vice versa. All those different kinds of stamps in time that have made up the Heat organization, all mashed up into one uniform.

(All photos courtesy of the NBA)



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