Tag Archives: Westbrook

Jonathan Majors to Star in Westbrook and Amazon’s ‘Da Understudy,’ Spike Lee in Talks to Direct – Variety

  1. Jonathan Majors to Star in Westbrook and Amazon’s ‘Da Understudy,’ Spike Lee in Talks to Direct Variety
  2. ‘Creed III’s Jonathan Majors To Star In ‘Da Understudy’ For Amazon & Westbrook; Spike Lee Circling Deadline
  3. Jonathan Majors, Spike Lee Reteam for Amazon Movie ‘Da Understudy’ Hollywood Reporter
  4. Spike Lee’s ‘The Understudy’ Casts Jonathan Majors — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  5. ‘Da Understudy’: Jonathan Majors To Star In Upcoming Spike Lee Film The Playlist
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Creed III’s Jonathan Majors To Star In ‘Da Understudy’ For Amazon & Westbrook; Spike Lee Circling – Deadline

  1. ‘Creed III’s Jonathan Majors To Star In ‘Da Understudy’ For Amazon & Westbrook; Spike Lee Circling Deadline
  2. Jonathan Majors to Star in Westbrook and Amazon’s ‘Da Understudy,’ Spike Lee in Talks to Direct Variety
  3. Spike Lee’s ‘The Understudy’ Casts Jonathan Majors — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  4. Jonathan Majors, Spike Lee Reteam for Amazon Movie ‘Da Understudy’ Hollywood Reporter
  5. ‘Da Understudy’: Jonathan Majors To Star In Upcoming Spike Lee Film The Playlist
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Report: Paul George ‘drove decision’ for Clippers to bring in Westbrook – NBC Sports

  1. Report: Paul George ‘drove decision’ for Clippers to bring in Westbrook NBC Sports
  2. Lowe’s 10 things: LA’s gamble on Westbrook, Chicago’s woeful offense, and the meaning of a high five ESPN
  3. Russell Westbrook’s Clippers debut: Star guard shines as playmaker next to Kawhi Leonard, Paul George Sporting News
  4. Clippers and Kings combine for 2nd-highest scoring game in NBA history in Russell Westbrook’s debut Yahoo Singapore News
  5. Lakers: LeBron James linked in Skip Bayless’ Russell Westbrook slander ClutchPoints
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Here Are LA Lakers’ 6 Best Options to Move Russell Westbrook | News, Scores, Highlights, Stats, and Rumors

Here Are LA Lakers’ 6 Best Options to Move Russell Westbrook

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    Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Los Angeles Lakers have started the season…slowly. They had hoped that new head coach Darvin Ham and a younger, healthier roster would lead to a better performance than last year’s 33 wins. But the results have been concerning. The team is winless in three games, poorly assembled and historically bad from three-point range (21.2 percent).

    The early failings aren’t entirely on Russell Westbrook, but he stands out as the obvious problem given his team-high $47.1 million price tag and how poorly he fits alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis. The Lakers have tried to get out of his deal since before last season’s trade deadline.

    With offseason deals too costly, the hope heading into the season was to evaluate progress over the first 20 games. But the losses are already mounting. Multiple executives around the league expect Los Angeles to eventually give up its 2027 and 2029 first-round picks to move Westbrook.

    Is there a “Lakers tax”? Some executives believe it to be real—less because of historic rivalries but because of pressure to field a contender around James and L.A.’s recent history of questionable deals.

    Will the Lakers rush into a panic trade? What kind of return would they be looking at for a deal in early to mid-November?

Buddy Hield and Myles Turner for Two Firsts

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    Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images

    The Lakers and Indiana Pacers (1-3) have been in a staring contest for months. Pacers governor Herb Simon has long resisted tanking, but the team isn’t very good. Would he be more open to accepting that path for both Lakers’ firsts?

    Indiana is believed to be interested in a deal. The Lakers would receive Buddy Hield and Myles Turner, potentially with Daniel Theis and/or T.J. McConnell. L.A. hasn’t gotten much out of Damian Jones and Thomas Bryant (out with a thumb injury). Turner would help the Lakers defensively and allow Davis to play more power forward.

    Given his questionable durability, Turner’s value may not be as much as a single first. Many view Hield as more of a negative asset given his production at $39.1 million-plus over this season and next. Still, he’d help address the Lakers’ biggest weakness as a high-volume three-point shooter.

Multiple Players from San Antonio (Jakob Poeltl or a Trade Exception?)

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    Ronald Cortes/Getty Images

    The San Antonio Spurs have enough salary-cap space to make an unbalanced trade. The Lakers and Spurs have communicated for several months about the possibility of working together on a Westbrook trade, but nothing has apparently come close to fruition.

    The Lakers would take on Josh Richardson’s expiring $12.2 million contract, along with the $27.5 million owed to Doug McDermott through 2023-24. L.A. might be able to get that done for a single first, but its low-leverage position may preclude reasonable protections.

    If Los Angeles is more generous with its draft currency, perhaps it could get Jakob Poeltl to fill its need at center. Without him, the Lakers would receive a $21.1 million trade exception, large enough to acquire Turner in a separate deal. L.A. would still get an $11.7 million trade exception with Poeltl.

Jordan Clarkson, Malik Beasley from Utah

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    Ned Dishman/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Utah Jazz are among the best teams in the NBA record-wise, but few expect that to last. After dealing Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert in the offseason, the Jazz are supposed to be tanking. If they continue winning, drop them to last on this list.

    But if Utah decides to focus on development, it could offer the Lakers Jordan Clarkson and Malik Beasley. The Lakers would probably have interest in Lauri Markkanen, Jarred Vanderbilt or Kelly Olynyk, but Utah is more likely to offer aging veterans Mike Conley and Rudy Gay.

    If the Lakers can get depth out of the Jazz for a single first, perhaps that’s a viable path. Unless some of Utah’s younger players can be had, the potential haul shouldn’t be worth multiple first-rounders.

Rozier and Hayward from Charlotte

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    Patrick Smith/Getty Images

    Would Charlotte Hornets chairman Michael Jordan favor Westbrook as a Jordan Brand athlete? The Pacers and Spurs would probably try to buy Westbrook out if they traded with the Lakers, but the Hornets could be a rare team that might consider Westbrook’s value as a player.

    That may be a Lakers dream. Closer to reality, the Hornets aren’t tanking. Terry Rozier and Gordon Hayward are their top performers. Others such as Kelly Oubre Jr. and Mason Plumlee might also help the Lakers, but the Hornets aren’t likely to rush into a move that decimates their roster.

    If Charlotte embraces the Victor Wembanyama chase, then perhaps it would move Hayward, whose contract may not appeal to the Lakers. But he’d be a clear talent upgrade, along with Rozier. But that opportunity may not develop until closer to the trade deadline and may cost the Lakers both first-rounders.

Kyrie Irving (Sooner or Later)

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    Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images

    The Lakers were interested in acquiring Kyrie Irving from the Brooklyn Nets and would do so if he became available again. So far, the Nets (1-2) have survived the offseason turmoil of Kevin Durant’s trade demand. But L.A. certainly has an eye or two on that situation.

    If the franchises want to help each other out of disappointing situations, perhaps there’s a deal to be made. But that may not be likely until closer to the deadline. Irving will certainly stand atop the Lakers’ free-agent wish list if a trade isn’t in the cards.

    The Lakers may have $31-35 million in cap space, but that won’t be enough to max out Irving next season. It might, however, be enough if Irving’s market is soft given his mercurial personality. The Irving possibility may lead L.A. to spurn some of the proposals listed above, unless they’re for expiring contracts. That would mean no Hayward, Rozier or Hield if the Lakers identify Irving in free agency as the priority.

    Whether they should is a different story. But that’s the theme for all these potential targets. The Lakers are likely choosing from a list of questionable options.

Would Waiting Be Best?

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    Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

    The Lakers may find a deal that improves their roster from bad to mediocre or even good. But how many realistic trades would make them great? Would any move that doesn’t result in the Lakers joining the elite be worthwhile?

    On the other hand, any team with James and Davis shouldn’t be that far from contention—except for this squad and last year’s. The Lakers may be in a poor position in October and November, but rushing to get a deal done may cause more long-term issues. What would be the point if they sacrificed two first-round picks and didn’t become a significant force in the Western Conference?

    If the Lakers can hold out until December and January, opportunities might increase as recently signed free agents become eligible for trades. Waiting may be best, though the season could be all but over if the Lakers fall too far out of contention.

    Additionally, if the Lakers make a two-, three- or four-for-one trade, others on the roster beyond Westbrook would need to go. The only trade-eligible players on regular contracts include Davis, Patrick Beverley, Austin Reaves, Wenyen Gabriel, Max Christie and Kendrick Nunn. Others can be cut outright to make roster space, such as Matt Ryan, whose salary is non-guaranteed.

    Finally, in any of the deals, the Lakers might want to try to rope in the Phoenix Suns in a multiteam swap to add Jae Crowder, who is away from the team, hoping for a trade.



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As Lakers stumble early, Russell Westbrook trade possibilities linger: Shams’ Inside Pass Notebook

We are one week into the NBA season and teams across the league are still working on finding their footing on and off the floor. Playing and rotation styles are still being figured out. It is still far too early to make changes in most situations, and as front-office officials travel with their respective teams, attend draft scouting events and begin to identify this season’s prospective trade targets, everyone involved understands the trade market tends to take 20-to-30 games to develop.

Contending teams are working on themselves internally while postseason hopefuls are playing for strong starts to the season. Even in the midst of competition, the buyers and sellers always reveal themselves as the campaign inches closer to the February trade deadline.

In the middle of it all this year, stand the Los Angeles Lakers.

Off to an 0-3 start, the Lakers will be a pivotal team in this season’s trade market because the expectations are the franchise will continue to scan options using Russell Westbrook’s expiring $47 million deal and up to two unprotected first-round picks (2027, 2029). The Lakers lost to the Trail Blazers, 106-104, on Sunday — giving up a 98-90 lead with 4:42 left in the game, when coach Darvin Ham inserted Westbrook back into the game.

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Shams’ Inside Pass: As Lakers stumble early, Russell Westbrook trade possibilities linger

After Sunday’s game, Ham and Westbrook answered questions about Westbrook’s fourth-quarter stint, which included missing both attempted shots and a 16-foot jumper that the former league MVP took — and missed — with 30 seconds remaining in the game and 18 seconds on the shot clock with the Lakers up 102-101.

The Lakers were impressed with Ham’s coaching acumen, his no-nonsense attitude and his ability to project as an authority figure when he went through the head coaching search process. Those traits have been put to the test from the very beginning of his tenure.

As The Athletic’s Jovan Buha reported in August, Ham was given the authority to bench Westbrook down the stretch of games, and potentially remove him from the starting lineup. Ham was the lone coaching candidate to express the fortitude necessary to be able to bring Westbrook off the bench when needed, sources say. Westbrook was used in a reserve role in the final game of the preseason in Sacramento on Oct. 14, but the Lakers went back to Westbrook in a starting spot to start the season.

In the very early stages of the season, Westbrook has had some spurts of solid defense and energy plays, but has also shot just 28.9 percent from the field and 8.3 percent from 3-point land. As a team, the Lakers are shooting just 21 percent from 3. While Anthony Davis and LeBron James have played at their usual high level to start the year and Lonnie Walker IV and Juan Toscano-Anderson have been bright spots, the Lakers are still trying to find the best rotations to provide shooting and playmaking around their Big 2.

The Lakers and Pacers extensively discussed a potential deal sending Myles Turner and Buddy Hield to L.A. during the offseason, as The Athletic reported in early October, but no deal formed ahead of training camp. The Lakers and Pacers discussed several packages, but Indiana’s demand for both of the Lakers’ first-round picks in 2027 and 2029 prevented a deal from coming to fruition. Turner suffered an ankle sprain during warmups before the Pacers’ season opener last Wednesday, but is expected to return soon.

In a perfect world, the Lakers had hoped Westbrook would find a complimentary role in Ham’s system, but as sources have told The Athletic over the past month, the organization planned to keep an open mind with trade opportunities to improve the team. Potential trade partners across the league have wanted one or two unprotected first-rounders from the Lakers in all deal frameworks, which creates a battle over price and value.

Several more trade avenues are expected to open as the season goes on, as teams fall out of the postseason race and turn their attention toward top prospects Victor Wembanyama and Scoot Henderson.

Charlotte’s Terry Rozier emerged as a trade target for the Lakers in the offseason and their interest in him remains high, multiple sources tell The Athletic. The Lakers and Hornets held discussions about a possible three- or four-team trade during the summer, and hold him in high regard among their possible trade possibilities, but the dynamic Hornets guard’s availability will be entirely predicated on the franchise’s direction for the future and its play as the season goes on. Despite LaMelo Ball being sidelined with a Grade 2 ankle sprain and Rozier recently suffering his own sprained ankle, the Hornets and coach Steve Clifford are off to a 2-1 start in the Eastern Conference.

The Lakers have also held preliminary discussions with the Spurs in recent weeks, sources said, showing interest in three-and-D wing Josh Richardson. The 6-foot-5 Richardson has averaged nearly 13 points to start the season, shooting 47.1 percent on 5.67 three-point attempts per game. So expect the Lakers to continue to keep tabs with the Spurs, Hornets and Pacers as a potential trade partner as the season wears on.

For now, the Lakers appear determined to give the current roster a proper sample size of 20-to-25 games and assess their needs. Lakers vice president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka is tasked with balancing the team’s current state versus the future when using the only two first-round picks eligible to be traded for the remainder of this decade. And for the Lakers, the proper deal will take patience, strategy, internal resolve and growth.

More NBA news and notes as the season gets going…

The Timberwolves and center Naz Reid have engaged in contract extension talks as Reid starts his fourth season, sources said.

Minnesota has also engaged in extension discussions with guard Jaylen Nowell, but the fourth-year guard is expected to bypass a new deal and enter unrestricted free agency next offseason, according to sources. Nowell, a dynamic scorer, is averaging 15 points in three games to start this season.

In addition to the Hawks, the Suns have recently been engaged in talks with the Bucks on a potential Jae Crowder trade, sources said. Milwaukee has registered interest in the veteran forward who has remained away from the Suns’ organization as both sides work toward a trade. Miami is also believed to be among the current suitors for Crowder, according to league sources.

 (Top Photo: Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images)



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Darvin Ham – ‘Understanding’ with Russell Westbrook after remarks

LOS ANGELES — Lakers coach Darvin Ham says he and Russell Westbrook have “moved on” and have “an understanding” after the point guard suggested Ham’s decision to bring him off the bench in the preseason could have contributed to a minor hamstring injury he suffered.

Ham, however, pushed back at any insinuation that his rotation in the Lakers’ preseason finale loss to the Sacramento Kings — in which Westbrook played just five minutes off the bench before exiting with the strained left hamstring — had anything to do with the physical setback.

“Let me be clear with this,” Ham said before his team hosted the LA Clippers on Thursday. “The Lakers, myself, my staff, we would in no way, shape or form put a player or an employee in harm’s way. Physically, mentally, spiritually. We don’t stand for that. We’re not about that. That’s not who we are.”

Following the Lakers’ 123-109 season-opening loss to the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday, Westbrook said he “absolutely” believes that coming off the bench against Sacramento could have caused the injury.

“I’ve been doing the same thing for 14 years straight,” he said, referring to starting 1,005 out of 1,022 games in his career. “Honestly, I didn’t even know what to do pregame. Being honest, I was trying to figure out how to stay warm and loose. … That’s something I just wasn’t accustomed to.”

Ham said the two shared a “brief discussion” about the remarks. Ham went back to Westbrook in the starting lineup against the Warriors and again against the Clippers.

“We moved on, we got an understanding,” Ham said. “As the coach of this team, we’re going to do what’s best for our team to be as successful as it can be. And I’ll just leave it at that.”

Ham said he understands “respect” and “routine” are important to the former league MVP but acknowledged the team-centric goals he will require Westbrook to meet.

“He’s been around a long time. He’s been a high-level player for a very long time. So, I know what that’s about and how that is,” Ham said. “But on the other hand, you have to be prepared to do whatever your team needs you to do. And that’s called being a professional. So, however we choose to use him, there has to be a willingness there to sacrifice for your teammates and overall good of the team if that course of action is going to lead to success.”

Westbrook played 31 minutes against Golden State and finished with 19 points on 7-for-12 shooting, 11 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal and 4 turnovers.

Ham said he had a “good plan in place” for Westbrook’s role moving forward, but added, “based on performance, minutes can go up, minutes can go down.”

Ham also said he didn’t have a problem with Westbrook saying what he said to reporters after the Warriors game, or with LeBron James’ blunt assessment that “we’re not a team that’s constructed of great shooting” — even if their comments were interpreted as critiques of the coaching staff and front office.

“It’s a grown man’s league,” Ham said. “Things are going to be said whether it’s directed at someone or not. I handle it in stride. I’ve been around this thing for 26 years. I’ve been on quiet teams and I’ve been on a couple of loud teams. But I have the utmost respect for those guys. I believe they have the utmost respect for me. There’s nothing taken personal about anything. We address it and we move on.”

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Lakers’ Russell Westbrook cites coming off bench for hamstring strain

SAN FRANCISCO — Russell Westbrook said he “absolutely” believes that Los Angeles Lakers coach Darvin Ham’s decision to bring him off the bench in L.A.’s preseason finale could have caused the hamstring strain he suffered that night.

“I’ve been doing the same thing for 14 years straight,” Westbrook said following the Lakers’ 123-109 loss to the Golden State Warriors in their regular-season opener Tuesday night. “Honestly, I didn’t even know what to do pregame. Being honest, I was trying to figure out how to stay warm and loose. … That’s something I just wasn’t accustomed to.”

Westbrook was back in the starting lineup against the Warriors — playing with the first unit for the 1,005th time in 1,022 career games — after being limited in the days leading up to it because of his hamstring injury.

He played just five minutes in the exhibition loss to the Sacramento Kings on Friday. He alluded to being able to play more but choosing not to because, “I wasn’t going to risk it in a preseason game.”

Westbrook played 31 minutes against Golden State and finished with 19 points on 7-for-12 shooting, 11 rebounds, three assists, one steal and four turnovers. His plus-minus rating of minus-six was better than that of both LeBron James (-10) and Anthony Davis (-21).

Ham said he wanted Westbrook’s approach to competition to jolt his team from the opening tip.

“You want to start the game off the right way in terms of your energy and being in attack mode, and no one better than him,” said Ham, who spoke to reporters before Westbrook did following the game. “I mean, it’s what we have, and we got some key guys hurt. It’s Game 1, give them a chance to go out and compete at the highest level. I thought he was solid. I thought he was solid. A couple possessions I wish I can get back, but overall, I thought he was solid.”

Before the contest, Ham said he wanted to “establish” a consistent starting unit.

“We don’t want to be one of those teams,” he said, “where teams are swaying according to who their opponent is starting.”

However, asked whether that meant he would stick with his opening-night starters for a stretch of time moving forward, Ham would not commit.

“We’ll see,” he said. “I’m a day-by-day guy.”

Davis said after the game that Westbrook’s bench role against the Kings was merely experimentation.

“I don’t think he was ever out of [the starting group],” Davis said. “I think it was a look [at a different rotation] in Sac.”

It was only the 22nd regular-season game that Davis, Westbrook and James played together since L.A. traded for Westbrook in the summer of 2021. The loss on Tuesday dropped their record together to 11-11. Yet Davis and James were encouraged.

“I think we played well,” Davis said. “We wanted to come out and everybody be aggressive. We didn’t want to — I think last year at times we were playing selfless, like, ‘Here [you take it].’ … It took away our aggression. At certain moments throughout the game, one of us three were aggressive, and it worked out for it to look good.”

As James added, “I thought we all just kind of played free. And it resulted in all three of us pretty much being efficient from the floor.”

TNT analyst Charles Barkley didn’t see it the same way.

“You know how I feel about Russell Westbrook,” Barkley said at halftime of the broadcast. “I admire him. I respect him. It’s time for the Lakers to move him. They have taken all his joy out of life and basketball. … This guy used to be so exuberant and play with great energy and great emotion, I think the wear and tear mentally last year, starting this year. … And the thing is, he’s going to get the blame no matter what, because the Lakers ain’t a championship contender. … I think he needs a fresh start, I think the Lakers need a fresh start, because they’re not contenders.”

Westbrook was asked about Barkley’s comments and whether he has lost joy for the game since joining the Lakers.

“You know, man, I’m super blessed and leaning a lot on my faith,” Westbrook said. “So, I have a lot of great friends and family, good people in my corner that support me through thick and thin, and when I have God in my corner, it doesn’t really matter what happens outside of that. I stay on course, stay focused, stay locked in. That’s all I can ask.

“Everything else that comes around it, I’ll continue doing what I’m doing, stay locked in on my craft and everything else will take care of itself.”

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Lakers’ Russell Westbrook gives context to viral videos

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. — After several videos went viral making it appear Russell Westbrook was intentionally distancing himself from teammates during the Los Angeles Lakers’ preseason loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday, the veteran guard offered context to debunk any signs of discord.

In one video, shot on a phone by Instagram user Michael Morales from a seat located behind the Lakers’ bench, Westbrook is seen greeting teammates near the foul line during player introductions and then running to the bench alone, while the Lakers huddled up.

“Pregame, I’ve been doing that since I’ve been in the league for years, man,” Westbrook said after practice Thursday. “I think they just cut the video and obviously the internet is going to take it and run with whatever they need to run with. But, I’ve been doing the same ritual since I’ve been in the league.”

Westbrook’s wife, Nina, responded to a Twitter user who showed several photos and videos of Westbrook indeed following the same solo pregame ritual on other teams he has played for by writing, “Smh… and it begins…”

Another video, clipped from the ESPN telecast and shared widely on Twitter, showed Patrick Beverley gathering his teammates for an on-court huddle following a foul by Westbrook early in the third quarter and Westbrook lining up in rebounding position outside the lane to await the Wolves’ free throw attempts, rather than joining in.

However, another video angle from the same sequence, from the Spectrum SportsNet broadcast of the game, gives a broader view of the chain of events that preceded Beverley beckoning Westbrook to join in.

First, Westbrook engaged in a dialogue with the referee who made the call, and then Westbrook turned his attention to the Lakers’ bench to discuss the defensive possession with L.A.’s coaching staff. Beverley never caught his attention.

“As far as the other video, I was actually talking to the coaches and they cut that video in half as well,” Westbrook said. “I was talking to the coaches about a missed coverage. So, I don’t pay no mind to it, man.

“Honestly I’m just trying to compete and do my job. Everything, videos, get nitpicked. You can cut any video and make anything you want out of it. It’s not up to me to be able to judge that. I know I’m a genuine team player. I’ve never had a problem being with my teammates, so I’m going to continue doing what I’ve been doing.”

Beverley told reporters Thursday that he was unaware the video of the attempted huddle existed until he was asked about it after practice.

“If I don’t know something happened, then I can’t really address something that I don’t know happened,” Beverley said.

Westbrook has been a target of frustrated Lakers fans ever since the team acquired him in a trade with the Washington Wizards in the summer of 2021, as L.A. missed the playoffs last season with his uneven play adding to a whole host of team struggles that included pervasive injuries and underwhelming role player contributions.

Despite the difficult campaign, Westbrook opted in to the final year of his contract to stay in L.A., and new coach Darvin Ham has vowed to get more out of the former league MVP this season.

While Westbrook expressed dismay with how fans mocked his family name last season, the 13-year veteran said Thursday that the scrutiny he faces as a member of the Lakers doesn’t differ from the spotlight he has been under in other spots since entering the NBA.

“That’s been the same for me, honestly, man, through my career,” Westbrook said. “I’m very used to it. And I’m very accustomed to it. That’s why I’ve just been blessed and thankful to be able to continue to play each year and keep my head down and continue competing. And whatever comes with the extra stuff, comes with it. It’s not up to me to be able to make videos and things for the internet. I just go out and do my job.”



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Lakers media day takeaways: Pelinka willing to trade first-round picks; Westbrook stresses professionalism

After a disappointing 2021-22 season that ended without even a trip to the play-in round, the Los Angeles Lakers were expected to make massive changes before the 2022-23 campaign rolled around. On some level, they did just that. Only five players returned from last year’s debacle, but with Russell Westbrook among them, the core problems of limited depth, defense and shooting that doomed the Lakers a season ago continue to plague the purple and gold. Expectations will therefore remain relatively low until the Lakers prove that they don’t need to make another move.

On Monday, all of the team’s key figures attempted to do just that. New head coach Darvin Ham, president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka and the entire roster (save Dennis Schroder, who is dealing with a visa issue) spoke on media day about the nightmare season they just endured, the one that’s still to come and everything in between. Here are the biggest takeaways from media day as the Lakers attempt to work their way back into the championship picture. 

Lakers willing to deal two first-round picks… for the right return

The biggest question of the offseason was originally when the Lakers would trade Westbrook. As the months passed, it shifted to why Westbrook hadn’t been traded. There were plenty of theories. Ham made it clear that he had a plan for Westbrook, so perhaps he wasn’t as bullish on sending him out as others. There are obvious financial motivations for keeping Westbrook. And of course, there’s the dreaded Lakers tax, a supposed premium teams charge the NBA’s most prominent team in negotiations, especially when they’re desperate.

But Occam’s razor tells us that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one, and the simplest explanation here is that Westbrook is widely viewed as a negative asset and the Lakers do not want to give up assets just to remove him from the team. Getting anything of value back would mean giving up both of their available first-round picks. Pelinka made it clear that he is willing to give those picks up. 

“One thing that needs to be made clear is, there was a lot of speculation, will the Lakers trade their picks? Will they not trade their picks? Let me be abundantly clear: we have one of the great players in LeBron James to ever play the game on our team. He committed to us with a long-term contract, a three-year contract. So of course, we will do everything we can, picks included, to make deals that give us a chance to help LeBron get to the end. He committed to our organization. That’s gotta be a bilateral commitment, and it’s there.”

Here’s where things get tricky: as this offseason proved, he’s not going to give up those picks just for the sake of doing so. As Pelinka pointed out, “you have one shot to make a trade with multiple picks, so if you make that trade, and I’m not talking about any particular player on our team, but if you make that trade, it has to be the right one. You have one shot to do it. So we’re being very thoughtful around the decisions on when and how to use draft capital in a way that will improve our roster.”

The implication is that the Lakers were not satisfied with the offers on the table. As far as the reporting tells us, the two primary deals discussed involved Myles Turner and Buddy Hield from Indiana or Bojan Bogdanovic and a selection of other role players from the Jazz. The Lakers may have traded Westbrook already if Kyrie Irving was truly on the table, but all signs suggest that he was not, and he is set to play out the final year of his contract in Brooklyn. If the Lakers are waiting for another player of Irving’s caliber to become available, well, they might never make a trade. Role player deals will be available all season. Eventually, the Lakers will have to decide how much of the season they’re willing to sacrifice waiting for the perfect trade. 

Availability is the best ability

Over the last two seasons, LeBron James has played in only 101 games. Anthony Davis has played in even fewer, just 76. Whether Westbrook is around or not, the Lakers have no chance of contending without their two best players. Keeping them healthy is going to be a priority this season, and Ham promised to do his part. “I don’t need LeBron or AD playing playoff minutes in October, November or December,” the new coach said. Notably, Ham is coming from Milwaukee, whose head coach, Mike Budenholzer, is famously stingy with minutes for his stars. Giannis Antetokounmpo has never topped 33 minutes per game since Budenholzer took over as Milwaukee’s coach.

James has typically been against lowering his workload. “I think this whole narrative of ‘LeBron needs more rest’ or I should take more rest or I should take time here, it’s become a lot bigger than what it actually is,” James told reporters after a 2021 loss to Washington. “I’ve never talked about it, I don’t talk about it, I don’t believe in it. We all need more rest, s—. This is a fast turnaround from last season, and we all wish we could have more rest. But I’m here to work, I’m here to punch my clock in and be available to my teammates.”

But James sang a different tune on media day. James said that he is fully healthy after an injury-riddled season and said that he would “focus my game on being available.” What exactly that means remains to be seen, but on a team loaded with ball-handlers, the Lakers are likely hoping to limit his minutes as he approaches his 38th birthday.

The new culture

According to Anthony Davis, the Lakers had training camp shirts made with the word “chip” on them to represent the chip the team has on its shoulder going into the season. For the first time since Davis arrived in Los Angeles, the Lakers are underdogs. They aren’t a superteam or a defending champion. They’re just trying to prove they belong in the playoff picture. That has seemingly changed the entire culture of the team.

No player better embodies that culture than Patrick Beverley. When discussing what went wrong last season, Beverley, as an outsider, cited the “will factor” as something that worked against them. “Will they get back on defense? Are they willing to do the small things? I didn’t think so with the unit they had last season. That’s no discredit to anyone. But as a basketball player, I feel like I have top-10, top-11 mind when it comes to IQ in basketball, coming from a player like that, me, I didn’t know if they had the will factor. I didn’t know if they wanted to make the extra rotation. I didn’t know if they wanted to get on the floor, get dirty, scrape your knees getting a loose ball. I didn’t know that. As a leader, going to a team like that, if they didn’t do it, I’ll do it. Hopefully they’ll pick up from there.”

Beverley has a history of instilling such a culture on the teams that he plays for. He embodies the underdog spirit that the Lakers will now have to embrace. For now, he’s the guy who consistently does those things. If the Lakers are going to win anything this season, that will have to rub off on the rest of the team.

A business relationship

When Westbrook split with longtime agent Thad Foucher this offseason, Foucher’s statement indicated that Westbrook simply did not want to remain in Los Angeles. The feeling was, in all likelihood, mutual. But as Westbrook explained Monday, it ultimately doesn’t matter.

“Whether they want me here or not doesn’t really matter. My job is to be professional, show up to work like I’ve always done thus far, do my job the best way I know how to, and that’s it. We’ve all had jobs that sometimes people at our jobs don’t like us or don’t want us there, as you guys can probably attest to in any other job across the world. As a professional and as a working man I have to do my job and do it the best way I know how to be able to support and take of my family, and that’s what I’ll do.”

A ringing endorsement of his relationship with the Lakers, that was not. Pelinka went out of his way to praise Westbrook, but the fact remains that he is making $47 million this season on a roster devoid of tradable salary. If the Lakers are going to trade those two first-round picks, as Pelinka said they would for the right offer, Westbrook almost has to be in the deal.

Until then? His future is unclear. Ham refused to commit to a starting lineup, but he spoke positively about Westbrook’s attitude this offseason. “He’s been awesome,” Ham said. “Everything that I’ve asked of him he’s done. Everything has been about being selfless, being team-oriented, defense.” Of course, these were talking points repeated frequently before last season. Lakers fans can be forgiven for not believing it until they see it. 

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Russell Westbrook, agent part ways over dispute over future with Lakers

Russell Westbrook wants the Lakers to trade him.

If that wasn’t obvious before, it’s been made crystal clear by his now-former agent, Thad Foucher, and the statement he gave Adrian Wojnarowski of ESPN to explain why he is no longer Westbrook’s agent:

In a statement, Foucher said: “I represented Russell Westbrook for 14 years and am proud of our partnership which included a highly successful 2008 draft, a super-max contract and the only renegotiation-and-extend max contract in history. I also supported Russell throughout his rise into a prominent fashion industry figure and recently orchestrated three successive trades on Russell’s behalf — culminating with the trade to his hometown Los Angeles Lakers.

“Each time, teams gave up valuable players and assets to acquire Russell – and each time, a new organization embraced his arrival. We did it together with grace and class.”

In and of itself, none of the above would be notable. It’s cordial and respectful enough, but it’s what comes next that makes it plain where Westbrook stands, and what his difference of opinion with Foucher is that is leading to their separation (emphasis mine):

“Now, with a possibility of a fourth trade in four years, the marketplace is telling the Lakers they must add additional value with Russell in any trade scenario. And even then, such a trade may require Russell to immediately move on from the new team via buyout.

“My belief is that this type of transaction only serves to diminish Russell’s value and his best option is to stay with the Lakers, embrace the starting role and support that Darvin Ham publicly offered. Russell is a first-ballot Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame player and will prove that again before he is retired.

“Unfortunately, irreconcilable differences exist as to his best pathway forward and we are no longer working together. I wish Russell and his family the very best.”

If Westbrook’s agent of 14 years — someone who has likely heard what other teams would offer him in terms of role and future prospects — is saying that he thinks the best option for Westbrook is to stay with the Lakers, and they are separating because they disagree… then that makes it pretty clear that Westbrook is pushing hard to leave the Lakers.

It is unclear why Foucher chose to go public like this, or whether he quit or was fired, but when Westbrook and LeBron James couldn’t even pretend to be cordial at a nationally televised summer league game last week, it was fairly obvious that neither wanted to continue together. Still,, this is as explicit as we’re likely ever going to hear it without the use of anonymous sources. A statement like this is very, very abnormal, and I’m not positive I can even remember a situation anything like this happening before in recent NBA history. That Foucher came out and laid this out so plainly to get ahead of this news publicly should tell you all you need to know about just how far about how far dug in Westbrook is on seeing a Lakers exit as his best path forward.

Luckily for him, the feeling is pretty clearly mutual. Less fortunately for all parties involved, there haven’t been a lot of takers on Westbrook yet. We’ll see if that changes as the offseason progresses, but at the very least, now we know where Westbrook stands, and that this does not appear to be a situation where he’s going to come back, buy in, and happily run it back. Now it’s up to the Lakers to figure out how to handle that. And even less fortunately for everyone, in the wake of this statement, their leverage in such a deal has never been lower.


Update 1: After this story first published, Westbrook’s Twitter likes seemed to suggest he disagrees with Foucher’s characterization of their break up.


Update 2: Dan Woike of The Los Angeles Times reported a few minutes later that Russell Westbrook has never requested the Lakers trade him.

To some degree, that is a matter of semantics, but worth noting nonetheless.

Stay tuned…

For more Lakers talk, subscribe to the Silver Screen and Roll podcast feed on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher or Google Podcasts. You can follow Harrison on Twitter at @hmfaigen.



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