At the end of last season, anyone who suggested Russell Westbrook would be a Laker to start the 2022-23 season would have been laughed out of the room. The tension between LeBron James and Westbrook was evident even at Summer League when they showed up to the same game and didn’t acknowledge each other, staying on the opposite sides of the gym.
But there was no Westbrook trade to be made — at least not one that didn’t involve the Lakers giving up the only two draft picks they control for the rest of this decade. And there was no deal even with those picks that moved the Lakers to contender status.
So the Lakers are running it back with Westbrook (at least to start the season). If Westbrook and Patrick Beverley suddenly being pals was not evidence enough of what is to come, there are multiple other reports. For one, Brian Windhorst of ESPN said this on his most recent Hoop Collective podcast (hat tip Real GM).
Eric Pincus echoes the same sentiment at Bleacher Report after polling agents and league executives.
None of this is new. All signs have been pointing this way for more than a month. Westbrook is a negative value contract at $47 million, and other teams want a lot of sweeteners to take him on — sweeteners the Lakers don’t really have, and they are not eager to give up what they do have. So Westbrook will start training camp and likely the season as a Laker — he has been happy being back home and playing in Los Angeles. It just hasn’t fit on the court.
Windhorst added that he heard the Lakers were never seriously considered as the third team in a potential Donovan Mitchell to the Knicks trade (Mitchell ended up a Cavalier).
It made sense for the Jazz to want the Lakers involved — Danny Ainge is hoarding picks and would want Los Angeles’ 2027 and 2029 picks — but it made little sense for everyone else, including the Lakers. Los Angeles is only trading away those picks in a deal that makes them a contender, and this deal would return them something like Bojan Bogdanovic, Jordan Clarkson and Obi Toppin. That’s not good enough.
The Lakers are all saying the right things about buying into roles and playing tough defense this season, things that Frank Vogel could not get them to do but new coach Darvin Ham says he will demand. That all sounds good weeks before training camp starts. The real test will be how the Lakers handle adversity — internal and external — once the season begins. Until then, it is all just words.