This is why Darvin Ham is the Lakers coach
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Hey everyone, itâs Dan Woike, beat writer for the L.A. Times, and welcome back to the Lakersâ newsletter, where you can win some good insight and listen to a great song even if the Lakers canât seem to scare up a victory.
This week, letâs try to deconstruct this teamâs mindset 10 games into the season, when things got dicey again after its eighth loss.
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This, in part, was why the Lakers hired Darvin Ham.
No truth was too tough, no topic too toxic to address, no star too big to coach.
Yet here in Utah after another loss Monday, Hamâs honestly pushed him into strange territory, particularly for a first-year head coach â the constrictions of the teamâs financial situation.
Asked about being able to share a big-picture message with stars who are in short-term phases of their careers, Ham said it comes down to communication and putting all his cards on the table.
âWe canât go out [and sign guys]. Weâre in the [luxury] tax. Weâre tax offenders, right? We just canât go out and start spending money everywhere to build a team,â Ham said. âWe have three big-time first-ballot future Hall of Famers that a chunk of our budget is being spent on. And thereâs only so much left. So we have to do our due diligence and go out and establish the way we want to play â which I thought weâd been doing. Weâve regressed a little bit defensively and the offense has come around here as of late.
âJust keep fighting the good fight, pushing forward one day at a time, man. But just having an honest dialogue. Not sugarcoating anything. Looking at everything for what it is and being real. Like, being real. Weâre not one of these teams right now â as of right now â where we have 30, 40, 50 million dollars in cap space. We donât have that today.â
Discussions about luxury-tax implications and salary-cap situations donât usually happen in postgame news conferences, and especially not 10 games into the season. But what Hamâs saying is the obvious truth that scouts and executives around the league have been noticing when they watch the Lakers.
For the second consecutive season, the team has no real middle class on its roster â the gigantic salaries for LeBron James, Anthony Davis and Russell Westbrook forcing the front office to use salary exceptions to hunt for bargains in free agency.
Even if the Lakers pull off a trade â and thatâs certainly still an âifâ â Hamâs plan involves a hefty amount of internal improvement as the team discovers the best formula to maximize its current roster.
âWe just got to keep working, day in and day out. Keep working. We canât get discouraged,â Ham said. âThe season is too long. We canât get discouraged after 10 games being 2-8 or whatever the hell our record is. Itâs too early. And it should never happen, for that matter. We should fight until thereâs no more time on the clock. But I think weâll be fine and again, I know weâll be fine. Because Iâm not going to stop, my staff is not going to stop and our organization is not going to stop trying to be the best version of ourselves. As competitive as possible.â
One way that can be fixed is in the third quarter of games, when the Lakers have been the second-worst team in the NBA by being outscored by 17.6 points per 100 possessions. The Lakers have, strangely enough, the same minus-17.6 net rating in the first quarter.
âThatâs whatâs been killing us all year,â Davis said.
Itâs not the lone issue â but itâs a big one. And with the Lakers limited in the ways they can address their talent, zeroing in on focus and execution will be a must.
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A new AD?
In between the Lakersâ last three losses, Davis went to Ham to discuss getting him more touches late in games.
âWeâre just trying to be assertive,â Davis said. âComing out in the second half, demand the basketball and make plays out of it. Try not to get lost in the game where Iâm not touching the basketball.â
Davis has taken just 21 shots in the fourth quarter this season. James leads the team with 49 fourth-quarter attempts, with Lonnie Walker IV (25) and Russell Westbrook (24) taking more shots than Davis late.
âI love the communication. I love the openness,â Ham said. âI donât get offended by that. If a guy says he wants more touches and heâs of the caliber of Anthony Davis, then yeah, my ears are going to perk up and Iâm going to see how I can get him the ball more.â
Song of the week
âReflectionsâ by MisterWives
Speaking of spacing issues, enjoy this recent indie dream-pop jam from inside the back of a van. Though itâs still early in the season, it does feel like the Lakers are about to hit some key points of reflection over the next few weeks, the schedule easing up and spreading out before a hellish December. At least this song is happy.
In case you missed it
Darvin Hamâs Lakers âexcavationâ reaches new depths with loss to Jazz
Lakers-Cavaliers takeaways: Kendrick Nunnâs struggles continue
Plaschke: LeBron James says Lakers âare who we are.â They stink
Lakers struggle again with shooting, offense in loss to Cavaliers
No rest for the Lakersâ defense, which went missing in action vs. Jazz
LeBron James condemns antisemitism amid Kyrie Irving controversy
âWe want Westbrookâ chants arenât enough to lift lukewarm Lakers past Jazz
Elliott: Seven games into head coaching career, Lakersâ Darvin Ham wisely trusts his gut
Matt Ryanâs shot forces overtime as Lakers rally to beat Pelicans
Inside the biggest shot of the Lakersâ season: How Matt Ryan hit an impossible three
Until next time...
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