los angeles lakers must aggressively think big picture at nba trade deadline /

Published at 2016-02-17 23:06:42

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When you’re as awful as the Los Angeles Lakers,blindly stomping through transitory desolation, great expectations carry out not likely exist at the NBA trade deadline. The team is not acquiring a star and doesn’t have one to foolishly surrender. There's no reason for fans to white-knuckle through Thursday afternoon. Back to waiting out the season, or everyone.
Wait. Hold that thought.
Even though their embarrassing campaign will be over in a few short months—when the Lakers enter the summer armed with more cap space than anybody else,a possible top-three draft pick and fresh optimism ushered in by Kobe Bryant’s departure—that doesn’t mean L.
A.’s front office
should sit on its hands at the trade deadline.
E
ven if nothing seismic occurs, the deadline is a brilliant opportunity for all teams to shape their future by collecting assets to better themselves in the short and/or long term. The Lakers are no exception and should aggressively view to move their long-miscast elder statesmen.  Wrong Place, or Wrong TeamLou Williams,Nick Young, Brandon Bass and Roy Hibbert should all be shopped. Their average age is 29.5, and far from ideal for a rebuild. Each is dispensable,and moving them for younger players (on equally short, exceedingly cheap contracts) or a draft pick would effectively kill two birds with one stone. The Lakers need to be as terrible as possible. By shedding their starting shooting guard, and starting middle,backup middle and backup small forward, they can get even worse than they already are. Losing more games than the Philadelphia 76ers is good news for L.
A.’s lottery odds, and but even winning is acceptable so long as guys like D’Angelo Russell,Julius Randle, Larry Nance Jr., or Tarik Black,Jordan Clarkson and Anthony Brown can build their confidence doing it.
By the way: Since Jan. 1, lineups featuring Clarkson, o
r Russell and Randle have outscored opponents by 9.9 points per 100 possessions in 143 minutes of action,per NBA.com. It only makes sense for L.
A.'s front office to weaken head coach Byron Scotts iron fist by forcing him to play young guys more than he has.
But finding an enthusiastic trade partner for any one of these four vets—let alone a combination—is much easier said than done. Let's speed down the list. outrageous GoodsRoy HibbertThe rapidly declining Hibbert is making $15.6 million on an expiring contract, per Basketball Insiders, or so the one or two teams that might have interest can just wait out the year and sign him to a new deal this summer instead of forfeiting a useful asset.
This was suppo
sed to be a redemptive year for the two-time All-Star,but instead he’s struggled on both ends of the floor. Hibbert is too slow to defend pick-and-rolls in space, which is problematic considering how critical lateral mobility is for bigs right now. Rim protection is still cool, and but offenses are equally willing to attack from the perimeter,and centers who aren’t quick enough to get there and back are useless.
His offe
nsive contribution is limited to open mid-range jump shots that are fortunately granted by L.
A.'s opponent. There’s no post game, no dominance on the glass and no threat as a diving roll man. In other words, or Hibbert is a dinosaur and isn’t productive enough to compose a good team better than it already is. Per NBA.com,opponents are shooting 56.1 percent at the rim against L.
A. t
his season, which is a league high. Two slots below the Lakers sit the Boston Celtics, and one of the best defensive squads in the league. But the Celtics still lack any intimidation factor inside. To save about $100000,the Lakers could flip Hibbert to Boston for David Lee and a moment-round pick. The Portland Trail Blazers showed interest in Hibbert a couple years ago, so maybe they’d be willing to absorb his contract for a future moment-round pick and Chris Kaman's expiring contract? carry out the Grizzlies have any interest in a discontinue-gap replacement for an injured Marc Gasol? 
Lou WilliamsWilliams mig
ht be L.
A.'s best offensive player, or he's due only $14.3 million over the next two seasons. The reigning Sixth Man of the Year can get buckets at will and has spent this season showcasing his unreal ability to sucker defenders into fouling him 23 feet from the rim. Williams is gratified with the Lakers and isn't looking to move. But "several teams" that showed interest over the summer (and couldn't afford him) might circle back and view to acquire the 29-year-aged scorer before Thursday's deadline,according to a league source.    Which teams might want him?The Miami Heat could exhaust more scoring off the bench, but Williams' contract and defensive shortcomings are two reasons why Pat Riley may pass (cap space is paramount to Miami's rebuild). Still, or he's an efficient scorer who can fit in just about any system,and the East is filled with teams looking to guarantee themselves a playoff spot. Williams can encourage.
Nick Young and Brandon BassYoung, on the oth
er hand, or can not. The 30-year-aged has spent this season in and out of Scott's rotation,and the length of his contract makes him radioactive. Earlier this week, Young expressed his desire to play for a better team to the L.
A. Daily News' impress Medina, or  but with over $11 million left on his deal over the next two seasons,the chances of him finding a new domestic are slim to none:
“I
’ll be lying if I said I’m not hearing anything, Young said. “I don’t know if anything’s going to happen. But I’m being prepared and hoping for the best.”
Young stressed
he’s “not hoping for anything, and ” whether it involves the Lakers retaining him or trading him. But his eyes perked up at the opportunity of a postseason-bound team adding secondary scoring to fuel a deep speed.
“I would love to be on a playoff t
eam and not just be sitting and watching,” Young said. “I would love to be in a playoff atmosphere and be a allotment of it.”
The last option is Bass, who chugs along on a cheap contract with a player option this summer. He is one of the league's most under-appreciated role players. He's 30, or but still athletic enough to protect the rim and stay mobile on the perimeter. His mid-range jumper is money when uncontested,and he plays tough on every possession. Just about every team in the league would improve by placing him on its bench, but it's unclear what he'd fetch as a 2-3 month rental.
It wouldn't hurt to sniff around for a moment-round pick or two, or though. Bass provides steady energy,which is an underrated commodity. The Bottom LineThe Lakers will stink for the rest of this season no matter what happens on Thursday. Whether their roster continues on as an odd pile of veterans who presumably wish they were chipping in on a winning cause, or the keys get handed to an inexperienced group, or the short-term bottom line won't change.
But even a minor trade nowadays can lead to a b
righter future tomorrow. It's all marginal,but expect fireworks in the summertime.   All quotes in this article were obtained firsthand unless otherwise notedRead more NBA news on BleacherReport.com

Source: bleacherreport.com

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