WHO’S HOUSE?! BRON’S HOUSE!! WHO’S HOUSE?! BRON’S HOUSE!!: Your GOAT franchise Boss Angeles Lakers 2024 Reality TV offseason Thread

Piff Huxtable

Delaney 2020,2024,2028...
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Ham is bout to be out of here :leon:
dVul5RyEZLzhlJqMEs.gif
 

Voice of Reason

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Only so much you can blame on coaching, from an outsider’s perspective role players didn’t step up at all or were very inconsistent. They had opportunities

Can’t depend on a ~40 year old bron or a 47 year old body AD to carry this team consistently. dlo was dlo, rui was rui ( word to that bozo who used to post here about player eyes. This nikka looks lost or casual more often than not ), white boi was white boi, etc…those are not winning pieces

Ham is mid but maybe you steal a game with Phil but I see players who played like dear in the headlights and didn’t make any plays when it counted or hit many key shots / make plays to win.

Denver role players covered there deficiencies when it matter. They were inconstant but made the plays that matter and their dogs closed out games.


Yeah Rui was playing all confused.
 

KingBeez

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someone paste the good parts

Quick quote I seen

“Darvin Hams Rotations, gameplan, and lack of adjustments created a palpable situation amongst the locker room”

Ham catered to his old players from his former teams like Reddish and Prince. Gave them way too many chances to fail

anonymous player said the locker room respects Ham as a players coach, but said they actually need someone who will coach them

Your typical hit piece before a coach gets fired. Also lakers are very much in play for Bronny to fulfill his dream of playing with his son
 

Boonapalist

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Midway through the fourth quarter of a “road” game against the rival LA Clippers on Feb. 28, with the Los Angeles Lakers having cut a lead that was once as much as 21 points in the fourth quarter down to five, a question arose within the team’s player led huddle.

Why are we running plays to have LeBron James attack a former Defensive Player of the Year in Kawhi Leonard if the Clippers are willingly switching big man Daniel Theis onto him in screening actions?


The answer, provided by multiple players whom team sources say spoke up in the huddle, would provide the key to that night’s comeback win in those final five-plus minutes.

Anthony Davis would set the high screen to prompt the switch, with D’Angelo Russell as the “high man” and Rui Hachimura in the strong-side corner. If a double-team came James’ way, Russell would flash across the lane and open up a potential dunk for Davis or a 3-pointer for Hachimura in the corner. The plan worked to near perfection, with Theis taking over for Leonard six times down the stretch and James picking the opposition apart from there as the Lakers finished the game on a 15-6 run to win 116-112.

During this fourth quarter, in which James scored or assisted on 11 of the Lakers’ 13 field goals, seven weeks after the job security of second-year coach Darvin Ham had become a major storyline of their season, the irony of the Clippers’ ending wasn’t lost on several Lakers players. They had, in their minds, won the game on their own.

It had been one step forward, two steps back for the Lakers over the two-plus months since their In-Season Tournament championship. But this, as some players saw it, was a sign of the locker room coming together in an attempt to salvage a challenging situation with the head coach with whom they often didn’t connect. Their self-empowerment, it seemed, was born out of the perceived absence of effective direction from the coaching staff.

This moment, one of many in which these Lakers felt compelled to find their own solutions, summed up a season that began with high hopes after their Western Conference finals appearance against Denver last year, but ended with another ouster at the hands of the Nuggets. And by the time the Lakers’ season ended in Game 5 against Denver on Monday night, when Jamal Murray’s second game-winner of the first-round series sent the Lakers home less than a year after the Nuggets swept them last May, there were strong signs within the organization that Ham would be deemed most responsible.


The Lakers’ unflattering finish leaves Ham’s future as head coach in serious peril, multiple league and team sources tell The Athletic, with some stakeholders indicating it’s highly unlikely he’ll return. The plan is to reassess everything that went wrong in the coming days before making a final decision. In 2022, Ham signed a four-year deal in the range of $5 million per season, so the team would be assuming the remainder of his deal if he is fired.


“It seemed like every time we hit a rhythm, somebody, a key piece, would fall out of the lineup. It is what it is, man,” Ham said after the Game 5 defeat. “I’m not going to feel sorry for myself, for ourselves. It’s an unbelievable franchise to represent. I couldn’t ask for a better governor, a better president of (basketball operations) in Rob Pelinka and Jeanie Buss. But I’ve seen a lot my first two years in this seat. I’ll continue to work, to get better and to control what I can control.”

The Lakers believed this roster was built for much more than a first-round defeat. Vice president of basketball operations and general manager Rob Pelinka and his staff retained key free agents, such as Austin Reaves, Russell and Hachimura, extended Jarred Vanderbilt and believed the core had promise to make a title run around Davis and James. Throughout the series and most of the season, however, team officials and players believe Ham’s fluctuating rotations, game plans and lack of adjustments led to an underperforming group. It created discontent within the locker room, which became palpable across the franchise.

The Lakers’ blown 20-point lead in Game 2 of the Denver series served as a final straw of sorts. After a successful first year as coach in which he showed signs as a leader of players, the tide turned for Ham this season. There was tremendous respect for Ham as a person, and players had an appreciation for his pro career and time as an assistant coach in Atlanta and Milwaukee. But, as one player said recently, “We need to be coached, too.”

Now, the Lakers face two franchise-defining questions.
 

ALonelyDad

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Quick quote I seen

“Darvin Hams Rotations, gameplan, and lack of adjustments created a palpable situation amongst the locker room”

Ham catered to his old players from his former teams like Reddish and Prince. Gave them way too many chances to fail

anonymous plaer said the locker room respects Ham as a players coach, but said they actually need someone who will coach them

Your typical hit piece before a coach gets fired
The crying about catering to old players definitely came from Dlo lol. I am not even sure who this team will hire lol
 
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