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Andy Kamenetzky here, the host of the daily Locked On Lakers podcast, with your daily Locked On Lakers newsletter. Each day we bring you the biggest stories about the Lakers and the NBA, including the hottest links to other stories you need to read. Plus, Josh Lloyd delivers daily fantasy notes to crush your league.

Lakers Start Their NBA Cup Title Defense vs. Spurs and Wembanyama. Should They Try to Repeat?

Cup Resized.jpg
Dec 9, 2023; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) hoists the NBA Cup and celebrates with teammates after winning the NBA In-Season Tournament Championship game against the Indiana Pacers at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Candice Ward-Imagn Images|© Candice Ward-Imagn Images
Thought Starter...

It’s Cup Time!

Last season, the Lakers became the first team to win the NBA’s in-season tournament.

That means this year, they’re the first team to try and defend that title. Of course, while the in-season tournament (now the NBA Cup) was a much bigger success than most anticipated, fans certainly remember how much the Lakers struggled following the tournament. It was miserable, in part because LA clearly used a lot of energy to try and win the thing and it took a while to recover. So with their portion of the NBA Cup opening tonight in San Antonio against a quickly improving Spurs team featuring a red hot Victor Wembenyama.

But while Friday’s game will get the most attention, a very solid argument can be made that Saturday’s game in New Orleans is more critical. The Lakers, currently sitting at 7-4 in an extraordinarily crowded Western Conference, can’t afford to give any games away. The best teams in the conference will almost certainly dominate against sub-.500 teams. Teams that fall to the bottom of the playoff ladder wil almost certainly have given away some games they shouldn’t have.

A 2-0 weekend, where the Lakers play better, establish themselves as a competent road team, and add tons of optimism would be idea.

1-1, though, is the minimum.


Big Questions in this Episode:


1. Is it even possible for the Lakers to find center help over the next few weeks?

2. The Lakers need to win games to keep pace in the West. Should they push beyond the norm to try and defend their title?

3. What does a flat point differential say about the Lakers?
Listen to the full episode

League At Large

Are injuries in the NBA really spiking?

It’s time to talk about injuries.

I held off on writing about the apparent rash, or rise, of early-season athlete injuries because there’s always some recency bias involved when the subject comes up. Are there really more injuries this year than any other? Do we have the data to support it? Is there a new, underlying cause? Or are injuries due to the same compounding mix of bad luck and the NBA’s 82-game schedule running into a long postseason, running into the offseason, running back into a brand new long regular season and the erosion of bodies this eventually leads to?

A report early this week showed early-season injuries were up 35%, and indeed ESPN’s list of injuries, at a glance, looks like a ferocious Christmas tree, lit up in blazing reds and yellows. A handful of teams (the Grizzlies, Pelicans, Raptors) are cobbling together rosters game-to-game depending on who’s still healthy. TrueHoop’s Henry Abbott ran a draft of the injured list this week and each team reads like an All-Star squad on steroids, and when Abbott printed out the league’s official injury report it was 10 pages long.

Injuries are definitely up — but why?

The Paris Olympics proved extra playing time for a few top-tier stars, but most of them remain healthy. The early season schedule hasn’t served up any more back-to-backs to longer road game stretches, which tend to be more gruelling on athletes, than usual. However, when everything appears to be normal and the bodily price is anything but, perhaps it’s time to examine that “normal”.

The NBA’s current schedule of 82 games was adopted in 1967. Already, I’m sure your brain is picturing black and white basketball, that’s good. When you picture that grainy, glitchy footage, how fast is it going? The reality is that the game used to be a lot slower. Not just in its mechanics (think of an offensive passing sequence, the ball flipping from set of hands to hands at a speed that can be hard to follow), but the athleticism too. Bodies were moving slower. The game was still physical — the trope of players from the 80s and 90s complaining about the “softness” of current athletes is a trope for a reason — but full tilt sprinting, cutting, complex rotations, these weren’t the norm. Given that, the bodily mechanics were different. Guys weren’t stopping on a dime, pivoting hard, having to force their ligaments and muscles and bones into exacting motions with all sorts of volatile force behind them.
What sports scientists say
Katie Heindl is a credentialed NBA and WNBA writer, her bylines have appeared with The New York Times Magazine, SLAM, The Athletic, Yahoo Sports, Dime, Rolling Stone, among others. She writes the bestselling Substack, Basketball Feelings and is working on a book of the same name.

Home and Away

Must Read
Inside Timberwolves’ Rob Dillingham’s bizarre journey to the NBA. (ESPN)

Analysis
A few weeks into the season, and there have been some surprises. The Athletic looks at eight players to get to know better.

Fans
C’mon, you know you’ve done it too. Ranking the NBA’s 2024-25 City Edition jerseys. (Dime/UPROXX)

Must Read
What’s motivating the Lakers in their chase for back-to-back NBA Cup titles? Straight cash, homie. (Los Angeles Times)

Injury
Lakers’ Jaxson Hayes will be sidelined for 1-2 weeks due to an ankle injury. Here’s what we know about his recovery plan. (Daily News)

Fantasy Cheat Sheet

Replay: Navigating the injury bug

Locked On - Chet Holmgren
Oklahoma City Thunder forward Chet Holmgren (7) holds his leg after a hard following a play against the Golden State Warriors during the first quarter at Paycom Center.|Photo by Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images
This week in the fantasy basketball world has been a rollercoaster of highs and lows. A major talking point has been Chet Holmgren’s unfortunate injury, which has fantasy managers scrambling for replacements as the Oklahoma City Thunder adjust with potential lineup changes. Keep an eye on players like Aaron Wiggins and Cason Wallace — who might see increased minutes — and consider them as temporary pickups in deeper leagues.


For a deep dive into this week’s standout performances and to gain a competitive edge in your league, don’t miss our comprehensive analysis on this week’s notable fantasy basketball performers. Explore which players made waves and how they can impact your lineup strategy in our latest article.
Stay ahead of the game

3peat (ICYMI)


Don’t let these episodes pass you by — stay locked in with the latest Locked On Lakers podcasts.

Lakers Let Game Get Away, Lose to Orlando Despite 70 Points from LeBron and Anthony Davis
In the Western Conference, teams that don’t close games they were in position to win will feel it in the end. That’s certainly what happened to the Lakers on Thursday night. To be sure, the visiting Orlando Magic, even without its star (Paolo Banchero) and playing shorthanded beyond that (no Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, no Wendell Carter, Jr.) still represented a challenging opponent. To their credit, the Magic have played quite well of late, winning six of seven coming into the game.


Jarred Vanderbilt Remains Out Indefinitely. Should the Lakers Expect Him to Return This Season?
The Lakers have had long stretches this year where news on Jarred Vanderbilt has essentially been non-existent. And for the most part, it has been a matter of no news not equaling good news. There’s no update because he’s not making progress. Well, sometimes getting news isn’t good, either.


Dalton Knecht Scores 37, Lakers Beat Utah for 6th Straight Win
In a town that has seen its share of “manias” around young, exciting players (Fernandomania, Nomomania, and so on) it’s fair to think we’re probably one more big game from full blown Knectomania in Los Angeles. Dalton Knecht, who entered Tuesday’s game against Utah at the Crypt riding a big hot streak, got even hotter. He finished with 37, on a cartoonish 9-11 from 3-point range.



Listen now
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