The Los Angeles Lakers Are A Great Team

No, I did not lose a bet.

Yes, this is like root canal.

No, this is not a backhanded compliment (well, it probably will turn into that, but I’m going to do my best).

After careful review this morning, I’ve come to the conclusion that this Los Angeles Lakers team is, in fact, great. Not very good. Not very talented. Great.

Ugh. Let’s get this over with.
*************************************************************************************

I have maintained since 2008 that this was not a great team. That they were a very good team, the most talented team, a load of other superlatives, but never great. Because they never managed to really show any heart. Their version of “dealing with adversity” was when the Rockets without Yao Ming and Tracy McGrady and Dikembe Mutumbo outworked them in a seven game series (they had Ming for three games). They always seemed to coast, and then do just enough to get by. They did not execute at an elite level. Their victory over the Magic last year was primed off of a weak playoff schedule (neither Utah nor Denver look very convincing as challengers at this point, do they?), and then a superior talent base with some karma from the Gods (read:Fisher) thrown in.

And when the Lakers cruised down the stretch, routinely getting offed by inferior teams, it was easy to bring that label back. I knew they’d make the Finals, because, again, the talent thing. And they struggled in OKC and it was easy to throw out the same labels at them about not being great and not responding to adversity.

Thing is, they have.

What started me down this path was thinking about how utterly sick I am of them in the Finals. And I am. Let’s not get confused. I would kill for literally any other team to be in the Finals, just to have something unfamiliar at this point. But then I realized “Holy hell, this team has been to the Finals three straight years.” That’s a remarkable feat in and of itself, particularly in a loaded Western Conference (well, besides Utah). They’ve been one of the final two teams for three straight seasons. And they’ve done it with Kobe as their best player, Lamar Odom as their third best, and Squeaky Wheel down there at center. That was the first piece.

Then I started to rationalize it. “Well, yeah, but they’re not a great team, still. I mean, look at the teams they struggled with!” And then I really started to think about it. Didn’t Oklahoma City actually play the best basketball in a losing series effort this year? Weren’t they the one team to really take it to LA, consistently? And for all their inexperience, that was a ridiculously good team. So them pushing LA shouldn’t be surprising. And losing by a gajillion in Game 4 would have sunk most teams. But LA not only battled back, but, and this is the important part, finished them in six games. They went into OKC and took down the Thunder because they’re better and the defending champs. They didn’t slack off and let it go seven. They didn’t mail it in and wait to go back to the comfy confines of Staples. They kicked in the door in OKC and took what was theirs, a series in six.

Utah I’m not giving them any credit for. That team might as well just be playoff cardboard cutouts. They should change their names to the Playoff Speed Bumps.

But Phoenix? That Phoenix team wasn’t just blessed with more talent than we gave them credit for all the way up until the second round. They were riding a streak of confidence. That team believed in itself. If ever there was a team primed to be a great story of a champion, it was the Suns, with Nash and that bench and Grant Hill all refusing to go down, battling their way back from an 0-2 series deficit and tying things up. They guaranteed a win in Game 6 and… LA smoked ‘em. They went into Phoenix, and crushed their hopes and dreams, took care of business. And that’s what great teams do. They don’t shrink from the moment, they steal the other team’s and then shove them down the stairs.  And that’s what they did.

So now they’re back in the Finals. And I think they’ll win. I really do. I’ve doubted Boston in three straight consecutive series, what’s one more, really? I think Boston is an incredible team. I just think this Lakers team is better. Lamar Odom has become a great player… for the Lakers. Ron Artest has become a great complimentary player… for the Lakers. Pau Gasol has become a great player… for the Lakers. All of these players early in their careers represented the salvation of small market teams for me and I’ve watched them become death rays on the Death Star. But that’s the reality of the NBA and I’m doing a disservice to this blog and you who’s reading if I deny it.

The Lakers are a great team. They run a spectacular offense with options at every turn, are led by one of the top five players of all time, are coached by a man who may have 11 rings in two weeks, and are arguably the most recognizable basketball franchise on the planet (and they’re playing the only team you can argue about it with). They have battled back from adversity and closed out series like champions. They are, quite simply, a great team, and I expect them to win their 16th NBA championship, cementing this crew as having passed the very lowest threshold of being considered a dynasty.

**************************************

Go Celtics.

Wait, Glen Davis.

Go Lakers!

Wait, Phil Jackson!

Go Celtics!

Wait…

***************************************

Behold, the face of greatness:

Via Reds Army (I saw this guy behind the announcers a month ago and commented on it on Twitter. Now, he haunts my dreams. And probably smells like a BP vacation.)

Oster-Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest

Lakers fan here. To be honest, before the Celtics-Lakers series started, I was scared to death. I thought the Celtics were going to win in six games due to their toughness and willingness to play for each other. Seeing the first three games has made me respect the Lakers much more. Bynum is working hard, playing through his painful injury. Ron Artest doesnt force shots as much as play hard defense (well he will force shots a few times a game). And Gasol and Odom have really intensified their game. The only downside is Kobe. As a person living in LA, I have really wanted to LOVE Kobe, but I can't. I'll support him because I am a Lakers fan but he still plays selfish from time to time. He gets by on talent, but his shot selection is horrible.

BTW, your comment on the Lakers being a mercenary squad? You may have a point, but I would say its not even close as the Celtics. Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett are new to the franchise. Their whole bench are mercenaries. Look who they've had over the last few years: PJ Brown, James Posey, Sam Cassel, Stephon Marbury, Michael Finley. You would be criticizing these guys if they signed with the Lakers in the hopes of winning a championship.

The Lakers have built this team mostly from the draft, not from mercenaries. Kobe and Fisher were rookies with the Lakers and those two are the heart and soul of this team. The Lakers bench are mostly draftees (Bynum, Farmar, Walton). Yes Gasol and Artest are new, but how are they different from the people who sign up with Boston?

I know you hardwood, your stat cursing!

Excellent post, Matt. And Justin N, that was a very eloquent comment. One correction, though, is that the Lakers have closed out five consecutive playoff series on the road in their first try, not four (Denver 2009 WCF, Orlando 2009 Finals, OKC 2010 1st Round, Utah 2010 2nd Round, Phoenix 2010 WCF).

that clip at the end totally reminds me of Jon Lovitz. like a character he would play ironically in a movie. hilarious.

Since I ripped into your for your Ron Artest piece yesterday, I'll give you credit here now that you've earned it. This is a very smart piece. Here instead of judging the Lakers for what you think they look like and what history has told you they are, you judge them for their accomplishments. The current incarnation of the LA Lakers has closed out 4 straight playoff series on the road. In their runs to the finals they've beaten some bad teams and some very good teams. The same can be said for any high quality team and it's important to appreciate that when looking at the Lakers.

Last article you said the Lakers are a team of mercernaries competing off nothing but talent, but when I look at this team I see something much different. I see a group of veterans each sacrificing their game (and sometimes their money) to compete for the goal of winning a championship. Isn't this what everyone in the NBA wants to see? It's perhaps unfortunate for some that it happened on the team that is the NBA's equivalent of The Empire but that doesn't really take anything away from it.

Furthermore, by playing for the Lakers and "sacrificing" their game each of these players has perhaps become something greater than they ever could be. Kobe Bryant had to stop scoring 35 ppg to be a real winner again. Pau Gasol had to limit his touches to get back to all-star status and shoot into the discussion of best PF in the game. Ron Artest took a small contract and perhaps the most limited role in an offensive system he's ever had, but people now acknowledge him with a level of respect that he's never had his entire career. Lamar Odom, coming off the bench, has found perhaps the only way his playstyle can contribute to a championship team.

People love to hate the Lakers for one reason : they win a lot. Even when they're not "winning" by their own standards, they're winning at a level many other teams in the league could only dream of. Regardless of whether you love or hate the Lakers, the post-Gasol era team is truly something special.

Oh and that fan is a douchebag and a terrible mockery of Lakers fans throughout the world.

Birdman, if you would take Oscar over Kobe, I don't know what to tell you other than you need to take a step back from your stat sheet and actually look at what winning basketball is about.

Kobe isn't top 5 of all time, that list will be Jordan, Russell, Kareem, Magic and Bird and Kobe would have to win a few more titles to even think about bumping someone down from that list. But Kobe has a chance to differentiate himself and separate himself from the 2nd tier group of guys. Shaq, Duncan, Oscar, Jerry West. He's clearly on their level and has surpassed some of them already. Another title or two and he's free and clear of the 2nd tier.

Pierce was unstoppable in the 2008 final. I remember sitting there watching and thinking the Lakers had nobody that could guard him. Now they have Artest, and Crazy Pills really limited Durant in the first round in a way that I didn't think was possible, and Durant was the scoring champ this year. I think the series will hinge on this match-up.

Lakers in 5

the worst part about seeing the lakers in the finals again, and yes i admit that they're great too, is that they became great because they can afford to pay bynum, gasol, kobe and odom. when you spend enough its easy to accrue that kind of talent and win. its great basketball and all, but im sick of watching the lakers be great.

Is this a Simmons-esque reverse curse or something? I'm a Lakers fan, and I think they are damn good, and when everything clicks, pretty amazing, but I don't agree with this. They have shown a little more gumption this year than in the past, and obviously they are more ready for the Celtics than in 2008 (Artest on D versus VladRad? Yeah). But this Celtics team just mangled the two teams with the best records, plays mind-boggling defense, and has ridiculous swagger, and the T-1000 of basketball (Rondo). I think either team is fully able to beat the other, but if I were being completely objective, I'd have to pick the Celtics. Only the homecourt advantage might make me pick the Lakers.

I just hope bring their best shit, to make it competitive and interesting. Could be the best finals in a long time.

Birdman: you're hilarious. I don't think Kobe is top 5, but to pretend Gasol is the best player... for his various flaws, Kobe is the superstar engine of the team, just as those guys in your list were for theirs.

That fan scares the shit out of me. Of course, I lived in Boston for awhile once, so I know what their fans are like too.

Who on the Lakers is one of the top 5 players of all time? I see no one on their roster better than Jordan, Magic, Bird, Russell, Wilt, Oscar, etc.

I mean, Gasol's pretty good, but he's not at that level.