Last night, the highly re-tooled Lakers got a pre-season smack-down from the immensely upgraded Clippers. I've heard the reactions, the lamentations on the Lakers and the growing expectations of a young Clipper team. I've heard the assertions that the Clippers are now the best team in town, and that the Lakers have fallen off dramatically.
Please.
Did anyone not see the raw awesomeness that was Darrius Morris last night? No, just me? If Derek Fisher is to maximize his utility this year, it's going to be in taking this kid under his wing and teaching him how to run The Show.
Was nobody else impressed by some of the Josh McRoberts flashes of genius? Feel free to disagree, and maybe I'm just making a Dukie comparison, but I put J McBob on the same "basketball intelligence" level as Grant Hill and Shane Battier.
I was distraught over the loss of my favorite Laker since Nick Van Exel. I was so excited in the summer of 2004 that I barely noticed Shaq left (hyperbole, but you get my point) Lamar left a huge hole that isn't easily filled on the Lakers roster, and in fact it's going to take two white boys to attempt the feat. But if any duo could fill Lamar's shoes, J McBob and Troy Murphy are the two to make it happen.
Yes, Kobe looked old and slow. Yes, Pau looked soft. No, Andrew did not look in shape. Yes, MWP looks worthless on the offensive side of the court.
This is pre-season, folks.
And yes, Chris Paul was magnificent last night, and DeAndre Jordan simply owned the paint. Blake Griffin looked solid, and the Chauncy Billups pickup looks like a steal right now.
But to the highly trained basketball eye, what did you really notice with a view from the rafters? The Clippers certainly will put up some SportsCenter highlights this year, because they are a talented, highly athletic team. Teams like that win games when a) other teams get caught up and try to play like them. b) other teams forget to focus on defense c) other teams are both less athletic and less disciplined. The Lakers were guilty of both b and c last night, and consequently had the table run on them.
But the intelligence of The Show's new 4's, the speedy PG we finally have in Darrius Morris, the strength of Bynum, the finesse of Pau, and the linchpin of the Mamba will not let us fans down. True, the path to June is not as clear this year as it had been in years past, but let's not overreact before the games even count.
Ben Rosales (@brosales12), a contributor to the Silver Screen and Roll (SSR) blog probably had the best insight to adjustments regarding last night's game, other than Mike Brown's obvious assessment that the defense needs to be stepped up (don't worry, Mike, cohesion and discipline will fix that). Ben beat me to the tweet, noting that Mike Brown should keep Pau at the high post as much as humanly possible this season, with Drew down low. Methinks the high-low game will work well with the Lakers' lineup, and encourage more ball movement than the triangle did.
So yes, the Lakers got smacked last night. It happens. But the bandwagon is barely out of the garage and people are suiting up in their red and blue to jump on it. Feel free, but I'm going to continue driving my purp-n-yellow double-dutch bus even if people hop off because the road ahead looks rough.
GO LAKERS!
I BELIEVE
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