The Niagara Falls Review

Lonzo and LeBron ‘gonna fit together like a glove,’ says papa Ball

- DES BIELER

After LeBron James announced he was joining the Los Angeles Lakers, it was only a matter of time — like nanosecond­s — before LaVar Ball, who had been predicting the move for months, weighed in on it.

According to the outspoken patriarch, his son Lonzo will not only mesh well with James but make the former Cavaliers superstar “better” — as long as the Los Angeles point guard has the basketball in his hands.

That could be an issue, as James is renowned as one of the greatest playmakers in National Basketball Associatio­n history, and he can’t make his remarkably precise passes without the ball in his hands. Thus, his teammates have to be adept at playing off the ball, or at least willing to accept that role, which was one cause of the eventual desire of another prominent point guard, Kyrie Irving, to be traded away from Cleveland.

Whereas Irving was an establishe­d star when James returned to the Cavs in 2014, Ball is coming off a rookie season in which he showed some of the all-around skills that made him the No. 2 overall pick but didn’t exactly take the NBA by storm. Neverthele­ss, his father scoffed at a recent question about Ball’s ability to thrive off the ball.

“Lonzo ain’t going to play off the ball,” LaVar Ball said in a video posted by Overtime. “How’s LeBron going to play point? Lonzo will be pushing, and he’ll get it out of his hands too quick.”

According to Ball, all James has “got to do is run the lane and the pass [from Lonzo] is going to be right on the money.” The fourtime MVP “ain’t gotta worry about dribbling the ball 42 times, coming down there and making a play. We’re going to play so fast, he’ll throw [James] touchdown passes and he’ll be scoring all day.”

Ball acknowledg­ed that there would be occasions when James initiated the Lakers’ offence, at which point “he’s going to throw the long pass and Lonzo will shoot the three-pointer — very easy.”

It wasn’t always very easy for Lonzo Ball to hit three-point shots last season, as he notched a woeful .305 percentage from beyond the arc, while displaying the unorthodox form that had some concerned about whether he could go from a standout at UCLA to one in the pros.

In any event, his ability to play well alongside James may not matter if Ball gets traded, a possibilit­y as the Lakers assemble a suitable supporting cast for their newest franchise icon.

L.A. has reportedly been in discussion­s with the Spurs about trading for Kawhi Leonard, but San Antonio is thought by some to be uninterest­ed in Ball, quite possibly because of the circuslike atmosphere his father creates with his brash commentary.

However, another scenario could have the Lakers sending Ball to another team for a firstround pick that would then be included in a package for Leonard, with veteran Rajon Rondo, acquired Monday on a one-year deal, taking over at the point in Los Angeles.

That would be a dagger for LaVar Ball, a Los Angeles-area native who reveres the Lakers and had seen an oft-stated prophecy fulfilled when that team drafted his oldest son. In turn, such a trade could potentiall­y be sweet revenge for James, who is among the many basketball luminaries to have clapped back at Ball for some of his edgy pronouncem­ents.

That occurred in March 2017, after Ball had suggested that children of NBA stars such as James would have extra “pressure” to live up their fathers’ greatness, whereas his own underwhelm­ing basketball career allowed him to “take the time to make my boys all that.” James fired back by saying, “Keep my kids’ name out of your mouth, keep my family out of your mouth.”

“This is dad to dad,” James said at the time. “It’s a problem now.”

Perhaps that combinatio­n of past unpleasant­ness and current uncertaint­y — a Lakers trade of Lonzo Ball “would be the worst move they ever made,” his father said last month — lay behind what sounded very much like LaVar Ball pitching his son to James through Overtime.

“Lonzo and him are going to fit together like a glove,” Ball said in the video, adding, “Lonzo makes everybody better, including him.”

“Lonzo’s going to get along with anybody he plays with,” claimed the father. “He’s just got that special gift.”

Of course, Ball couldn’t make his argument without at least some trash talk, so he took a few jabs at Irving while attempting to favourably contrast his son with the five-time all-star, now with the Boston Celtics.

“Lonzo’s not 6-1 or 6-2 like Kyrie. Lonzo’s not ball-dominant, where he’s just dribbling the ball while you’re watching him try to do a crossover and make a layup down the lane,” Ball said. “Anybody would enjoy playing with my boy, it’s always been like that.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Lonzo Ball, right, walks away after hugging his father, LaVar, following UCLA’s NCAA college basketball game against Washington State in Los Angeles in March 2017.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Lonzo Ball, right, walks away after hugging his father, LaVar, following UCLA’s NCAA college basketball game against Washington State in Los Angeles in March 2017.

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