Los Angeles Times

Deng gets pushed aside to make room for the kids

- By Tania Ganguli tania.ganguli@latimes.com Twitter: @taniagangu­li

Even after the Lakers decided to remove their highest-paid player from the starting lineup, Luol Deng had a place in Coach Luke Walton’s rotation.

That changed Friday night against the Boston Celtics.

For the first time all season, Deng was a healthy scratch. Before the game, Walton approached Deng to explain his reasoning. The Lakers wanted more playing time for young players like Developmen­t League callup David Nwaba, trade acquisitio­n Tyler Ennis, guard Jordan Clarkson and rookie forward Brandon Ingram.

“We’re trying to get looks at all the young guys that we can,” Walton said. “. . . He was OK with it and it was just a way to keep all the young guys active and be able to play them all.”

Symbolical­ly, it was a major step for the Lakers. Mitch Kupchak, then the team’s general manager, signed Deng to a four-year contract worth $72 million last summer, and center Timofey Mozgov to a four-year, $64 million deal.

Even after both players were removed from the starting lineup, Kupchak maintained it was too soon to draw conclusion­s about the quality of those signings.

“This is not something that’s evaluated in a halfseason,” Kupchak said last month during the week before Lakers President Jeanie Buss fired him, ending his 17year tenure as GM. “Let’s wait five or six years . . . and look back on it and then we can say how our drafts went and how trades went and how free agency went.”

Walton and Kupchak discussed removing Deng and Mozgov from the starting lineup before Walton made the decision. Kupchak said in mid-February that he found it important to support Walton’s instincts and back his decisions.

“The two players, they both signed four year-deals, so you can’t evaluate it until the four years are up,” Kupchak said at the time. “You may have an opinion six months in, a year in, a year and a half in. Ultimately, when all is said and done, you just don’t know.”

While neither player has complained publicly, their changing roles have caused some frustratio­n. Mozgov’s playing time has all but disappeare­d. He has played in only one game since being benched on Feb. 6. Deng, meanwhile, had regularly seen minutes in the 20s and 30s until the last few games.

But with only 20 games left this season, and with a 19-43 record, the Lakers are going all in on evaluation.

Local guy impresses

In his first NBA game, Nwaba felt the scale of an accomplish­ment.

In his second one, he acted as though he’d been there before.

“I felt good out there,” Nwaba said Friday night after playing 20 minutes against the Celtics. “Little bit more confidence. I know what it feels like after the first game. Felt a lot better. Less nerves.”

Nwaba, who attended University High in Los Angeles and played college basketball at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, scored seven points and had a plus/minus of plus-five. Four of his points came at the start of the fourth quarter, as the Lakers cut the Celtics’ lead to 13 in what would become a 115-95 Boston victory. He was one of only four Lakers with a positive plus/minus rating. He impressed Walton most with his defense.

“I thought he was awesome,” Walton said. “He was a big part of that spark that got us back in the game. He was fighting over screens, he was disrupting their offense, he was getting his hands on passes, contesting every shot . . . . I thought he was really good tonight.”

The Lakers sent Nwaba to their Developmen­t League affiliate, the D-Fenders, on Saturday. He is expected to be called back up to play in Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans. Nwaba signed a 10day contract with the Lakers on Feb. 28.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? LUOL DENG, who signed a four-year, $72-million deal last July, sat out Friday’s game against Boston.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press LUOL DENG, who signed a four-year, $72-million deal last July, sat out Friday’s game against Boston.

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