Los Angeles Times

Young giving way to the spring youth push

- By Dan Woike daniel.woike@latimes.com

Nick Young had laced up his shoes and started his walk out of the Lakers locker room Sunday evening, lamenting a chance that might’ve passed.

“I had like 169,” he said, mildly inflating the 166 three-point shots he has made this season.

But this wasn’t boasting. Young, who earlier Sunday wanted to know the franchise record for most three-point baskets in a season ( 183 by Nick Van Exel) spoke like someone who knew his chances to launch over the season’s final 17 games would be severely limited.

Sunday, Coach Luke Walton removed Young from the starting lineup for the first time this season. The move, Walton said, isn’t a punishment.

“Nick has been one of our best two players all year long,” Walton said.

No, the move is more about the Lakers’ mindset as they enter the season’s final month, where Young chasing the franchise’s three-point record is a distant second priority to getting starts for undrafted free agent David Nwaba.

“Again, Nick’s been absolutely great for us all year,” Walton said, “but with giving [Young] so many minutes and wanting to see more of David and see Tyler [Ennis] a little bit before the season end, it’s not really fair to him to keep playing four or five minutes per half. We’re thinking about making that move and committing even more so to the youth.”

In addition to moving Young out of the starting lineup, Walton made another move he’d been “toying” with making for some time. Rookie center Ivica Zubac made his second career start, a move that came just days after Magic Johnson, the Lakers new president of basketball operations, said he wanted to see the team’s secondroun­d pick in the starting lineup.

Walton wouldn’t commit to a plan going forward on who would be the guard opposite D’Angelo Russell in the team’s starting lineup.

“We’ll go in a direction and see how it’s going and what it looks like. Depending on that, we might make another change,” he said. “We’re just going to continue to get some more opportunit­y and some more informatio­n on some of these young guys going into the off-season.”

In addition to Young, veterans Luol Deng and Timofey Mozgov don’t appear to be in the team’s spring plans. Deng and Mozgov, who were the Lakers’ marquee offseason signings at a cost of about $34 million, were healthy scratches from the active roster Sunday night against Philadelph­ia.

Young said before Sunday’s game that he had spoken to Walton and was on board with the new direction, even if it meant he wouldn’t be breaking Van Exel’s three-point record.

“It’s nothing. It’s that time of year,” Young said. “It’s not like I’m doing some crazy stuff.”

Etc.

Walton said he didn’t think new General Manager Rob Pelinka would have a big effect on the team over the final weeks of the regular season. “It’s going to impact going into the summer more than anything, honestly,” Walton said. “I think it’s a great time for him to get in there, get into the office, get a feel for it and start reaching out and making those connection­s. And really getting a good feel for what we’re looking to do going into the off-season.” … Walton did his pregame media chat wearing an Arizona basketball shirt, boasting of his alma mater’s victory in the Pac-12 Conference tournament Saturday night.

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