Los Angeles Times

SPORTS INSIDE: Smith set to join James on Lakers to make another NBA title run.

Former Cavaliers guard will sign with Lakers to fill in for the absent Bradley.

- By Tania Ganguli

The Lakers are working to sign guard JR Smith for the rest of the season, according to people familiar with the situation, which would reunite LeBron James with his former Cleveland teammate as the Lakers head to Florida for the resumption of the NBA season.

Smith, 34, will be added to replace Avery Bradley, who decided to not join the team in Florida because of family reasons. Once Bradley is officially listed as a player who opted out, the team can add Smith starting at 9 a.m. on Wednesday.

Replacemen­t players must follow a protocol to ensure they can safely join a team at the secluded ESPN Wide World of Sports campus next month.

According to the NBA’s health and safety manual, any player signed to a contract after June 23 has to complete a questionna­ire about his medical history, be examined by team doctors who will review whether he is at risk of complicati­ons because of COVID-19 and undergo COVID-19 testing that follows the same protocol the rest of the team follows.

Lakers players were administer­ed drive-up tests for both the virus and its antibodies on June 23.

Teams have until Wednesday to finalize their rosters and travel party, which can include 35 people. The Lakers’ first of eight games before the playoffs will take place July 30 against the Clippers and will be televised on TNT at 6 p.m. PDT.

The first round of the playoffs will begin Aug. 17. Teams will be sequestere­d in their hotels and on the ESPN campus for as long as they play. The last possible day of the Finals is Oct. 13.

When the season halted on March 11, the Lakers were leading the Western Conference, having recently defeated the Clippers and league-leading Milwaukee Bucks. The Lakers led the Western Conference with a record of 49-14 and had secured the organizati­on’s first playoff berth since 2013. They have hopes of winning their first championsh­ip since 2010.

Bradley was a big part of their success as he started alongside James, Anthony Davis, Danny Green and JaVale McGee. His defensive intensity and skill helped the Lakers, and in February and March he was on a hot streak shooting three-pointers. When Bradley was injured, the Lakers relied on Kentavious Caldwell-Pope to fill his spot.

Once Bradley decided not to play, the team resumed previous conversati­ons with Smith’s representa­tives. Smith is represente­d by Klutch Sports Group, which also represents James, Davis, Caldwell-Pope, Talen HortonTuck­er and Dion Waiters. Smith originally worked out for the Lakers on March 2, the same day Waiters did, and the team opted to sign Waiters instead.

Waiters has yet to play for the Lakers, who were easing him into their lineup. He was scheduled to join the South Bay Lakers, the team’s developmen­tal affiliate, just before the season was interrupte­d.

Smith also performed well during his workout, which led the Lakers to keep him in mind. A first-round pick by the New Orleans Hornets in 2004, Smith was the sixth man of the year while playing for the New York Knicks in the 2012-13 season.

He was with James in Cleveland for four consecutiv­e Finals appearance­s, including 2016 when the Cavaliers won the city’s first championsh­ip in more than 50 years.

During the 2018-19 season, the year James joined the Lakers, Smith played in only 11 games. Cleveland waived him last summer and he has not played for a team since.

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