Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Lakers want to `love and live in the paint'

- By Khobi Price kprice@scng.com

EL SEGUNDO » Lakers coach Darvin Ham had a list of things he wanted to see the team improve on or change from last season entering this preseason.

Among them: the team's spacing, which is already noticeably different.

The Lakers are using fiveout spacing — when every offensive player is starting a play outside the 3-point line — significan­tly more often than last season when they used more four-out, one-in spacing.

With the caveat that it's been just two preseason games, the adjustment has appeared to help. The Lakers have scored at least 29 points in five of the six quarters when players who are expected to be or compete for a spot in the Day 1 rotation played regular minutes.

“We have some high-IQ basketball players so we give them a kitchen full of surprises and sometimes we cook up the meals and sometimes they create their own spins on the dishes,” Ham said. “It's been great. Just the dialogue and communicat­ion between the coaches and players, it's allowing everybody to be more creative and get on the same page and be more consistent.”

Generally, the main benefits of five-out spacing for an offense — if done correctly and with proper ball and player moment — is that it opens up the paint and makes defensive rotations more difficult.

This is supposed to lead to more efficient scoring opportunit­ies, which has been the case for the Lakers so far in their exhibition­s — especially in Monday's victory over the

Brooklyn Nets.

Monday's shot chart from the non-deep bench Lakers players significan­tly skewed toward 3-pointers and shots inside the paint — the signs of a healthy offensive system.

“Our offense is a free-flowing offense and it's predicated on space and quickness,” Ham said. “So whenever we cause the defense to be occupied, we have shooters out there. They have to account for people at the 3-point line, it opens up lanes and allows us to love and live in the paint. Which, in turn, puts that much more pressure on the defense to get stops and it opens us up to win the free throw line as well.”

Using five-out spacing should be easier for the Lakers this season compared to the last one, when they were a bottom-six team in both 3-point attempt frequency and accuracy.

They added players in free agency who attempt a high rate of 3-point shots and are going to force defenses to respect them from behind the arc in Gabe Vincent, Christian Wood and Taurean Prince.

D'Angelo Russell is a highvolume 3-point threat who will take them off the dribble in addition to catch-andshoot opportunit­ies. Austin Reaves is also a versatile 3-point shooter.

LeBron James has become a more respected shooter in the latter stages of his career.

Ham said after Tuesday's practice that he's “requested to see six 3-point attempts a game — three per half, at least” from big man Anthony Davis. That might not happen, which Ham acknowledg­ed, but Davis seems poised to take more 3-point shots after attempting 1.3 per game last season, his lowest output since the 2014-15 season.

The Lakers might not replicate the 55 3-point attempts they had Monday, but letting it fly from behind the arc and making defenses pay for sagging off of them has clearly been an emphasis.

“We have better shooting this year,” James said. “We have a lot of guys who shot the ball extremely well from the 3-point line last year. Obviously, it starts with putting pressure on the rim and still getting to the free-throw line.”

 ?? ETHAN MILLER — GETTY IMAGES ?? Lakers coach Darvin Ham says he's been happy with the team's spacing on offense in the first two preseason games.
ETHAN MILLER — GETTY IMAGES Lakers coach Darvin Ham says he's been happy with the team's spacing on offense in the first two preseason games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States