The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Lakers add center Andre Drummond for postseason push

- By GREG BEACHAM

LOS ANGELES » Andre Drummond is joining the Los Angeles Lakers for the playoff push.

The Lakers announced the signing of the twotime All-star center less than an hour before Sunday night’s game against the Orlando Magic. Drummond announced his decision with a post on his Instagram account earlier in the day, writing “Back to work” underneath an illustrati­on of himself in a Lakers uniform.

Drummond agreed to a buyout Friday from the Cleveland Cavaliers, who acquired the four-time NBA rebounding champion last year after nearly eight seasons in Detroit. He had to clear waivers before he could join a team of his choosing, and Drummond chose to link up with Lebron James, Anthony Davis and the defending NBA champions.

“We’re all thrilled. He’s one of the best centers in the league and someone every defensive coordinato­r is going to have to account for while trying to slow down Lebron, AD and our guards when we get going,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said after Sunday’s 96-93 victory over the Magic. “He can dominate on both sides and his physicalit­y is something they have to account for.”

Vogel said he wasn’t sure if Drummond would be available for the Lakers’ next game, which is Wednesday against the Milwaukee Bucks.

Drummond is almost certain to get his first significan­t NBA postseason playing time with the Lakers after appearing in only eight playoff games — and losing all eight — in two postseason trips with the Pistons.

When Drummond gets up to playing speed after sitting out the past six weeks, the two-time Allstar Game selection should be a notable upgrade at center for Los Angeles, which won a competitio­n with several contenders for his services over the weekend.

Veteran Marc Gasol played inconsiste­ntly for the Lakers even before he returned recently from a 3 1/2-week bout with coronaviru­s, while 6-foot-8 Montrezl Harrell is undersized for the biggest defensive assignment­s in the middle.

“I really believe we are going to need all three of those guys and we will use all three of them with the condensed schedule and the playoffs coming up,” Vogel said.

Harrell knows Drummond is eager to play, especially after his long layoff, but hasn’t considered the lineup implicatio­ns.

“Everything comes from the top office and coaching staff. I am going to keep playing the way I can play,” he said. We got a great player who is going to help our team and organizati­on.”

Davis also plays center in many postseason matchups, but Drummond’s rebounding and interior scoring should immediatel­y boost the Lakers as they attempt to hang on to a top seed in the Western Conference without James and Davis. James is out indefinite­ly with a sprained right ankle, while Davis hasn’t played since Feb. 14 due to a right calf injury.

Drummond is averaging 17.5 points, 13.5 rebounds and 2.5 assists in 25 starts for the Cavs this season. He hasn’t played since Feb. 12, when Cleveland benched him to give more playing time to youngster Jarrett Allen.

Drummond would be second in the league in rebounds per game to Atlanta’s Clint Capela if he had played enough games to qualify among the league leaders. His 4.0 offensive rebounds per game would be third in the NBA.

The Lakers currently rank ninth in the NBA in rebounds per game (45.1), but just 17th in offensive rebounds (9.6).

The 17-time champion franchise hasn’t had a rebounder of Drummond’s accomplish­ments for decades. The last Lakers player to top Drummond’s career average of 13.8 rebounds per game in even one single season was Kareem Abduljabba­r in 1975-76, and Los Angeles has had just one league rebounding champ in those ensuing 45 years: Dwight Howard in 2012-13.

“So much of the playoffs are about the paint, you know, and he’s a physical force down there,” Orlando coach Steve Clifford said about Drummond. “He’s a great rim protector and one of the great offensive rebounders in our game. He could win one or two playoff games for you just for this physicalit­y and size alone.”

Drummond’s arrival in LA is the latest developmen­t in the NBA’S annual super-team agglomerat­ions around the trade deadline. Brooklyn added Blake Griffin and Lamarcus Aldridge this month, while Miami got Victor Oladipo and Denver landed Aaron Gordon and Javale Mcgee.

 ?? TONY DEJAK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? FILE - In this Feb 5, 2021, file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers’ Andre Drummond drives the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Milwaukee Bucks in Cleveland. Drummond is now a free agent and can sign with a contending team after reaching a buyout with the Cavaliers. Drummond, who has not played since midfebruar­y, began negotiatin­g terms of the buyout with the Cavs on Thursday, March 25, 2021, after the club could not trade the 27-year-old.
TONY DEJAK - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE - In this Feb 5, 2021, file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers’ Andre Drummond drives the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Milwaukee Bucks in Cleveland. Drummond is now a free agent and can sign with a contending team after reaching a buyout with the Cavaliers. Drummond, who has not played since midfebruar­y, began negotiatin­g terms of the buyout with the Cavs on Thursday, March 25, 2021, after the club could not trade the 27-year-old.

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