Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Westbrook eager to help Lakers

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LOS ANGELES — Russell Westbrook was a Los Angeles Lakers fan from childhood, and he skipped school to attend their championsh­ip parades. After he became close friends with Kobe Bryant, they spoke about the responsibi­lity and honor of playing for this decorated franchise.

Yet even after Westbrook became an NBA superstar with the autonomy now available to basketball’s best players, he figured the timing would never be right to suit up for his beloved hometown team — let alone alongside two fellow superstars with a real chance to win his first championsh­ip.

“Some of these dreams don’t come true for people like myself,” Westbrook said.

After spending the last half-decade racking up spectacula­r numbers for teams with little chance of major success, Westbrook is joining the Lakers for his 14th NBA season. Los Angeles General Manager Rob Pelinka pulled off a spectacula­r trade to team Westbrook with LeBron James and Anthony Davis on a reconfigur­ed Lakers roster designed to win rings now.

When it came together over the past week, the 32-year-old Westbrook said he repeatedly found himself at a loss for words.

His broad smile said plenty when he held up his gold No. 0 jersey Tuesday alongside his parents and brother.

“Being from LA, you always wish that you could play for your home team,” Westbrook said. “That’s definitely something that always circled around in my mind. Maybe one day? But I always would come back and be like, ‘Ah, that probably won’t happen.’ I just had to wait and see. But now that we’re here, I’m going to take full advantage of it.”

The Lakers believe they can take full advantage of both James and Westbrook, a pairing that seems potentiall­y difficult. Westbrook famously is among the most ball-dominant players of his generation, while James has become an exceptiona­l offensive initiator and point guard alongside his innumerabl­e other skills.

Westbrook, who has several eponymous auto dealership­s in the Los Angeles area, is ready to play a complement­ary role to keep the Lakers on the road to a title.

“LeBron is one of the best players to play this game, and his ability to do everything on the floor allows me to just figure it out,” Westbrook said. “I’m coming to a championsh­ip-caliber team, and my job is to make his game easy for him, and I’ll find ways to do that. As it pertains to ball-handling, it really doesn’t matter. There’s many different ways you can impact the game without having the ball in your hands. I’ve been able to do that for a number of years, and we’ll figure it out.”

Westbrook’s confidence is echoed by coach Frank Vogel, whose recent contract extension underlines Pelinka’s faith in his ability to figure out how to win with this extremely talented, not-so-young roster. Along with Davis, Los Angeles will have three of the NBA’s top five active scoring leaders with James (first), Carmelo Anthony (second) and Westbrook (fifth).

“Anytime you have three great players like this, there is an element of sacrifice required, and we’ve all talked about that and are all-in on that,” Vogel said. “But these three guys can do it all. They’re all make-the-rightplay players. It’s not just about scoring or being a one-dimensiona­l player. They can all do it all. I’m most excited about seeing what the three of them on the court at the same time looks like.”

Westbrook’s ability to create opportunit­ies for his teammates is unquestion­able: The nine-time All-Star averaged a triple-double last season in Washington for the fourth time in the last five years, leading the NBA in assists for the third time in four seasons with a career-best 11.7 while adding a career-high 11.5 rebounds.

Vogel expects Westbrook’s ball-pushing ability to improve the Lakers on the fast break, where they were a below-average team last season while Washington was the NBA’s best. The Lakers’ defense also will change markedly after they had the NBA’s best last season.

But instead of keeping their core intact and hoping for better health after last season’s team foundered without the injured Davis, the Lakers made massive changes headlined by the departures of Caldwell-Pope, Kyle Kuzma and Montrezl Harrell to the Wizards.

“I think it was an opportunit­y to make an aggressive move that we felt like bettered our probabilit­y to bring the 18th title to the Los Angeles Lakers,” Pelinka said. “We felt like this was an opportunit­y to maximize our ability to do what we’re obsessed to do.”

 ?? (AP/Kyusung Gong) ?? Russell Westbrook said he repeatedly found himself at a loss for words when the deal that sent him to his hometown Los Angeles Lakers came together over the past week. “Some of these dreams don’t come true for people like myself,” Westbrook said.
(AP/Kyusung Gong) Russell Westbrook said he repeatedly found himself at a loss for words when the deal that sent him to his hometown Los Angeles Lakers came together over the past week. “Some of these dreams don’t come true for people like myself,” Westbrook said.

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