Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Pelinka’s savviness? Check

- HELENE ELLIOTT

In between making moves that have reinforced and rejuvenate­d the Lakers’ roster, Rob Pelinka has passed time during the pandemic by watching Netflix. For most of us, the streaming service provides entertainm­ent. For the Lakers’ general manager and vice president of basketball operations, watching the chess-themed miniseries “The Queen’s Gambit” provided a good analogy to his approach to free agency during this abbreviate­d NBA offseason.

“I don’t know if anyone has watched that show,” he said, “but free agency is a little bit like playing a game of simultaneo­us chess with 29 other teams and they’re all really smart and they have their plans and their boards and they’re going to make their moves and we’ve thought out our various chess moves that we can make and you never know exactly how the game’s going to be played out.

“I think if you watch that show on Netflix you see the ins and outs of chess and how to study the board, but you don’t know until you play the game how it’s going to go.”

Pelinka has won the game of offseason roster management, making the Lakers younger and grittier — if a bit smaller — while also securing LeBron James to an extension through 2022-23 and signing Anthony Davis to a five-year max deal through 2024-25. “Our two pillars, our two captains, our two unicorns,” Pelinka called them during a webinar on Friday. “It’s being able to find young players that can win now and also carry forward the torch with AD and lining up with his age.”

Before last season, it seemed that Pelinka could do no right. He couldn’t lure Kawhi Leonard to sign as a free agent in the summer of 2019, he couldn’t get Monty Williams or Tyronn Lue to take the coaching job, and he had to take a chance on an apparently faded Dwight Howard after center DeMarcus Cousins suffered a torn ACL. The Lakers mortgaged their future to acquire Davis from New Orleans, with James coming off a groin injury there was no guarantee their gamble would pay off.

Now, in the warm and fuzzy aftermath of the Lakers’ first championsh­ip since 2010, it seems like Pelinka can do little wrong. Frank Vogel proved to be an inspired choice who got James and Davis invested in a defense-first mentality. When they enthusiast­ically bought in, everyone else fell in behind them. Davis became that second unicorn alongside James, a force at both ends of the floor and a singular leader in the playoffs. The supporting cast stepped up admirably.

But to stand still would have meant falling behind, and Pelinka had to move his pieces around the chessboard. On Friday he thanked Howard, Rajon Rondo, JaVale McGee, Danny Green and Avery

Bradley for their contributi­ons to the team, saying they will “be etched in the history of this franchise forever,” but losing them was a reasonable cost in his plan to not only repeat but to establish dominance for years to come.

To add the snarl he and Vogel wanted, Pelinka signed big man Montrezl Harrell, the NBA’s sixth man of the year, away from the Clippers and traded for guard Dennis Schroder, the sixth man runner-up. Schroder is 27 and in position to become a long-term and solid supporting player. “I love his edge that he plays with, his demeanor. The nasty competitor side of him is something that you hate playing against but you love it when he’s on your team. I’m thrilled about it,” said Vogel, who added it’s too early to say if Schroder will start or come off the bench.

“He’s one of the fastest guys in the league and we were a great fastbreaki­ng team last year, so I think he’s only going to add to what we do in that regard. I always called him the speeding bullet. There’s probably very few coaches in the league that are bigger fans of his game than I am.”

These aren’t the glitzy “Lake Show” Lakers. Their work ethic is more lunch pail than lavish expense-account lunch. The newcomers’ hunger and energy should fit in well.

“I think Frank Vogel and his coaching staff have made it clear that the identity of this team is centered on defense and just playing gritty, tenacious basketball,” Pelinka said. “When you have talented guys like

LeBron and AD things on the offensive end are going to work themselves out.

“You look at the guys we added: Schroder I think is a pit bull of a defender. Montrezl Harrell is one of the hardest-playing players in the NBA, just the way he brings it every night. I think Marc Gasol, [the 2013] defensive player of the year who is one of the highest-IQ players in today’s game, and then Wesley Matthews, who manages to stand out.”

The Lakers may be overestima­ting Harrell’s defensive ability, but it’s also possible that with no need to cover up for teammates’ defensive failings and with better defenders around him he will elevate his game. The influence of strong leadership and the not-sodistant gleam of a championsh­ip ring could work wonders for him and for the Lakers’ repeat chances.

“I think it’s really building a team around the identity of kind of how the coaching staff wants to coach. And that’s with defense and high basketball IQ and grit, and that’s how we built it,” Pelinka said.

“Those threads and those themes can run through a franchise and can continue because it’s just the natural part of sports that players will come and go, but if you have that identity in who you are and how you play, that’ll endure, and that’s what this team’s about right now.”

Grandmaste­r, the highest attainable title in chess, isn’t on Pelinka’s résumé. Another championsh­ip or two would make a case for adding the basketball equivalent of that honor.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States