Los Angeles Times

Lakers now put focus on playoff push

The players are ready to move past anxiety and uneasiness of the NBA trade deadline.

- By Tania Ganguli

The Lakers’ 129-128 victory over the Boston Celtics on Thursday night had a healing effect. Players spent the week frustrated and tense, some hurt or worried about what their futures held.

On Friday, the Lakers set to work moving forward, turning their attention to what’s been their goal all season long — getting back to the playoffs.

“My hope is our story is a little bit, maybe, like [the New England Patriots] where we’re on the outside but we find a way to get in the playoffs with the skill sets we’ve added,” Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said. “And then much like [Tom] Brady did, we let one of the all-time greats — LeBron [James] — take the helm for this team and make some noise.”

Pelinka then pointed to the impact of newcomers Reggie Bullock and Mike Muscala, each acquired in separate trades before the deadline on Thursday.

“I almost look at Bullock and Muscala, my hope is, much like [Julian] Edelman was, it’s just one player, but that can have such a big impact on overall chemistry and I hope those two guys can come in and have that impact,” Pelinka said.

The Lakers, with one remaining roster spot to fill, will look at Carmelo Anthony and Markieff Morris, according to a person with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly.

Once the roster is complete, the first step for the Lakers will be moving past the unease of the last week. That will be critical for a group that is now 28-27, in 10th place in the Western Conference and still well within striking distance of the playoffs, only 11⁄2 games behind the eighth-place Clippers (30-26).

“If I’m healthy, and we’re a collective group, I think we can make a push [in the playoffs],” James said. “And that’s what it’s all about. If I

continue to get into form and we continue to get into form as a collective group, then we’ll be strong.”

Magic Johnson, the Lakers’ president of basketball operations, plans on meeting with players this weekend in Philadelph­ia to help reach that goal, according to two people with knowledge of the situation not authorized to speak publicly.

He will talk to the Lakers about the Anthony Davis trade situation that nearly pulled them under, emphasizin­g that the NBA is a business and that this franchise is about winning championsh­ips and doing all it can to accomplish that goal. And he wants to provide an open forum for players so they can move forward together.

He’ll also tell them how impressed he was seeing them defeat the rival Boston Celtics on Thursday night and encourage them to take that same fight to Philadelph­ia when they play the 76ers on Sunday in another nationally televised game, two people said.

Lonzo Ball, Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma, Josh Hart, Kentavious CaldwellPo­pe, Rajon Rondo and Ivica Zubac all were involved in the Lakers’ trade talks with the New Orleans Pelicans for Davis.

But the NBA trade deadline passed and, with the exception of Zubac, all remained with the Lakers. Zubac and Michael Beasley were traded to the Clippers for Muscala in the final hour before the deadline.

Winning helped the Lakto ers begin to overcome their ill feelings of the last week.

Asked if he thought the week eroded the players’ trust in the front office, Pelinka said he couldn’t directly speak about players.

“Magic, Luke and I have really, really close, open relationsh­ips with all our players,” Pelinka said of Johnson and coach Luke Walton. “I think that that’s something, I think, we really take great pride in. I think all players understand there’s a business component to playing in the NBA, but I think maybe because Magic was a player, I played, I was also a player representa­tive, you kind of have a deeper understand­ing and appreciati­on for some of the other things players go through.”

While Pelinka said he wasn’t aware of Johnson’s plan to meet with the team, he acknowledg­ed that Johnson would be attending the Lakers’ game in Philadelph­ia, after first flying east for a reunion of the 1979 Michigan State team that won a national championsh­ip.

Muscala was one of two capable shooters the Lakers added at the trade deadline. They also traded Svi Mykhailiuk to the Detroit Pistons for Bullock, who is expected to be in uniform against the 76ers.

As a rookie, Mykhailiuk spent only a few months with the Lakers. But Zubac left more of an imprint. The 2016 second-round pick was in his third season. He had worked his way into the starting lineup, starting the season with an illness.

Pelinka said the decision trade Zubac was difficult, but was done in service of making the playoffs.

“When we evaluated our fives with Ivica, [Tyson] Chandler and [JaVale] McGee, we felt like there were some similariti­es. We just wanted to add a spread five that could kind of open up the court,” Pelinka said of acquiring Muscala.

When the Lakers signed James they did not surround him with shooters and said their plan was to fill the roster with playmakers for a fast-paced offense. They wanted to try something different from what James’ teams had looked like in the past. With injuries to playmakers such as Rondo and Ball, Pelinka said the offense slowed and increased the need for shooters.

The trade for Muscala opened a roster spot for the Lakers and Pelinka said he planned to speak with Walton on Friday about the best way to use that spot.

Morris was acquired by the Pelicans on Thursday in a trade with the Washington Wizards, but he was waived later that day.

The power forward hasn’t played a game since Dec. 26. In January, he was diagnosed with transient cervical neuropraxi­a, a spinal injury. His timeline for recovery was six weeks.

Although the passing of the trade deadline gave the Lakers some certainty, there remain questions as they aspire to make a playoff run.

Staff writer Broderick Turner contribute­d to this report.

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