The Lakers spent the offseason reshaping their roster, re-signing Austin Reaves and sending multiple picks in a deal for Walker Kessler, moves they believe leave them ready to hold their own in the Western Conference. But not everybody is buying into the plan.
Stephen A. Smith made that clear on his podcast, where he zeroed in on the makeup of Los Angeles’ new top trio. His complaint wasn’t subtle.
“Where the hell do the Los Angeles Lakers think they are going with a bunch of white dudes? Your three top players are white dudes?
Really? This ain’t golf, this ain’t baseball, it ain’t even soccer.
This is basketball,” said Smith on his podcast. “In NBA history, when have you seen your three most prominent players on the basketball team all be white, and what takes you to the promised land?
Somebody gotta say it, so I’m saying it. This is basketball; I’m not complaining; I’m making the point.
The Lakers aren’t going anywhere being led by three white dudes in today’s generation of basketball. It ain’t happening.
They both have earned what they have earned, and with LeBron James, I get it. But those two and Walker Kessler?
You ain’t scaring anybody with that. Rob Pelinka has made this white dude central.
No wonder LeBron James walked out the door.”
The reaction to Smith’s comments was immediate, with fans calling the take racist. Smith, though, framed his argument as one rooted in NBA history. The source points out that no team has ever won a championship with its three leading players being white, and notes that even for players such as Larry Bird, Nikola Jokic, and Dirk Nowitzki, most of their teammates were Black.
The broader point, as laid out in the source, is that Black athletes have made up the vast majority of the league for most of its history and were typically more athletic than their lighter-skinned counterparts.
Los Angeles has also built out the rest of the roster in a way that stands out. The team’s depth chart includes Dalton Knecht, Jake LaRavia, Drew Timme, and Sandro Mamukelashvili, and head coach JJ Redick is white as well. The source also notes that the Lakers lost LeBron James, described there as one of their biggest culture setters and a presence who helped maintain peace and prosperity in the locker room.
Still, the Lakers and their supporters don’t appear concerned. The source says they are focused on performance, not race, and that Reaves, Doncic, and Walker have earned their lucrative contracts. In that view, the trio has the talent to push the Lakers toward success and silence the stereotypes around them.
Smith doesn’t see it that way. He believes the Lakers have put together a group that won’t intimidate anyone and will end up regretting the way they committed to this new core. Now it’s on the Lakers to prove him wrong.
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Kalen DeBoer Faces A Bigger Alabama Question Than Fans Realize
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That approach has left Alabama with a 2027 class that is sitting near the bottom of the SEC, and the Tide have also been low in portal activity for the 2026 cycle. ESPN analyst Paul Finebaum recently highlighted that philosophy as a defining question around the program, and it is easy to see why. In a league where roster churn has become a shortcut for quick fixes, Alabama is betting on a slower path, one that could shape the next few years of DeBoers tenure as much as any single game. [Read more 🡒]
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Even Alabama Still Has Some Shockingly Close Firsts Left
For a program that has piled up 985 wins and 18 national championships over 134 years, Alabama still has an oddly long list of firsts left on the schedule. As the 2026-27 season arrives, the Crimson Tide have never lined up against 46 FBS programs, a mix that includes 10 from Power Four leagues and a broader group of opponents that, for one reason or another, have simply never crossed paths with the Tide.
Some of those gaps are surprising enough to make a future matchup feel like a small event in itself, especially with first-time games already on the calendar in the coming years. Alabama has a few of those dates circled already, and postseason pairings could always add another new name to the ledger, which is part of what makes a schedule around a blueblood so strangely unfinished. [Read more 🡒]
