The Lakers are being linked to a familiar kind of bargain-bin swingman, but this one comes with a very specific profile: Gary Payton II, the 6-foot-2 son of former Boston Celtics Hall of Fame guard and NBA champion Gary Payton.
Los Angeles, as the source notes, would ideally prefer to add a perimeter player who can really space the floor. Instead, Lakers insider Jovan Buha floated the idea of the team pursuing Payton, even with the caveat that his outside shot has been a problem. Payton shot under 30% from three last season, and that’s the kind of number that usually makes a front office think twice.
Still, Buha pointed to the value Payton brings in other ways. “Bruce Brown and Gary Payton II are more of these power forwards on offense but guards on defense, so they check off a unique box with their profiles,” Buha said Monday.
That unique box is part of what has kept Payton in the league. He’s never been a high-volume scorer, but he has carved out a role as an anticipatory defender, an off-ball cutter, and the kind of teammate coaches trust. Those traits helped the Warriors win the 2021-22 championship, even though they didn’t begin that season as title favorites.
Payton spent the start of the 2022-23 season with the Portland Trail Blazers before eventually making his way back to Golden State. In 2025-26, the 33-year-old averaged 7.5 points, 3.6 rebounds, and 0.9 steals per game, but his three-point shooting remained a concern for the second straight year. He hit 29.1% from deep after making 32.6% of his attempts in 2024-25.
For all of Payton’s strengths, the Lakers are expected to keep looking for a wing who can lift the roster more directly this summer.
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Tatum addressed the change publicly for the first time at an event for his childrens book, and he made clear the transition has not been easy on a personal level. Even with Boston always moving forward, the emotional weight of seeing a longtime teammate and co-star gone is part of the story now, and it is the kind of development that changes not just the roster, but the entire feel of what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
