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.
In Other News...
Jaylen Brown Trade Just Raised The Stakes For Houston's Star Debate
Jaylen Browns name has a way of pulling Houston back into the bigger star conversation, especially now that the Rockets are trying to chart their next move with real ambition. Around the league, the latest deal involving Brown has only sharpened the question of what a compelling package would have looked like from Houstons side, and it naturally turns the spotlight onto the kinds of players and assets the Rockets could have put together if they chose to chase that level of talent.
The hypothetical starts with the sort of mix Houston can actually talk itself into: Alperen Sengun at the center of the offer, Tari Eason in a sign-and-trade, Fred VanVleets expiring contract, and draft capital to sweeten the deal. It is the kind of structure that invites a hard comparison with the package that ultimately got done, and it leaves Houston in the familiar place of wondering whether its path to a true difference-maker is still open, or whether the market has already moved past what the Rockets can realistically assemble. [Read more 🡒]
Rockets Cannot Afford This Star Chasing Mistake Right Now
The Rockets have spent so much time building around youth and upside that any star-chasing detour has to be measured against what they have already assembled. That is why the latest round of trade speculation has landed with some unease, even before Houston starts weighing the cost of adding a veteran name who comes with a long injury history and a shrinking runway.
Anthony Davis has still been productive when available, but availability is the whole issue here. He played just 20 games last season and has averaged 46.5 games over his last six years, which is exactly the sort of profile that should make Houston hesitate before putting core pieces on the table. For a team trying to protect its future, the risk is not just giving up too much, but giving up too much for a player whose timeline may not match theirs. [Read more 🡒]
Rockets Face One Backcourt Question That Could Define Their Season
The Rockets are heading into next season with a much deeper look in the backcourt, and the point guard rotation could end up being one of the quiet drivers of how far they go. Fred VanVleet is back in the mix, Marcus Smart was added in free agency to give the group more stability and toughness, and Reed Sheppard gives Houston another option if the staff needs to shuffle the guard spots around.
What makes it interesting is that this is not just a numbers game, it is a fit question. VanVleet, Smart and Sheppard each bring something different, but the Rockets will have to sort out who handles the offense, who plays alongside it and how much flexibility they want to preserve for matchups once the season starts to get real. [Read more 🡒]
