Lakers Just Got The Jokic News They Were Hoping To Avoid

The Lakers face an uphill battle this season as they grapple with a lackluster roster composition and the dashing of their key hopes to land Nikola Jokic.

The Lakers’ offseason may be close to finished, but one of the biggest names tied to their long-shot plans just took himself off the board.

Nikola Jokic has now made it clear he plans to wait until next summer before signing an extension with Denver, shutting down the speculation that followed his decision to pass on a new deal with the Nuggets this summer. For Los Angeles, that’s the kind of update they were hoping not to hear.

If Jokic is holding off now, the next move is likely Denver’s, and the Nuggets will be able to offer him a five-year max next summer. That makes a future run at him from the Lakers look highly unlikely.

So much for the dream scenario. The Lakers will have to keep building the hard way.

That leaves the focus squarely on the roster they actually have, and the reaction around their offseason has not been especially warm. The group they’ve assembled has a strange balance to it: plenty of offense, but very little defensive backbone beyond one clear defensive-minded piece.

Looking at a projected starting five of Luka Doncic, Austin Reaves, Quintin Grimes, Sandro Mamukaleshvili, and Walker Kessler, the scoring is obvious. The stop-the-other-team part is where the concerns start piling up.

And the Lakers don’t have much flexibility to fix it. They only have three tradeable picks, which makes a meaningful move on the market feel unlikely. Jokic was the kind of star-level possibility that could have changed the whole conversation, but that path now looks closed.

The front office did make one notable upgrade, replacing Deandre Ayton with Walker Kessler. But that move came at a real cost: two first-round picks and two second-round picks. Kessler is also set to make at least $32.5 million annually over the next four seasons, a number that puts him in top-10 center territory even if his game doesn’t quite match that label.

There’s no question Kessler brings elite rim protection and rebounding. The issue is the price tag. The Lakers likely could have put together a solid center rotation for about $10 million less per year, and that difference matters when the roster is already leaning so heavily on Doncic, Reaves, and Walker as its core.

As things stand, the Lakers look more like a top-six team in the West than a true title force. That’s a respectable place to be.

It’s just not the standard the franchise usually sells. And if Jokic is staying in Denver, this version of the Lakers may be the one they’re stuck with.

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