Lakers Just Sent A Message About LeBron's Future After Luka

Lakers' commitment to Luka Doncic marks the end of an era as LeBron James potentially sees his influence wane in Los Angeles.

Olden Polynice thinks the Lakers made their choice the moment Luka Doncic arrived.

The former NBA center said on Byron Scott’s Fast Break podcast that Los Angeles had already started building for a future that no longer centered on LeBron James. In Polynice’s view, the message was obvious once the Lakers landed Doncic and then committed big money to Austin Reaves.

“Look, LeBron is an all-time great. Twenty-three years.

His numbers speak for themselves. But when the Lakers brought in Luka, we all knew things had changed.

In that moment, LeBron and his camp knew things were different too. He was going to have to take a back seat, whether he wanted to or not.

The Lakers made it clear. It wasn’t really LeBron’s decision to leave.

The Lakers had already moved on. They were done.”

He pointed to Reaves’ four-year, $185 million extension as the clearest signal of all.

“That four-year, $185 million deal for Austin Reaves told you everything you needed to know. It was their way of saying, ‘We’re done.’ ‘Thank you for eight years, but we’re moving in a different direction.'”

The Lakers’ offseason moves back up that idea. Rather than trying to keep LeBron at the center of everything, the team shifted toward a younger core built around Doncic. Reaves is now positioned as Doncic’s running mate, and the front office spent the rest of the offseason adding pieces with the new direction in mind.

Walker Kessler came in to address the long-running issues at center. Quentin Grimes, Collin Sexton, Sandro Mamukelashvili and Ziaire Williams were added for youth, athleticism and depth. Jonathan Kuminga is also being linked as another long-term piece.

Polynice also argued that the market around LeBron says plenty about where things stand now.

“They’re scrambling right now. It’s not like it was 10 years ago.

Rich Paul and LeBron aren’t getting teams calling nonstop. Now it’s more like, ‘Let’s see if we can get him at a discount.’

That’s how teams are operating. The second apron is kicking everybody’s ass.

It really is. It handcuffs teams with what they can and can’t do.

That’s why you saw the Jaylen Brown situation.”

Byron Scott made a similar point earlier this week, saying LeBron remains elite but that teams have to account for more than just what he does on the floor. Scott pointed to LeBron’s age, salary expectations and the attention that comes with signing him, and said only a few teams are truly in the mix.

Still, calling the market weak may go too far. LeBron has several contenders watching his situation, including the Cleveland Cavaliers, Miami Heat, Philadelphia 76ers, Golden State Warriors, Minnesota Timberwolves and Denver Nuggets. The bigger obstacle appears to be the second-apron rules, not a total lack of interest.

From the Lakers’ side, though, Polynice’s read is hard to dismiss. Once Doncic was in the building, Los Angeles was staring at a choice between staying tied to a 41-year-old superstar or pivoting toward a younger player in his prime.

They chose the younger path.

What comes next will decide whether that gamble looks smart or shortsighted. If Doncic and Reaves push the Lakers back into title contention, the transition away from LeBron will be seen as the right call. If not, the questions around how the franchise handled the end of his run aren’t going away anytime soon.

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