The Lakers’ Summer League watch list has a new name rising fast: Arthur Kaluma.
The former Creighton forward has turned heads in Las Vegas by building his scoring output game by game. He opened with 12 points against the Golden State Warriors, then followed with 16 against the San Antonio Spurs, 18 against the Oklahoma City Thunder, and broke out with 34 against the Dallas Mavericks.
That kind of climb has already caught the attention of Lakers Nation’s Daniel Starkand, who thinks Los Angeles should move quickly if it wants to keep Kaluma in the fold.
“Lakers need to give Arthur Kaluma a two-way contract before someone else does,” Starkand wrote on X/Twitter Saturday.
The catch is simple: the Lakers’ two-way slots are already occupied. If the team wants Kaluma, it would need to make room by moving on from one of the players currently holding one of those deals. Starkand was asked specifically about Peter Suder, the undrafted shooting guard out of Miami, Ohio, and said the Lakers could go that route.
“Yes, they’ve done it in the past,” Starkand replied.
Kaluma has given the Lakers plenty to like beyond the scoring spike. Last season with the South Bay Lakers, he shot 55.6% from three over five games, and he’s carried that perimeter touch into Summer League, hitting 38.1% from deep through four games in Las Vegas. He’s also shown he can punish closeouts as a slasher when defenders fly at him on the arc.
There’s more to his appeal than offense. Kaluma has been active defensively, showing up in the right places as a help-side defender and holding his own in one-on-one matchups.
Suder brings a different profile. He made his name as a shooter, including a 42.1% mark in his senior season with the Redhawks, but his struggles creating space and his defensive limitations could push the Lakers toward a change if they decide Kaluma is the better bet.
In Other News...
Lakers Duo Sent Fans A Strange Signal In Uncertain Offseason
The Lakers have spent the summer reshaping the roster around a flurry of moves, adding Walker Kessler and signing Colin Sexton, Quentin Grimes and Austin Reaves while also exploring more changes on the margins. Dalton Knecht and Jarred Vanderbilt have been part of the conversation, with both names surfacing in trade talk as the front office keeps working through options and no deal has come together yet.
Still, the sight of both players at Summer League in Las Vegas offered a curious backdrop to all that uncertainty. For a team that may be trying to clear more room for another move, their presence around the action only added to the sense that the Lakers are not done navigating this offseason, and that the next step could involve a familiar pairing if the right trade materializes. [Read more 🡒]
Collin Sexton Just Walked Into A Familiar LeBron Lakers Twist
Collin Sextons arrival in Los Angeles comes with a little dj vu attached. He signed with the Lakers as a free agent after LeBron James departed, and it is not the first time Sexton has found himself entering a franchise in the same offseason James walked out the door. He was drafted by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the summer James left for the second time, so the timing feels oddly familiar even before Sexton has put on a Lakers uniform.
For the Lakers, it is part of a broader reset after a recent playoff loss, with the front office reworking the roster around Sexton and several other new additions. The move gives Los Angeles another fresh piece as it tries to reshape the team without James, while Sexton brings his own history of landing in the middle of a post-LeBron transition. The only question now is how this version of the Lakers comes together once the new faces start fitting into place. [Read more 🡒]
JJ Redicks Message To Adou Thiero Says A Lot About Lakers Plans
Adou Thiero has already done enough in Summer League to get the Lakers attention, and not just because of the numbers. The rookie has stood out with his defensive activity and athleticism, showing the kind of disruptive presence Los Angeles can use on the wing, while also putting up a productive scoring line in Las Vegas.
What makes his early run more interesting is the direction JJ Redick is pushing him in. The Lakers coach has made it clear that Thieros value starts with becoming a defensive pest, a role that fits the way the team wants to build out its depth if his summer form carries over into camp and preseason. He has yet to connect from deep, but the bigger question for Los Angeles is whether this is the start of a longer path into Redicks plans. [Read more 🡒]
