After the Indiana Pacers play the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday at Crypto.com Arena and continue on the road to Sacramento, center Myles Turner might have mixed feelings about boarding the team plane instead of staying in L.A.
Last month, after trade talks between the Pacers and Lakers fizzled just before training camp, Turner took the rare tactic of publicly lobbying for the teams to revisit the deal.
“If I’m the Lakers, I take a very hard look at this with the position that you’re in,” Turner said, responding to a question about the potential swap as a guest on ESPN’s “The Woj Pod” with Adrian Wojnarowski. “I know what I can provide for a team — my leadership, my shot-blocking, my 3-point ability and just my ability to make plays out there on the floor.”
The proposed trade, which involved Turner and shooting guard Buddy Hield going to the Lakers and L.A. sending point guard Russell Westbrook and draft capital in return, fell apart when the Lakers backed away, multiple sources told ESPN.
Klay Thompson, and ranks in the top five in accuracy on wide-open 3s.
Hield could allow the Lakers to get more out of LeBron James, who has assisted on the most 3s in NBA history. His Lakers teammates this season are shooting 22.9% on wide-open 3s off his passes, which is the worst percentage for any passer who has created at least 40 wide-open 3 opportunities this season, according to Second Spectrum.
And Turner, who is in a contract year, is putting up career-best numbers in scoring (18.2 points), FG% (55.9), 3FG% (43.1), FT% (82.9) and rebounds (8.1) per game. He has played in 14 of 19 games for the Pacers after suffering an ankle injury that sidelined him for the first week of the season.
The Lakers’ defense has allowed opponents to shoot 68% at the rim in November, seventh worst in the league this month. Turner can help there, too. The 26-year-old is averaging 2.8 blocks per game, a category he has led the league in twice in his eight seasons.
And he would allow Anthony Davis to continue playing inside, where he prefers, with his range from deep.
Is Westbrook still a problem for L.A.?
Not necessarily, but his contract is. The Lakers don’t have enough reliable players and turning Westbrook’s $47.1 million contract into two rotation players gets them closer to the depth needed for a postseason run.
Westbrook’s 15.7 points and 8.1 assists per game as a reserve have been a rare bright spot in the Lakers’ season. After struggling so much last year, he has found a rhythm as the leader of the second unit.
Some of Westbrook’s decision-making has been second guessed — notably by Davis following a loss to the Kings on Nov. 11 that dropped the Lakers to 2-10. “Couple ‘my bads’ at the end of the first half, and they go on a 14-5 run,” Davis said, referring to a rough stretch by the point guard when L.A. lost momentum going into halftime. “Certain moments where we can’t have ‘my bads.'” Westbrook is also shooting a career-worst 39.4% from the field and has the seventh-worst turnover rate in the league, while playing the fewest minutes of anyone in the bottom 10.
Ham, who adjusted Westbrook’s role from starter to sixth man just five games into the season, has continuously championed the 15-year veteran since the change.
“I love what he’s bringing, coming off with that second unit and giving us a boost when needed,” Ham said when asked, after James suffered a groin injury earlier this month, if Westbrook would return to the starting lineup. “Just him being able to orchestrate and be Russ. Dominate the ball, dominate the pace and play free.”
But if the Lakers intend to upgrade the roster this season around James to give the 20-year veteran his best chance at another championship run, as Pelinka said was his goal over the summer as the “caretaker of LeBron’s legacy,” then it would simply have to involve Westbrook’s contract.
So what concerns remain?
Let’s start with Turner’s availability. He has played in only 89 out of 154 of Indiana’s games the past two seasons because of foot and ankle injuries — hardly reliable insurance should Davis get hit by injuries, as he has the past two seasons.
There are other questions the Lakers’ front office considered when evaluating the trade before training camp, sources said, that left L.A. reluctant to go all-in. Questions such as:
Would either Turner or Hield be clear-cut members of L.A.’s closing lineup in a playoff game?
Would Turner be able to stay on the court if the opponent went small?
Would Hield bring enough defensively, or would Ham trust in a wing like Austin Reaves or Troy Brown Jr. more in that spot?
And, recalling the franchise’s trades for free-agent-to-be Dwight Howard in 2012 and Dennis Schroder in 2020, is it worth risking what could be valuable future draft capital to acquire Turner for what could amount to only a few months in Los Angeles if he walks the way Howard and Schroder did?
Would the Lakers’ season be saved by a trade?
Maybe. There is belief shared by leaders in the Lakers’ locker room, sources said, that the team is only a couple of players away from turning this group into a legitimate contender. But acquiring the right players could take multiple trades.
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Which is why attaching both 2027 and 2029 draft picks to get a deal done with Indiana is such a gut check. Pelinka admitted as much on media day in September. “You have one shot to make a trade with multiple picks,” he said. “So if you make that trade, and I’m not talking about one particular player on our team, but it has to be the right one.”
Otherwise, maybe there is a way to seek one deal centered on Westbrook and one of the two picks, and another using something like Patrick Beverley’s salary ($13 million) and Kendrick Nunn’s ($5.3 million) — the only other contracts on the Lakers’ books hefty enough to pair together to salary match for a proven player — plus the other pick to add another player of consequence.
But the clock is ticking. Even with improved play as of late, at 7-11 L.A. is still three games out of the final play-in spot in the Western Conference.
And the schedule is unforgiving leading up to the mid-January timeline when L.A. anticipates offers could materialize. Including Monday’s game against the Pacers, 15 of the Lakers’ next 23 games between now and Jan. 9 are on the road. If at that point, nearly 40 games into the season, the Lakers are still below .500 — a reasonable concern considering L.A. is 2-6 on the road so far — would leveraging the future to pour into this group be worth it?
Or should the Lakers play this season out with the roster as currently constructed, use salary-cap space to sign free agents in the summer and explore trades involving picks after draft night when they will have the player they selected with their 2023 first-round pick available to deal?
For now in Lakerland, there remain far more questions than answers.