The four seasons that followed the Lakers' 2020 title were relatively uninspiring for a team that featured two future Hall of Famers in LeBron James and Anthony Davis. Los Angeles posted a total regular season record of 165-153 (.519) across those four years from 2020-24, missing the playoffs once and getting eliminated in the first round twice. Even in 2023, when the Lakers advanced to the conference finals, they had just a 43-39 record during the season and were swept out of the postseason by Denver.
While the end result of the 2024/25 season was another first-round playoff exit, there are a couple important reasons why it would be inaccurate to say the year was more of the same for the Lakers.
First, with the lone exception of the COVID-shortened championship season in 2019/20, L.A.'s 50-32 record was the best single-season mark the club has posted since 2012. The last time the Lakers won 50 or more games in a full 82-game season was when Phil Jackson was on the sidelines and Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, Lamar Odom, and Andrew Bynum were on the roster.
Second, and more importantly, Luka Doncic became a Laker during the 2024/25 season.
Much of the discourse in the hours, days, weeks, and months that followed February's shocking Doncic blockbuster focused on what exactly the Mavericks were thinking when they traded away a popular five-time All-NBA first-teamer in his prime. But Dallas wasn't the only franchise whose trajectory was changed irrevocably by the decision. Instead of having James pass the torch in the coming years to Davis, who turned 32 years old in March, the club is set up to build around the 26-year-old Doncic for the next decade.
The acquisition of Doncic didn't turn the Lakers into legitimate championship contenders in the short term. After all, there will always be some growing pains when a ball-dominant star gets accustomed to a new situation halfway through the season.
Plus, the fact that they had to part with Davis - a star in his own right - and nixed a separate deadline deal for center Mark Williams due to concerns about his physical meant the Lakers had a serious dearth of frontcourt talent. It was an issue that came back to haunt them in the postseason, when the Timberwolves dispatched them in five games in the conference quarterfinals.
That sort of first-round playoff exit with the old roster would've created real angst in Los Angeles heading into the offseason, and we likely would've spent weeks or months speculating about how the Lakers could add another impact player this summer to take advantage of what little time they have left with LeBron. Instead, the high of the Doncic trade has lingered for months, significantly reducing the pain of that quick postseason ouster.
Sure, the Lakers need to address the center position and will explore additional roster upgrades before next season tips off, but it certainly feels like there's far less urgency to make a major splash in the short term now that one of the NBA's perennial MVP candidates appears poised to be in L.A. for years to come.
The Lakers' Offseason Plan
Although it's an issue that will have to be addressed later in the summer, ensuring that Doncic will, in fact, be a Laker for the foreseeable future figures to be a top priority for the front office. The star guard will technically become extension-eligible in July, but restrictions on his total years and dollars will remain in place until August 2, six months after the trade that sent him to Los Angeles. At that point, he'll be able to sign for up to a projected $228.6MM over four years.
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