Tuesday, October 13, 2020

J-Speaks: Lakers Dominate In Win Clinching Game 6 of 2020 Finals

Coming into 2019-20 NBA season, the goal for the Los Angeles Lakers was to get back to the Playoffs after a franchise-long six-year absence. Then it was about winning a title. After over a four-month hiatus because of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic and a 3-5 record in the restart in Orlando, FL there was some doubt if the Lakers could reach their ultimate goal. On Sunday night, they did reach that ultimate goal led by their dynamic All-Star duo.

Behind a triple-double of 28 points, 14 rebounds and 10 assists on 13 for 20 shooting by 2020 Finals MVP LeBron James and a double-double of 19 points and 13 rebounds, with two blocks by Anthony Davis, the Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers won Game 6 of the 2020 NBA Finals 106-93 over the Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat at the Advent Health Arena on the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex on Sunday night on ABC. That victory in Game 6, that won the championship series 4-2 clinched the Lakers 17th title in franchise history, tying the archrival Boston Celtics for the most Larry O’Brien trophies in the National Basketball Association.

For the Lakers, this was their first championship in a decade, when the late great Kobe Bryant led the Lakers to their last title in the 2010 Finals over the aforementioned Celtics in seven games.

What made this championship even more special is the fact that the Lakers and the NBA as a whole were able to conclude their season in the middle of the Coronavirus Pandemic as well as put a spotlight on two very incredible issues also happening in our nation and world like social injustice and voter suppression.

The two members of the Lakers organization that put the roster and coaching staff together over the last two summers that made their 17th title a reality were Owner Jeanie Buss and Vice President of Basketball Operations and General Manager Rob Pelinka.

Ms. Buss during the Larry O’Brien trophy presentation first thanked NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, the 22 NBA squads that participated in the restart, and the 6,500 employees at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex and those that worked at the Hotel’s at Disneyworld, and all the medical people that made sure that not one positive COVID-19 test happened during the league’s restart. She especially thanked the teams that the Lakers defeated during this title run in the No. 8 Seeded Portland Trail Blazers in the First-Round; the Houston Rockets in the West Semifinals; the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Finals and the Heat in The Finals for the “honor of sharing this court with them.”

“On behalf of the Laker organization, Rob Pelinka, thank you,” Ms. Buss added. “Coach [Frank] Vogel, the coaching staff, training staff, all our employees back home in Los Angeles for your tireless work in making this happen.”

Ms. Buss went on to thank the team as well for their “hard work, professionalism and dedication” both on and off the court as they wrote their own inspiring chapter in the history for one of the greatest franchises in professional sports.

That professionalism and dedication to the game of basketball and to being a great example of professionalism off the floor is what Kobe Bryant was all about in helping the Lakers to win five of their 17 titles.

Bryant, his second oldest daughter Gianna, along with seven others were killed in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26.

This trophy Ms. Buss also said during the presentation serve as a reminder that when we all work together, show a belief in each other, that incredible things can happen. On top of that, Ms. Buss said that when it is safe, she and the entire Lakers organization look forward to celebrating this triumphant moment in a season unlike any other.

“Until then, I will bring back the trophy to Los Angeles where it belongs,” Ms. Buss concluded.

Seeing over the dedication and commitment to winning this title was first-year head coach Frank Vogel, who defeated an Erik Spoelstra coached Heat team for the first time in the postseason three straight years while the head man on the Indiana Pacers sidelines, including twice in the Eastern Conference Finals in seven and six games respectably. The person also responsible for those defeats, which included a six-game setback in the East Semifinals was James.

This title is particularly special for Coach Vogel because he was not the Lakers first choice but ended up being the right choice.

The positive, even keel, defensive minded focus he brought was just what this team needed to get out of the gates like they did in the early part of the season. To navigate a 3-5 mark during the seeding games. To form a stellar partnership with the star duo of James and Davis, and getting them as well as the rest of the team to buy in to playing defense; leaving their individual egos at the door, and keeping the focus on the end goal of winning a title.

That was on full display on Sunday night, when the Lakers held the Heat to 44.3 percent from the field in Game 6, including 10 for 28 from three-point range. After not taking care of the basketball in recent games in The Finals, only committed 14 turnovers in a wire-to-wire victory where they led by as man as 36 points in the third quarter. The forced the Heat into 15 turnovers scoring 20 off their miscues

James set the tone in the opening period with nine points, five rebounds and three assists, on 4 for 5 shooting, while Davis had eight points and three boards on 4 for 6 from the floor. They were a big reason the Lakers outscored the Heat 18 to four in the paint in the opening stanza, outscoring them overall 52-44 in the paint in title clinching contest. They outscored them 16 to eight in fast-break points.  

“Well, we have a Ph D. in adversity. I can tell you that much,” Vogel said to ESPN’s Rachel Nichols during the trophy presentation. “We’ve been through a lot.”

“I’m so damn proud of this team. World champions! Credit to this group right here, this group of players, for buying into being a team first team. Committed to the defensive end. You became a defensive monster. You saw that tonight.”

What was also on display the continuity of Coach Vogel’s staff in his assistants in Hall of Famer Jason Kidd, Miles Simon, Mike Penberthy, Quinton Crawford, and Phil Handy.

While he was not with the team, opting out of joining them in the restart, assistant coach Lionel Hollins via Zoom contributed mightily to the Lakers during this playoff run.

At the start of this season when the coaching staff was being put together, there was a lot of questions of could a staff of three former head coaches in Vogel, Hollins, and Kidd work? If the Lakers got off to a slow start, would Vogel be on the hot seat?

There was no such strife. The staff and the players blended together and got the job completed. Coach Vogel may not have been the Lakers first choice to be their head coach, but he was the right one.

“Just, I’m a guy that’s going to focus on the work, you know? And that’s what this team needed,” Coach Vogel said. “We had the talent, you know? We just wanted to focus on the work. Tie all the strings together. Make sure we all played together, and we got it done.”

At the head of making sure that he and the Lakers team as a whole put in the work to be champions was James, who won his fourth Bill Russell Finals MVP trophy.

The other day during his presser, James said that Lakers fans do not give “a damn” about your past success. When you join the Lakers, the main objective is to win a title.

A groin injury last year sank those hopes and dreams for James and the team from the “City of Angels,” as James missed the playoffs for the first time since his second season in the NBA in 2004-05 and the Lakers missed the playoffs for a sixth consecutive season.

The four-time Kia MVP, four-time champion and now four-time Finals MVP, the only player to do it with three different teams (the Heat in 2012 and 2013; Cleveland Cavaliers 2016, and Lakers 2020) more than made up for that in leading the Lakers back to the top of the NBA mountain like he promised when he signed with them in the summer of 2019.

“It means a lot,” James, who averaged 29.8 points, 11.8 rebounds and 8.5 assists in the 2020 NBA Finals on a Finals career-high 59 percent from the floor said to Nichols. “It means a lot to represent this franchise. I told Jeanie when I came here that I was going to put this franchise back in the position where it belongs. Her late great father [Dr. Jerry Buss] did it for so many years, and she just, you know, took it on after that. And for me to be part of such a historical franchise is an unbelievable feeling, not only for myself but my teammates, for the organization, for the coaches, for the trainers, everybody that’s here.”

This title for James, in season No. 17 in NBA, two months shy of birthday No. 36 also made it clear that he is still if not the best player but the top player in “The Association.” That the Lakers front office is one of the best in the league, and that they should be respect and appreciated for what they do.

“We just want our respect. Rob wants his respect. Coach Vogel wants his respect. Our organization wants their respect. Laker nation wants their respect. And I want my damn respect to,” James also said to Nichols about his and the Lakers organization’s place as a top run franchise in the NBA.

He added about how the prime of his career is one of the longest in pro sports, James said that he will leave that up to Nichols and the rest of the media to decide. All he can do is commit to being the best basketball player to be by putting himself, his body, and his mind in position to be available to his teammates.

There is no better example of that then the fact that Game 6 of the 2020 Finals was his 260th career playoff game, surpassing five-time NBA champion with the Lakers, and current head coach of the WNBA’s Los Angeles Sparks Derek Fisher. 

“The best thing you can do for your teammates is be available,” James, who has never missed a playoff game in his playoff career said. “And for me to be available to my teammates and put in the work, I just hope I make my guys proud, and that’s all that matters to me. If I make my guys proud, make the fan base proud, my family back home.”

One teammate that is definitely proud of James is Davis, who after so many years with the New Orleans Pelicans of having only one year of making it passed the First-Round of the playoffs had his first lengthy playoff run on his way to his first title.

James said that his partnership on the floor with Davis, who averaged 25.0 points, 10.7 rebounds, 2.0 blocks on 57 percent from the field in the 2020 Finals is “easy,” because there have no egos amongst each other. That they both want the best for one another each day both on and off the court.

One big reason the respect between James and Davis is so high is because James said during the trophy presentation is that he understand what it is like to make the playoffs like he did in his first stint with the Cavaliers and come up short of winning a title. That he needed more help to reach the top of the NBA mountain. Someone that would push him to be his best when it mattered the most.

For James, that was fellow future Hall of Famers Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh with the Heat. That led to four straight appearances in The Finals from 2010-14, winning back-to-back titles in 2012 over the Oklahoma City Thunder in five games and over the five-time NBA champion San Antonio Spurs in seven games in the 2013.

“And so, to be able to get him [Davis], and we push him, and let him know how great he is,” James said of Davis. “But just making him see better basketball, and be a part of something that’s special, that’s what it’s all about.”

“So, to be able to put him where he is today, that means so much to me, and the fact that he trust me means even more.”

For Davis, who won his first title in his eighth season out of the University of Kentucky, the No. 1 overall pick in 2012 said that being a part of this group, and grind through the highs and lows of this season for a full calendar year and to finish it off as World Champions of the NBA is a “surreal” feeling.

On many occasions over the first seven years of his career with the Pelicans, where he made the playoffs just twice, he often said to Nichols that all he wanted the opportunity to play against the best with the stakes at their highest.

He got that chance this postseason and Davis passed that test with flying colors, averaging 27.7 points, 10.9 rebounds, and 1.9 blocks on 55.1 percent shooting from the field and 83.9 percent from the free throw line.

Dating back to Game 5 of the Western Conference Finals versus the Nuggets to Game 6 Davis connected on 38 straight free throws before his first miss in the second half of the title clincher.

As great as Davis played at the offensive end, especially in The Finals, he really showed how great of a defender he was not only being a solid rim protector but his ability to guard in space against the solid wing scorers the Heat had in five-time All-Star Jimmy Butler, rookie Tyler Herro, and second-year sharp shooter Duncan Robinson.

When asked by Nichols what he learned about himself, he said that you have to “compete.”

“It’s tough,” Davis added. “It’s tough on the body. It’s a lot of hard work. But these guys push me every day, especially Bron and Do [Rajon Rondo]. They always on me about being great, being better, you know? Covering up every mistake. It’s my job, and to be able to, you know, win it and grind, and see how tough it is, and to see this feeling and want this feeling again, you know, that’s what it’s about.”

It is also about being continuing the legacy of those that came before you. In the case of the Lakers, that is the legacy of continuing to win championships, which as mentioned was something the Lakers had not done since 2010.

In the 2012 Summer Olympics Davis was a part of that team and one of his teammates was Bryant, who Davis said became like a big brother to him from that point on. Before the playoffs, Davis told Nichols that he could not let Bryant down. That he had to do everything in his power to help the Lakers win a title. While they could not win the title wearing their City Edition “Black Mamba Snakeskin Jerseys” in Game 5 on Friday night, they did finish the task in Game 6.

“We didn’t let him down,” Davis said. “Ever since the tragedy, you know, all we wanted to do was do it for him, you know? We didn’t let him down.”

“He was a big brother to all of us. We did this for him. It would’ve been great to do it, you know, last game in his jerseys. But it made us come out even more aggressive. Even more powerful on both ends of the floor to make sure we closed it out tonight. And I know he’s looking down on us, proud of us. I know Vanessa is proud of us. The organization is proud of us. It means a lot us.”

One person who is really proud of Davis for winning his first title is his father Anthony Davis, Sr., who told his son he would quarantine for as along as necessary to be here for this moment. He did, along with Davis young daughter as well.

“He’s one of my biggest supporters,” Davis said about his father. “He said he quarantined 30 days just to be right here in this moment. He always texting me before games, you know, telling me to go get it. He’s my biggest critic, my biggest supporter. I know he’s proud of me. He’s been with me from the beginning of my career, waiting for this moment. Both of us was waiting for this moment, and it’s here. So, he ain’t crying right now but I know he’s going to be crying in a minute. I know he’s proud of me.”

As impressive as Davis and James were in not just The Finals but in the 2020 Playoffs overall, the Lakers are not holding their 17th Larry O’Brien trophy without the contributions from battled tested veterans like Rondo, Danny Green, Dwight Howard, and JaVale McGee, and youngsters Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Alex Caruso, and Kyle Kuzma.

Rondo registered 13 of his 19 points in the opening half, going 6 for 6 from the floor. Aside from his production of 16 points on 5 for 9 shooting in Game 2, Rondo had only registered 20 points on 6 for 29 shooting in Games 1, 3, 4 and 5.

That said, Rondo’s contributions go beyond the box score. He was able to provide another ball handler, perimeter defender, and had an ability to connect with Davis and James in such a way that when he spoke, not only did they listen, but so did the entire Lakers squad.

It was just a few years ago that many though Rondo was finished when his upfront style did not work with the Dallas Mavericks and they basically said in the middle of their playoff run to take a hike.

Rondo moved on to play for the Chicago Bulls, New Orleans Pelicans, where he forged a chemistry with Davis and then the Lakers and the rest is history.

Rondo joined Hall of Famer Clyde Lovellette as the only two players in NBA history to win titles with the Celtics and Lakers. Lovellette, a Hall of Famer won his title with the Lakers when they were in Minneapolis, MN.

When the Lakers signed Caldwell-Pope two summer back to a $38 million deal, critics made it clear that was one expensive investment in a player that only made the playoffs once in his first four NBA seasons with the Detroit Pistons, who drafted him No. 8 overall in 2013 out of the University of Georgia.

All KCP did was show his worth his first two seasons in L.A. scoring in double figures and being a solid three-point shooter and perimeter defender, and this season he flourished even more in those roles working with better players. Caldwell-Pope was especially good the last three games of The Finals scoring 15, 16 and 17 points respectably the last three games. 

"It feels great. Just to have that name attached to mines," Caldwell-Pope said to Nichols and ESPN NBA studio analyst Matt Barnes on the Thursday edition of ESPN's "NBA: The Jump" about being an NBA champion. "I kind of went home first after the bubble, you know, to be around family, especially my boys that I missed for three months, and that's all I was hearing. It feels wonderful." 

If there was any Laker that will appreciate this championship season more than anyone on the roster its Howard, who lost in his first trip to The Finals in 2009 with the Orlando Magic against Bryant and the Lakers 4-1.

That loss came in an eight-year period where Howard had tremendous individual success by being named Kia Defensive Player of the Year three times and was a six-time All-Star selection.

When he got dealt from the Magic to the Lakers in the offseason of 2012, teaming up with Bryant, it seemed a matter of time before he got back to The Finals and won the first of likely many titles. That was not the case as injuries to him and other key personnel, and the inability to compete at the level Bryant is why Howard flamed out with the Lakers in his first stint.

Over the next six years, Howard played for the Rockets, Atlanta Hawks, Charlotte Hornets and Washington Wizards. While he put up solid numbers for those squads, his so-called poor attitude and inability to understand that he had to settled into a role on those teams is why he only lasted three seasons with the Rockets and just one season with the other aforementioned teams.

To put the perception Howard had during that time into context, when Howard was dealt to the Brooklyn Nets by the Hornets in the summer of 2018, he was waived almost immediately. The same thing happened one summer later when the Wizards dealt the eight-time All-Star to the Memphis Grizzlies.

When it seemed like Howard’s career was over, he got a lifeline in the summer of 2019 when the Lakers took a non-guaranteed flyer on him. Howard, who averaged 7.5 points and 7.3 rebounds on 72.9 percent shooting during the regular season played his role to a tee coming off the bench and being a rim protector, rebounder, and screen setter, and it all worked out.

When he did not get consistent minutes, like he did in the Semis against the Rockets, he became the Lakers biggest cheerleader on the sidelines.

Howard, who averaged 5.8 points and 4.6 rebounds on 68.4 percent shooting during this year’s playoffs said to Nichols and ESPN NBA analyst Richard Jefferson late last month on ESPN’s “NBA: The Jump” that what allowed him to have success in his second stint with the Lakers that he really worked on his physical and mental state with his spiritual guide Clayton Gibson from his hometown of Atlanta, GA where they spend a lot of time training, talking, praying, teaching and learning.

“When I got back for the season, I was ready,” Howard, who hit a three-pointer to close Game 6 said. “I didn’t have any problems with my back. My mind was in the right place, and I was ready to give myself, whatever the team I was on a 110 percent.”

While there play was up and down at times, McGee and Green brought that championship grit and focus that they brought respectably to the Lakers from the Golden State Warriors and San Antonio Spurs.

McGee, who started much of the regular season at center for the Lakers, did not play much during the postseason, but like Howard was consistently engaged during the game from the sidelines cheering his teammates that were on the court as he earned his third championship.

Green had the chance to win Game 5 for the Lakers on Friday night, but his three-pointer in the closing seconds of a pass from James did not go in. 

That kind of shot would have sunk most players confidence or have the confidence of their teammates in said player lost in them.

Green, confidence was not shaken, nor his teammates confidence in him as he bounced back with 11 points in the title clinching contest two nights later going 3 for 7 from three-point range as the former Toronto Raptor, who helped them to their first title in franchise history last season earned his third title with as many teams. Green really showed that incredible intestinal fortitude in his postgame presser after the loss in Game 5, while also making sure the fight for social justice remains in the forefront of our nations minds. 

"It's a basketball game, you know? People are emotional, fans are emotional. I hope they don't take it that seriously," he said about how Lakers nation across the world taking the loss in Game 5 in stride, adding, "I hope they're that passionate about voting or injustice. These people [minorities] deserve justice or get some better change along in the country. But it's just a basketball game at the end of the day, and I know that they're just taking out their emotions and they need somebody to blame, and it came down to that last play. Of course I'm an easy target."   

For Kuzma and Caruso, this season was the first in their short time with the Lakers where there were major expectations of success.

There were times during the season, and even during the playoffs that Kuzma play was up and down. Sometimes when he was not involved offensively, he would just go through the motions.

As this postseason progressed, he found was to contribute, particularly defensively. The hope for Laker nation is that this season will act as a springboard for Kuzma to continue to become an even better player as he learns from James, Davis, and Coach Vogel.

The best example for Kuzma to follow is Caruso, who throughout this season provided the Lakers with solid play on both ends. He brought an energy and attention to detail that whenever he was on the floor, the Lakers played at a high level.

Caruso definitely displayed that in his first postseason start in Game 6, where he played well beyond his numbers of four points, five assists, and three rebounds on 2 for 7 shooting.

Along with winning a title and helping Davis be the best player he can be, James wanted in the league’s restart to be a real voice for social change in the most turbulent year in not just the U.S. but the entire world. 

Throughout the restart, James, the Lakers and the entire NBA and the National Basketball Players Association used their voices to make it clear that the likes of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Rayshard Brooks, Jacob Blake Sandra Bland and the many other African American and minority men and women who have been killed or seriously wounded by those sworn to protect them need to brought to justice. James and the league also used the platform of the NBA restart to get the message out to the entire country of the importance of voting early and on Election Day on Nov. 3 if the start of real change for our nation will happen.

That the players have to continue to drive home the point that voting is how we can push back against police brutality. To push back against those in law enforcement that would do harm to minorities that they are sworn to protect along with those of Caucasian decent. To push back against those that would suppress the voting rights of minorities. To push back against everything James said is the “opposite” of love.

For the 2019-20 Los Angeles Lakers, it was a season that was full of a lot of ups. It was full of a lot of tough moments. It consisted of the passing of a legend in Kobe Bryant that brought the organization, the fan base in L.A., across the country, and the world to tears. There was the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic that put their quest for a title on hold for four-plus months.

When the NBA got restarted in Orlando, FL in late July, the Lakers found a way to capture the top seed in the Western Conference. Rolled through the first three rounds of the 2020 NBA Playoffs with a 12-3 mark and took down a worthy opponent in the Miami Heat to capture their 17th NBA title in franchise history.

While there have been many more talented Laker title teams, this title team will stand the test of time as have those in the past not because of their teamwork, commitment to the defensive end, willingness to be coached, and the play of their talented dynamic duo of LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

For them to repeat as champions next season, whenever the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic will allow the 2020-21 season to begin will depend if they can remain healthy and if Davis, who can opt out of the final year of his five-year contract that he signed while with the Pelicans, worth $28, 751,775. He could receive according to ESPN’s NBA front office analyst Bobby Marks a salary of $32.7 million next season if the salary cap remains at $109.1 million.

Davis, 27, is eligible for a supermax extension this offseason after earning All-NBA and All-Defensive honors this season and finishing runner-up to back-to-back Kia MVP Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks for the Kia Defensive Player of the Year.

“I had a great time in L.A. this first year,” Davis said after Game 6. “This has been nothing but joy, nothing but amazement. Over the next couple of months, we’ll figure it out. I mean, I’m not 100 percent sure, but that’s why my agent [Rich Paul of Klutch Sports] is who he is, and we’ll discuss it and figure it out.”

This was season full of highs, lows, trials, and triumph for the Los Angeles Lakers. They had a solid season finishing No. 1 in the West and made the playoffs after a six-year absence. They dealt with the tragic death of Hall of Famer to be in Kobe Bryant and his second oldest daughter Gianna. They had to wait over four months like the rest of the NBA to see if they would finish this season. They got through a rough restart in the seeding games. Got things together in the playoffs, going 12-3 in the first three rounds and beat a gritty Miami Heat team to win their first title in a decade and their 17th Larry O’Brien trophy overall in franchise history tying them with the Boston Celtics for the most in the NBA.

If this group can come back intact next season as mentioned whenever that begins, they will be favored to win it all again.

Information, statistics, and quotations are courtesy of 9/29/2020 3 p.m. “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN, presented by Dell XPS with Rachel Nichols, Richard Jefferson, Vince Carter, and Zach Lowe; 10/8/2020 3 p.m. “NBA: The Jump” on ESPN, presented by Dell XPS with Rachel Nichols, Richard Jefferson, Matt Barnes, and Dave McMenamin; 10/11/2020 7:30 p.m. Game 6 of the 2020 NBA Finals “Los Angeles Lakers versus Miami” on ABC, presented by YouTubeTV with Mike Breen, Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson, and Rachel Nichols; 10/12/2020 www.espn.com story, “Los Angeles Lakers’ Anthony Davis On Pending Free Agency: ‘I Have No Idea,’” by Ohm Youngmisuk; 10/15/2020 3 p.m. "NBA: The Jump" on ESPN with Rachel Nichols, Amin Elhassan, and Matt Barnes; https://www.spotrac.com/nba/los-angeles-lakers/anthony-davis-10809/; https://www.nba.com/games/20201011/LALMIA/#/matchup/boxscore; https://www.espn.com/nba/matchup?gameid=401248438; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/_/id/2384/dwight-howard; https://www.espn.com/nba/player/gamelog/_/id/2581018/kentavious-caldwell-pope; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019-20_Los_Angeles_Lakers_season; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Vogel; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clyde_Lovellette.  

Friday, October 9, 2020

J-Speaks: #NBATogether With Lakers VP and GM

 With their 102-96 win in Game 4 of the 2020 NBA Finals on Tuesday night over the Eastern Conference champion Miami Heat, that gave them a commanding 3-1 series lead the Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers are now just one win away from their first title in 10 seasons and their 17th NBA title overall in franchise history, which would tie the Boston Celtics for the most for one franchise in NBA history. Considering all that has happened for the Lakers so far this season from having the second best mark in the NBA, then the tragic loss of one of the best players in Lakers history, the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic hit that shut down the NBA for nearly five months, the Lakers not playing to their high level in the seeding games. They been through a lot, but they got their act together in their first postseason appearance in six seasons and are now at the doorstep of their main goal for this season. Being there from the tough times over the previous six seasons to where they stand now about to add to their storied history was the latest guest on NBATV’s “#NBA Together” as the restart got underway in Orlando, FL.

Among the first things the host of “#NBATogether” Ernie Johnson, lead host of TNT’s “Inside the NBA,” presented by Kia asked in his virtual interview with Rob Pelinka, Lakers Vice President of Basketball Operations and General Manager, sporting a “Black Live Matter” hooded shirt in gray, white and Lakers colors of purple and gold from the ESPN Wide World of Sports in Orlando, FL was Pelinka saying to Johnson how he has been a “bridge” for the league during its hiatus with the programming of “#NBATogether” the last 16 weeks. 

Mr. Pelinka also complimented Johnson on his sneaker attire during the hiatus saying that it has been “off the charts.” He even said that he would try to get him some Kobe Bryant shoes. To which Johnson responded, “If it’s free, it’s for me.”

With the restart back at the end of July about to get underway in Orlando, when Johnson asked if the Lakers were ready for what has been a incredible carpet ride to The 2020 NBA Finals going 12-3 in the first three rounds against the Portland Trail Blazers, Houston Rockets, and Denver Nuggets, Pelinka said “Yeah.”

He then said that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and Executive Director of the National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) Michelle Roberts built the equivalent of “basketball utopia.”

“I mean, it’s just unbelievable the job they’ve done to construct this from the game venues to the safety of the campus,” Pelinka added.

He also said that a report before the games got underway of zero positive cases of COVID-19, which continued that way from the seeding games all the way to now Game 5 of the 2020 Finals, which will be played on Friday night at 9 p.m. on ABC.

The work the NBA has done in putting together what they did for the league’s restary Pelinka said is a testament to the dedicated, focused, and determined hard work of everyone on the so-called “NBA bubble” from the players, coaching and personal staffs of what began as 22 teams at the complex as well as the staff and personal of “The Association” as well as the medical staffs that tested the players and the staffs of the hotels that the teams stayed in.

“We can’t wait to get to the games. To be able to do it, and to be healthy so far, we’re all humbled,” Pelinka said.

One of the biggest sacrifices the players, support staff and the front office of the teams that began in Orlando, to now with the Lakers and Heat remaining had to make at the start of this was to come to Orlando without their family and friends, until the Semifinals where the NBA allowed a certain number of family to come to campus.

For Pelinka, that meant being without his wife, pediatrician Dr. Kristin Pelinka and their two children, a 12-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter in a tough time in our country not just dealing with the COVID-19 Pandemic but the social unrest in the wake of the shooting deaths of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, and Rayshard Brooks among the few, and the shooting of Wisconsin native Jacob Blake back in late August that left him paralyzed from the waist down.

He did say though that things were good on the home front without him there and that his wife Kristin has been “amazing.”

Like all of us, Pelinka said that he has seen his family, especially his children watch all that has unfolded in our world from the just mentioned social injustice that has taken place in our nation. He has seen his kids come to understand how important everything that has taken place is and how the NBA and its players union have come together to bring awareness to the social unrest and how important it is that we all are registered to vote and that we do exercise that democratic right in the lead up to the General Election and on the day of it on Nov. 3.

“They are excited too that I’m a part of it, and they understand that dad is doing something that’s bigger than basketball right now with this team,” Pelinka said of how his kids feel about him being a part of the restart in Orlando.

Pelinka said the Lakers organization from the players on the floor to the front office bringing social injustice to the forefront of our nation was something that was that was a part of the conversations they have had since coming to the home of Disneyworld to now.

At the forefront of this grand charge has been four-time Kia MVP and three-time Finals MVP LeBron James and seven-time All-Star Anthony Davis, who is playing in The Finals for the first-time in his career.

James has been incredibly outspoken about the social unrest in our country to his initiative that he launched, with help from a number of prominent athletes like Super Bowl MVP of the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and wideout DeAndre Hopkins of the Arizona Cardinals; All-Star guard of the Portland Trail Blazers Damian Lillard and two-time WNBA champion of the Los Angeles Sparks Lisa Leslie back in late August called “More Than a Vote,” that is focused on combating systemic and racial suppression of the minority vote. The initiative is also about recruiting young, healthy volunteers to work a polling stations across the nation so older, more vulnerable poll workers do not have to put their health at risk.

James like a lot of the league’s players during their media sessions during the restart to have taken the time to bring their concerns about what is going on to the forefront of people’s minds like the death of Ms. Taylor and Mr. Floyd to the importance of voting this election cycle.

Also, James has taken to social media to get the importance of what he and the NBA are doing as well.

While Davis has not taken a lot to social media to talk about the difficult climate our world is in at the moment, Pelinka said to Johnson that he thinks just as deeply about these issues.

What Pelinka said to Johnson that stood out to him early on being in Orlando for the restart is the kind of mental grind that was going to take place being away from your family and friends and being restricted on how you can maneuver on off days and after practice was over.

“And I think the team that has the greatest togetherness is going to have an advantage,” Pelinka said about what took place of now fans on hand in the early part of the restart. “Early in our scrimmage games, we’ve had the loudest benches because these guys love each other like brothers and I think they talk about these really deep issues together and wrestle with how they can bring change and awareness. And they also have a lot of fun, and that’s something about our culture we really appreciate.”

Before being VP and GM with the Lakers, Pelinka was a sports agent, who founded The Landmark Sports Agency, whose client list included the late Hall of Famer to be in Kobe Bryant and his longtime teammate Derek Fisher, the current head coach of the Sparks; Eric Gordon and James Harden of the Rockets; Andre Iguodala of the Heat; Buddy Hield of the Sacramento Kings; two-time Finals MVP and two-time NBA champion Kevin Durant of the Brooklyn Nets; former Laker Sasha Vujacic and current NBATV studio analyst Channing Frye.

Prior to that, Pelinka was chasing his own basketball dream that took him to the University of Michigan after he graduated from Lake Forest High School in Illinois.

In his four years in Ann Arbor, MI, Pelinka helped the Wolverines reach the NCAA Tournament Final Four in three of his four years, reaching the championship game three out of those four years.

He was a part of Michigan’s 1988-89 title team where as a true freshmen had teammates that would go on to either have a cup of coffee in the NBA or have pretty nice NBA careers in sharpshooters Glen Rice, who won a title with the Lakers in 2000 and Terry Mills; Loy Vaught, who played most of his career with the Los Angeles Clippers in the 1990s; Rumeal Robinson, and Sean Higgins.

In the last half of his career at Michigan, where the team finished as the national runner-up for back-to-back seasons played alongside current NBATV and NBA on TNT analyst Chris Webber, Juwan Howard, current ESPN NBA studio analyst Jalen Rose, Jimmy King, Ray Jackson, and Eric Riley, who are known as the “Fab Five.”

When asked about his experience playing with the “Fab Five,” Pelinka said that he was told by Webber and Rose that he was there to space the floor and hit corner three-pointers, and to keep the basketball squads Grade Point Average (GPA) “really high.”

Pelinka called Webber a “good friend” to this day, while saying Rose was the “heart and soul” of the team as well as the “spiritual anchor.”

One of the toughest moments from that time though was the famed timeout that Webber called in the title game against the North Carolina Tar Heels in 1993, which they did not have any left.

Pelinka said that, he did what any other great teammate would do in that tough situation his teammate was in. He was in Webber’s corner and let him know that they would have not been in that position without how he played leading to that moment.

“He’s learned a lot from that,” Pelinka said about that tough moment in Webber’s basketball career. “I think we go back to that moment now and laugh about it. But I just say, ‘thank goodness I had one championship ring to fall back.’ I do have that ’89 one because without it I’d still be pissed about that play.”  

Pelinka was playing with future NBA prospects even before he got the Ann Arbor at a so-called pro-amateur summer league where he played against local Illinois stars that would go on to NBA fame in Mark Aguirre, Tim Hardaway, Sr., the late Kevin Duckworth, and current analyst for the Chicago Bulls on NBC Sports Chicago Kendall Gill.

That summer league was Michael Jordan, who was in the infancy of his NBA stardom, fellow Hall of Famer, two-time NBA champion with the Detroit Pistons Isiah Thomas.

“I was a young kid from the suburbs and I got invited to be on a team, and I come down. And that’s where I kind of refined my game,” Pelinka said of that time.

Pelinka’s late father before he passed packaged some stuff, he got from the addict that he wanted to send to his son, that included an old program with Jordan on the cover of this Pro-Am league. As Pelinka said he was going through the roster and sees his name against future NBA stars, which he called one of his “favorite possessions,” his dad passed on to him.

That ability to play with the greats then where he found his niche and became that important glue-guy to the Michigan teams was something Pelinka learned from an early age from his father was a coached and public school teacher, who Pelinka said “dedicated” himself to the sport of basketball.

When Pelinka was two years old, his father was an architectural design teacher, and then taught shop, where he taught kids how to fix a car and welding.

At around age three or four, Pelinka said how his dad and he went up to his shop and he built the first basketball hoop out of black wrought iron that stood five feet.

This is where Pelinka’s basketball journey began where he shot hoops, that took him from being a sports agent to now the GM of the most storied franchise in professional sports.

“I guess kind of my faith informs me that life just unfolds as it supposed to,” Pelinka said about his journey. “I studied really hard in law school and business school, and I started out as a corporate lawyer. But missed basketball. And I got a call just sort of out of the blue to work at a sports agency. And of course, that’s where I spent 20 years doing prior to being a general manager.”

For Pelinka, he contributes his success as a sports agent by having the perspective of how could he help someone else help their life be better?

As an agent, Pelinka said he enjoyed being behind the scenes of working for the remarkable players, particularly his most well-known client in Kobe Bryant, who he met at the sports agency he worked for in Brentwood, CA in 1998.

When the two first met in his office then, Pelinka said that Kobe told him that he watched him with those “Fab Five” teams, and that he would have gone to Duke University or the University of Michigan had he not decided to go straight to the NBA right out of Lower Merion High School in Philadelphia, PA.

A day later, Bryant called Pelinka to set up a lunch meeting at UCLA’s campus where they had chicken wings.

“It was kind of an instant brother,” Pelinka said of the start of he and Bryant’s working relationship. “There was just something amazing about our connection.”

That connection led to some amazing conversations where Pelinka would talk about his days as a member of the “Fab Five” to where he would take joking jabs at Pelinka and his wife, a Duke graduate about the famed Duke versus Michigan rivalry.

Bryant was particularly drawn to Blue Devils head coach Mike Krzyzewski, who was his coach on the 2008 and 2012 Gold medal Summer Olympic teams.

There was a period of time when Bryant was still with the Lakers and they were looking for a new coach that Krzyzewski’s name came up in the rumor mill.

It was something that Bryant and Pelinka thought was a good idea at that time. Pelinka’s wife Kristin though when she saw that rumor on ESPN at the couple’s home was in tears.

“He was intrigued with the college game, and I think really appreciated the time he had with Coach K. with USA basketball,” Pelinka said.

It is that kind of connection that Pelinka had with Bryant and fans of the five-time NBA champion, two-time Finals MVP, 18-time All-Star, four-time All-Star Game MVP, 15-time All-NBA selection and 12-time NBA All-Defensive selection and Oscar winner that brought him, Bryant’s wife Vanessa, and their three other daughters, and all of us to unbearable tears when he and his second oldest daughter Gianna died in a helicopter crash along with seven other people outside of Los Angeles back on Sunday, Jan. 26.

“He was such a gift. He was such a gift to the world,” Pelinka said of Bryant. “And I think so much about 20 years of being a best friend, and what that meant. And I’m so grateful for it.”

“When he walked into a room, he just had this electricity about him that was otherworldly. To have someone like that as a friend in your life for 20 years is just—words can’t really describe the impact and power of that.”

How close were Bryant and Pelinka, during Bryant’s 2003 sexual assault case, it was Pelinka who spent a great deal of time with him, accompanying him on trips to Eagle, CO where the trial took place. It was Pelinka who confirmed the news of Bryant’s second child in the aforementioned late “Gigi,” whose god father was Pelinka. When Bryant was an unrestricted free agent in the summer 2004, it was Pelinka who confirmed to the media that his client would either remain in L.A. with the Lakers or join L.A.’s other team in the Clippers, even while rumors circulated that Bryant would join the Bulls. Days later, Pelinka negotiated a new seven-year, $136.4 million contract that Bryant signed.

Pelinka also described Bryant as a “real life superhero” that had abilities that other human beings do not have, that go beyond the basketball court.

He said that if you were a friend of Bryant, and you hit a rough patch, he would find a way forward.

“The richness of being able to have a brother and a friend like that, it’s one of the greatest gifts of life,” he said about his friendship with Bryant.

He added that being the godfather to Gianna, and to see her “bright spirit” that was going to change women’s basketball as well as the world for the better is some of the most “valuable gifts” Pelinka has had in his life.

When Pelinka spoke at Bryant’s memorial service back in February for 17 minutes, he talked about three versions of his famed client, none of which referenced his career on the hardwood.

Among the things Pelinka talked about was when he answered his phone that morning West Coast of Jan. 26 time while he was in church, which is something he never does.

Pelinka said that there was something in his spirit that said to him to check his phone. He checked the phone, and he received a text message from Bryant while he was on the helicopter with the message asking Pelinka to help a young girl that he wanted to help make her life better. That girl was Alyssa Antobelli, who also passed in that helicopter crash along with her mother and father Keri and John.

That text message was Bryant reaching out to Pelinka asking how he could help the young Antobelli get a sports internship with a prominent baseball agent.

“It just seemed to me in some sense like this was the essence of him, even though people saw him as this killer on the court. This warrior ‘Mamba Mentality,’” Pelinka said of Bryant as a person. “He was an unbelievable father. He was an unbelievable like uncle to my kids. Unbelievable husband to Vanessa, and that’s what I got to see for 20 years.”

“I think the world started to get a better understanding of that in his sort of last act in terms of what he was doing for the WNBA, and what he was doing in film and in books. That moment really just spoke to me about the essence of him. He was thinking about other people and making their lives better.”

The death of Bryant is something that really brought home the importance of making sure the relationships you have with people that you care about are intact, and if they need to be repaired that you have to put in the work to repair them.

That was the case with Pelinka and one of the NBA’s all-time greats in Earvin “Magic” Johnson where the two joined forces in the front office of the Lakers to get them back to championship form. The pairing did not work and it led to some internal strife to the point where last season Johnson in an impromptu presser announced his resignation from the Lakers front office without even notifying Ms. Buss or Pelinka before the team’s last game of the 2018-19 season versus the Trail Blazers that April.

Pelinka said to that any relationship that he has had as well as other people with a friend, family member or co-worker that you will hit adversity in that relationship. But he believes that what carries you through those moments is grace, which he has said has taken place with him and Johnson, even though when things were fresh when that relationship was on serious fire that Pelinka was accused of backstabbing the Lakers’ great.

Pelinka has said that Johnson has continued to be a great friend to him, especially in the moments after Bryant passed as mentioned in late January. Johnson has continued to converse and check in with Pelinka since the Lakers have been in Orlando during the restart to how he is doing. How the team is doing?  

“I think great things often can come from adversity,” Pelinka said. “I think that’s just something that I believe for any relationship. I think I believe it for any team that wins a championship, you got to go through adversity to reach something real and good.”

The other part that made Pelinka a great agent was he understood that it was more than just being a ruthless negotiator when getting their client their next big contract. That he had to be a mentor, a big brother where they have to be right there with them in the trenches in tough times, which Pelinka said he loved.

Pelinka has taken those lessons and applied them as the GM of the Lakers, where he and President Jeanie Buss wanted to build the culture of the team around how could they service the players on the roster from taking care of their needs that will allow them to be the best version of themselves on the hardwood.

When the Lakers take the hardwood tonight, they will have a chance to not only win their first title in a decade but win their 17th title in franchise history, which would as mentioned earlier tie the arch rival Boston Celtics for the most by one team in the NBA.

It would not only cap a great season that has seen the Los Angeles Lakers have to deal with the loss of one of the most beloved players in franchise history and NBA history in Kobe Bryant but it would put a stamp on all the hard work they put in bringing themselves back to the top of the NBA mountain after not making the playoffs the previous six seasons.

Along with that it would give Rob Pelinka his first title as Lakers GM and put the stamp on the fact that he can do what most think was not possible, build a championship roster for a franchise that expects to win them every year. An expectation he saw his famed client deliver five times in 20 seasons.

It would also cap a basketball journey that has seen him play alongside great players from his youth, to representing them as an agent and now representing the most storied organization in pro sports in the front office for the last three years and hopefully many more.

Information and quotations are courtesy of 7/31/2020 8:30 p.m. NBATV’s “# NBATogether With Ernie Johnson,” with Rob Pelinka; 8/26/2020 https://www.cnn.com story “LeBron James Is Helping Launch A Multimillion-Dollar Effort To Recruit Poll Workers Ahead Of The Elections,” by Allen Kim; https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobe_Bryant; and https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rob_Pelinka