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Tripped up
Los Angeles Lakers shooting guard Kobe Bryant (24) collides with Los Angeles Clippers’ Brian Cook during their NBA pre-season basketball game in Los Angeles, California. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson

What a crazy week for Los Angeles Lakers fans and Los Angeles basketball fans in general. Chris Paul is officially a Los Angeles Clipper and the Los Angeles Lakers are (to some fans) what appears to be a shell of their former selves.

Lamar Odom and his reality show are now in Dallas and Shannon Brown has moved to the desert to play with the Steve Nash and the Phoenix Suns. Meanwhile the Lakers have added players like energy guy Josh McRoberts and a washed up 20-something former dunk contest winner in Gerald Green. 

Local sports radio is already saying that the basketball powers have shifted in LA from the Lakers to the Clippers, but I think they are way off.

On paper, the Clippers have one of the best teams in the West and could compete for top 5 spots in the West. On paper, it looks like Lob City or the next coming of Payton/Kemp or Stockton/Malone. On paper, the Lakers look like a old bunch of guys way past their primes with a new coach and system to learn.

Lakers fans are livid at the league denying the trade of Chris Paul to the Lakers and the trading of Lamar Odom to the now hated World Champion Mavericks. They’re upset that Mitch has yet to make any “big moves” as he stated were in progress in a press conference a couple of days ago. They are in a panic over this current Lakers squad who was recently swept out of the playoffs by the Dallas Mavericks, a squad that is getting older by the minute and has a history of injury problems. 

Lakers fans… relax. Take a deep breath. Inhale… exhale. 

In my opinion, we will be fine, here’s why.

First, Kobe Bryant. Anytime you have this guy on your team you have a legit chance at not only making the playoffs but winning it all. Yes, he is a year older but I believe this will be the healthiest Kobe Bryant that we have seen in a few years. After 3 very deep runs in to the NBA Finals with various injuries, Kobe is finally well rested and as healthy as he has been in years. After losing to the Mavericks Kobe said “It was a wasted year of my life”, and I don’t think he wants to go through that again. 

Second, Andrew Bynum. Drew has been criticized for years for not being able to stay healthy for an entire season. When healthy, Andrew Bynum is probably the 2nd best center in the NBA behind superstar Dwight Howard. Drew, like Kobe, finally spent a summer not rehabbing or nursing an injured knee. Instead Bynum took up boxing, added on muscle and looks like he is in the best shape of his career. It’s amazing what rest can do to a body.

I think Andrew improves by leaps this season, especially on the defensive side of the ball. I believe whatever system Mike Brown installs in to this Lakers team, that Andrew will be a big part of the defensive scheme of things here in Lakers land. Don’t forget Mike Brown was able to get Anderson Varejao on the NBA All defensive 2nd team in 2010. Why would he not be able to do the same things with an Anderw Bynum? I believe Andrew makes the 2nd team all defensive team this year. 

Third, Mike Brown. People are really sleeping on Mike Brown this year. OK, I realize he is not Phil Jackson as a lot of my twitter followers have been screaming. Who is? PJax is the greatest coach of all time, there is no other like him and will not be one maybe ever. However, Mike Brown is in my opinion a pretty damn good coach. He took a young Lebron James led Cavaliers team to the NBA Finals in 2007, only to be swept out by the Spurs. He was named NBA Coach of the Year after a league best 66-win season in 2009 and followed that up with another league best 61 wins in 2010. Thing is, Mike Brown didn’t win it all and that is something most people point to when talking about his coaching history. 

Look what he did with the teams he had though. The Cavs were basically a one player team with Lebron leading the team statistically in almost every category. He turned Varejao in to an all defensive team player, Mo Williams in to an All Star and Lebron James in to a 2 time NBA MVP. What makes people think he will do worse with a far better team here in LA?

A lot of Lakers fans are demanding that we upgrade our point guard position, and some were even willing to give up some of our size in Gasol or Bynum. Just last season the duo of Bynum and Gasol was the Lakers main advantage over other teams. No other team would be able to match up with our size and now fans believe that it is now our downfall along with the PG position. 

Let’s look at Steve Blake and Fisher who statistically were terrible with the Lakers last season. No point guards flourish statistically when running the triangle offense. Look up all the Bulls and Lakers teams from years past and you will notice the trend. Steve Blake has and may still be able to put up descent numbers in a more traditional offense instead of the triangle. Also I really like the addition of Darius Morris to our team as well. He was easily the most pure point guard in the NBA draft last season and hopefully Mike Brown can turn him in to a guy that can contribute to this squad.

Same goes for Ron Artest, ehem…. Metta World Peace. Metta was a 17-20 point scorer before joining the Lakers and the triangle offense. He clearly had problems learning and running the offense and his stats took a huge hit because of it. Now with word that Metta will be the 6th man of this team, I believe that offensively and defensively he will improve. 

It really is all about the system.

Honestly, I would not be surprised if at the end of the season, Kobe Bryant, Andrew Bynum and Ron… damn. Metta World Peace are all be sitting on the 1st or 2nd all defensive team. 

Now this doesn’t mean the Lakers are going to win the championship, but I still believe they will compete in the West and still be one of the teams to beat.

All you Lakers “fans” that believe were done, please step off the Lakers bandwagon now. Thank you.

NBA owners revealed themselves to be vindictive, onerous, agenda-driven and spectacularly petty Thursday night when they complained to the point that David Stern, in a completely gutless move by all involved, essentially vetoed a perfectly legitimate trade.

It’s a move that smells rotten 100 different ways, and the players have no stink in it. The owners and the people who run the league ought to be ashamed of themselves for being so foul as to big-foot a basketball swap that appears to, yes, help the Lakers, who would get Chris Paul, and still help the Hornets get something for him. Everybody and his mama knows Paul plans to leave New Orleans after the upcoming season.

Instead of letting the Hornets get on with their business and make the best deal possible so as to avoid the disaster of an unhappy superstar playing out a lame duck season (as was the case with the Nuggets and Carmelo Anthony last season), Stern has apparently vetoed a deal that would have sent Lamar Odom,Luis ScolaKevin MartinGoran Dragicand a draft pick to the Hornets, and Pau Gasol to center-desperate Houston.

The problem with the deal? It’d send another star to a big-market team, the Lakers, a trend the small-market owners had in their sights to stop during the recently concluded lockout. Small-market teams screamed bloody murder about stars migrating to big-market teams, as if this hasn’t been the case all the way back to, say, the mid-1970s, when Kareem Abdul-Jabbar forced his way out of Milwaukee and to Los Angeles. The deal ratified just Thursday night was supposed to address those concerns.

But since the league re-opened for business, what have we had? Paul saying he wanted to go to New York to play for the Knicks, reports of the Lakers putting together a deal for Orlando’sDwight Howard, then Howard and/or Paul. It sure sounds like business as usual, NBA-style.

And the owners, probably a third of whom didn’t like the deal but voted for it anyway in order to not miss the entire season, whined and stomped their feet and made Stern make the deal go away. The owners apparently think the NBA can legislate where players go when they’re free agents or about to be free agents. See, Bryant Gumbel probably had it right when he talked about a plantation mentality at the top of the league, but perhaps he shouldn’t have confined his comments to Stern. Perhaps he should have been a lot broader and included some owners as well.

Unless the appeal filed by the teamsinvolved in Thursday’s proposed trade (or a lawsuit reportedly being considered by Paul) reverses the decision, the league now apparently will allow free agency only as long as enough players to its liking are willing to sign up to play in Portland, New Orleans, Charlotte, Salt Lake City, Milwaukee, etc. You think Stern would have stopped this trade had Paul been dealt for essentially the same package to, oh, Indiana? Or Memphis? Or Oklahoma City? There isn’t a chance in hell.

But what stopping this trade does is prevent New Orleans from getting players who can help that small-market franchise not only recover, but move on. Odom is one of the most versatile frontcourt players in the NBA. Scola averaged 18 points and eight rebounds per game last season. Martin can get you 20 points a night. Dragic is a suitable backup. What’s wrong with this deal? Nothing, except the Lakers made it. This isn’t a heist; it’s a deal that’s easy to defend if you’re looking at it from the Hornets’ viewpoint. What’s more, executives from the Lakers and executives from the Hornets made it. Club officials.

Problem is, there are owners like Cleveland’s Dan Gilbert, still whining like a 2-year-old over the departure of LeBron James, who want some sort of guarantee that small-market teams will get their share of free agents.

Well, there aren’t any guarantees. The NBA, with the majority of its players being African-Americans from uber-urban areas, is and will likely always be a league dominated by big-city teams. Players gravitate toward them. Even players such as Paul, from a small town, dreamt of playing on the big stage. The best attempt to even things up, even a little bit, is the college draft, which is how teams such as San Antonio and Utah (and now Oklahoma City) got top players, and in their cases developed and held onto superstars.

We’re sure to hear about a conflict of interest, what with the Hornets being run by the league and dealing a great player to Los Angeles. So, it would be OK for the NBA to trade Paul to a dreadful team, say the Timberwolves? The NBA knew there could be the appearance of a conflict when it made the decision to run the Hornets. Why should Paul play in New Orleans indefinitely? Because management there was incompetent, which it was? Because the Knicks — talk about the pot calling the kettle black — don’t like the trade? Since when do owners not involved with a trade get to lobby against it? Where in the NBA rules does it say other clubs get to whine that the Lakers will be too good again? And who stands up to them and says, “Hey you MORONS, it’s quite possible the Hornets made a good deal here.”

If, as many suspect, owners are still angry because they didn’t think they got a good enough deal and they didn’t want to ratify something that didn’t do enough for small-market clubs, they should have had the guts to say no to the new CBA. But if, as a group, the owners accepted it, then they should have the decency to live with it, which is surely what the league and owners would tell the players.

What eats at many NBA owners is this: They aren’t NFL owners. They don’t share a big enough cut of the revenues. They don’t have an unending stream of television money. Their arenas aren’t at about 95 percent capacity. They aren’t a national obsession. And their small-market teams aren’t flush, in most cases, like the Packers or Steelers are. They can’t just cut players and get rid of their salaries, which aren’t guaranteed in the NFL. They want control, big control, like the NFL teams have and they don’t. They don’t want the LeBrons and D-Wades hooking up on their own terms.

And after a lockout that was supposed to drive this point home, they damn sure don’t want Chris Paul forcing his way out of New Orleans to go to New York or Los Angeles. Don’t these players understand why they were locked out all that time?

So where does the league go from here? Does the vetoing of the Paul trade mean big-city teams can’t deal with small-market teams anymore, unless a certain number of owners or Stern find the deal to their liking? Do players have to check their free-agent destinations with the league for approval? You can go to Orlando or Charlotte because they’re smaller and in need, but not the Lakers or Bulls or Celtics because, you know, they’ve got enough already in the way of assets.

None of this even deals with how in the world the teams involved are going to re-incorporate the players they just tried to deal away. It doesn’t even deal with another eventuality: Chris Paul is going to have to be traded somewhere. Would Stern like to tell him where he can sign for the next five years?

The NBA, from the commissioner’s office to a great many of its owners, is so envious of the NFL that it wants the same kind of parity. It wants its small markets to matter in the same way. But the fact is, the NBA’s popularity, its very brand, was successfully built, yes, on the participation of a lot of teams but on the brilliance of a few, notably the Lakers and Celtics. Parity might have been a worthy goal for Pete Rozelle and the NFL, but it has never amounted to a hill of beans for the NBA. Neither has some socialist-style spreading of wealth.

Make no mistake (and somebody ought to stand up in a room and shout this in the faces of the shortsighted owners who whined over this deal): It’s the Lakers and Celtics and the ability of their top executives to make deals decade after decade that not only have kept those franchises at the top of the pyramid but also allowed the NBA to matter as much as it has.

Michael Wilbon is a featured columnist for ESPN.com and ESPNChicago.com. He is the longtime co-host of “Pardon the Interruption” on ESPN and appears on the “NBA Sunday Countdown” pregame show on ABC in addition to ESPN. Over the course of three decades with The Washington Post, Wilbon earned a reputation as one of the nation’s most respected sports journalists. You can e-mail him here and follow him on Twitter @RealMikeWilbon.

Stephen A. Smith, Skip Bayless debate the NBA vetoing Chris Paul to the Lakers.

In honor of the trade of Chris Paul to my beloved Lakers, I present to you this Chris Paul highlight reel. 

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Ladies and gentlemen, starting at guard for the Los Angeles Lakers…

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Ladies and gentlemen, starting at guard for the Los Angeles Lakers…

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Here is the reason why I think we do not NEED Chris Paul. 

Still don’t think Dwight wants to play in LA?

Magic Johnson has always been my favorite NBA player of all time. This video pretty much sums up why. 

Magic says Lakers will NOT win the NBA Championship this year.


Shaq has always been and will always be one of my favorite NBA players of all time.