LeBron James may have given a nearly $3 million discount to the Los Angeles Lakers but that may not be enough to make the necessary additions to catapult the team back into championship contention.
The move brought the team under the second apron of the NBA salary cap and prevented them from a scenario where they would not only be, “limited to the 100% salary matching in trades,” but “also be prohibited from combining multiple players’ salaries into trades as well,” per Jake Fischer of Yahoo.
The deal may have put the Lakers in a better spot financially but it did not make it any easier for the team to acquire the necessary talent to fill out the roster and put it in a better position in a stacked Western Conference.
NBA insider Marc Stein reported that the team has an interest in Gary Trent Jr. but, “one source close to the process cautioned this week that the Lakers, until they can move farther away from the second luxury tax apron, can’t even make a run at Trent … no matter how available he appears to be.”
Trent will not sign a minimum contract, either, making it nearly impossible for the Lakers to bring the veteran shooting guard and his 13.7 points per game, 2.6 rebounds, 1.7 assists, and 42.7 percent from the paint to the City of Angels.
Worse yet is that the cabinet of players to add to the roster that would make it markedly improved over last year’s squad is bare.
The Jazz are listening to potential trade offers for Lauri Markkanen, and the Lakers are interested, but that seems like a pipedream given their lack of capital.
Other potential trade options, like Zach LaVine from Chicago or Jerami Grant from Portland, are not likely enough to make a major difference in a conference dominated by young up-and-comers (Anthony Edwards and Luka Dončić) and a two-time MVP (Nikola Jokić).
James and Anthony Davis make for a potent on-two punch but age and injuries have prevented them from playing complete seasons in recent years and the roster has yet to prove it has the depth necessary to keep the team in championship contention if and when they are forced to the sidelines.
Until the team better manages the salary cap and finds relief, James’ discount helped relieve the team’s front office of a bigger headache later this season but did little to improve a roster that badly needed it ahead of the 2024-25 season.