The Los Angeles Lakers, stuck watching the Golden State Warriors celebrating their newly earned NBA championship, head into the busiest section of their offseason facing a huge question.
βIs there a way that this could be us next summer?β
With limited draft assets, no salary cap space and a roster full of empty spots, the pathway back to a championship requires some major moves.
Well, this would be a big one.
Early Monday, the Athletic reported Brooklyn guard Kyrie Irving and the Nets were at an βimpasseβ in contract talks, opening the door for Irving to look for a new team.
Among those suitors, the Lakers and a reunion with LeBron James might make the most sense.
Hereβs a quick primer on the situation:
Whatβs the latest
Irving has the option to become a free agent this summer if he were to turn down a player option for nearly $37 million to return to the Nets for the final year of his deal. Discussions about an extension with the Nets have stalled. That opens the door for Irving to find a new home.
After joining the Nets before the 2019 season, Irving played only 103 games because of injuries, vaccine requirements and personal issues. Brooklyn won just one of their three playoff series, though they lost to eventual champion Milwaukee in seven games with Irving hurt for the finale.
Despite the injuries and the other distractions, Irving is still one of the most talented players in the NBA, a guard able to shoot from every spot on the court efficiently regardless of degree of difficulty.
He turned 30 in March.
What could the Lakers trade?
There are ways that Irving could land on the Lakers without a trade that would require the kind of financial sacrifice that is unprecedented in the NBA, leaving more than $20 million on the table to move west. Itβs not impossible in the strict definitions of the word.
A more realistic approach would be a trade. And luckily, for the Lakers, Russell Westbrookβs expiring contract is functionally a match.
The best offer the Lakers can make in this trade β and really any deal β would be that contract, plus first-round picks in 2027 and 2029. Sign-and-trade deals arenβt options because of the cap implications, meaning Irving would need to first opt in with the Nets.
When you speak to executives around the league, trading picks that deep…