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🔥 Is This the Most Overhyped Lakers Team Ever? The Shocking Reality! Did you know that since their 2020 championship run, the Los Angeles Lakers haven’t truly looked like a dominant force for a sustained stretch? Did you know that teams that stumble right after the All-Star break rarely flip the switch in time for a deep playoff push? And here’s the uncomfortable question: what if this version of the Lakers is not “underperforming”… but simply revealing exactly who they are? Let’s break down the crisis unfolding in Los Angeles. Evaluating the Los Angeles Lakers’ Crisis The post–All-Star stretch is one of the most decisive periods of the NBA season. It’s when true contenders separate from the pack, playoff teams fight for seeding, and everyone else quietly starts studying mock drafts. Head coach JJ Redick said publicly that the Lakers needed to play their best basketball right now. That urgency was clear. The response on the court? It never came. Instead of building momentum, the Lakers have stalled in mediocrity. Since All-Star Weekend, they’ve gone 1–2. Just before that, they closed a rare eight-game homestand with a lukewarm 4–4 record — hardly the mark of a team defending its home floor with authority. With the roster largely healthy and near full strength, the uncomfortable conclusion becomes harder to avoid: this Lakers team might simply be average. Good enough to beat weaker opponents. Not good enough to consistently take down elite competition. At this point, a championship feels out of reach. Winning a playoff series sounds optimistic. And there’s still more than a quarter of the season left to play. It won’t take long before parts of the fanbase emotionally check out. Especially because the front office has already sent a subtle but clear message: the real focus is next year. The refusal to make win-now trades speaks volumes. The remainder of the 2025–26 season risks feeling like a rerun episode — nothing dramatically new, just tension building while everyone waits for the “next season” of this drama to truly begin. What Do the Lakers Actually Do Well? A question is starting to echo louder and louder: What does this Lakers team actually excel at? Coming into the season, it was fair to assume the defense might struggle but the offense would carry the load. Somehow, reality has been harsher than expectations. Both ends of the floor have underperformed. Even with LeBron James, Luka Dončić, and Austin Reaves healthy, the Lakers have struggled to score. In a loss to the Boston Celtics, they managed only 89 points — their second-worst offensive output of the season. In the following game against the Orlando Magic, the offense once again stalled when it mattered most. Reaves went scoreless in the first half. Luka finished the night shooting 8-for-24. Another loss followed. On paper, this team has: Luka in his physical and technical prime; The league’s all-time leading scorer in LeBron; A Reaves enjoying the most productive season of his career. In practice, that trio posted a –8 plus/minus in 61 minutes together over the week. That’s not just underwhelming. It’s alarming. The offensive fit still doesn’t make sense. There’s a lack of rhythm. Poor functional spacing. Unclear roles. Too many possessions that dissolve into isolation and late-clock desperation. And those are structural problems — not the kind you fix by simply “waiting for chemistry.” At some point, talent has to translate into cohesion. Right now, it isn’t. Is There a Light at the End of the Tunnel? The atmosphere isn’t good. The performances don’t inspire confidence. The “contender” label feels distant. And yet — zoom out. There’s a broader horizon where the picture isn’t quite as bleak. Redick has a legitimate chance to post back-to-back 50-win seasons, something the Lakers haven’t accomplished since 2011. They’re not on a 50-win pace at this exact moment, but the structural foundation he’s building suggests a higher baseline than much of the previous decade. Luka appears positioned as the face of the franchise for years to come. With significant projected cap space in the upcoming offseason, management will have flexibility to construct a more balanced and better-fitting roster around him. And then there’s ownership. The Lakers’ historical culture still defines success as championships — not moral victories. Walter has already shown with the Los Angeles Dodgers that he is willing to put the right people in the right positions to build a winner. If this current core of LeBron, Luka, and company isn’t enough, the expectation is that adjustments will be made — aggressively. The Real Truth In the short term, this hurts. This team doesn’t look like a title threat. It doesn’t look cohesive. It doesn’t look dangerous in the way a true contender should. But in the medium and long term? There is a foundation.