Lakers’ X-factor? Why Marcus Smart could be the key to L.A.’s postseason dreams


Following the Lakers’ 110-101 win over the lowly Pelicans on Tuesday — an odd game in which the latter actually held a lead with around five minutes left in the fourth quarter — head coach JJ Redick was asked about the trust he had in veteran guard Marcus Smart. Smart didn’t shoot the ball particularly well — he scored 10 points on nine shots — but he recorded 4 steals, 3 blocks and finished the evening as a +13, the highest mark of any starter on either team.

(According to Stathead, only four other guards have logged at least seven “stocks” in a game this season: Cade Cunningham, Jalen Suggs, Derrick White and Russell Westbrook.)

(Jonathan Castro/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

(Jonathan Castro/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

“Smart has starred in his role for what we need consistently from him throughout the year,” Redick told reporters. “He’s played great basketball for the last five or six weeks and that starts on the defensive end. He’s been tremendous for us defensively. There were a couple points where you felt the energy of the group start to wane and he makes a big play — he gave us life tonight.”

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Redick’s praise of Smart, wrapped in the context of just how the Lakers have struggled to establish a defensive identity this season, shouldn’t go unnoticed. There has been a strong emphasis on embracing physicality since training camp, but there is irony in the fact that their largest source of physicality is their smallest player on the floor at most times. It’s also notable that the Lakers coach went out of his way to acknowledge Smart’s contributions at a time when the on-court vibes might not be so great.



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