Mitch Kupchak Says LA Lakers Won’t Trade for Immediate Help, Won’t Tank Either

By all accounts, the Los Angeles Lakers have played and injured themselves out of any serious postseason talk.

At 16 games below .500 in a loaded Western Conference, the discussion isn’t about whether the Lakers will find their combinations fluttering around the lottery tank (sorry), as much as “how many?"

When your starting lineup consists of Kendall Marshall (in the D-League two months ago), Steve Blake (recently injured), Wesley Johnson (somewhere between “disappointing” and “disaster” on the lottery-bust scale), Shawne Williams (we’ll get to that) and Chris Kaman (going through hunting withdrawals living in L.A.), it’s bound to be quite a few.

But please, whatever you do, don’t say they’re tanking. Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak doesn’t like that. From Lakers.com’s Mike Trudell:



Wait, isn't worrying about a specific decision coming back to haunt you later the very definition of karma? Or our totally misguided Western understanding of karma, anyway?

More from Trudell:



That makes sense. The Lakers are currently a half-game ahead of the Sacramento Kings for last place in the Western Conference. Why on earth would they jeopardize such a sweet spot on the draft board by, like, trying to improve and stuff?

Of course Kupchak isn’t dumb enough to come out and admit to throwing games—be it explicitly or tacitly—for the sake of improving the Lakers' stock ahead of one of the deeper drafts in recent memory.

Over at CBS's Eye On Basketball, Royce Young sums it up thusly:

But imagine bottoming out this season and landing a top five pick in the draft. The Lakers need to face the reality that Kobe is not going to be Kobe much longer and it's time to find the new Black Mamba in L.A. Hunting stars in free agency is fine, but building through drafting a...

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