[Franko] Kessler was the franchise center Doncic wanted so badly, and from the people I’ve spoken to I can confirm he pushed hard for this move. This should be a very fun offensive team, built around both Doncic’s and Redick’s basketball philosophies fully aligned with the Doncic and Reaves timeline
Source: https://digginbasketball.substack.com/p/30-minutes-to-define-luka-era
Some notable tidbits from the excellent Iztok Franko’s substack who has been covering Luka Doncic since he was a teenager:
Ever since Nico Harrison sent Luka Dončić to Los Angeles in February 2025, one of my biggest gripes with the Lakers has been the lack of clarity. There was no obvious long-term core, no clear direction, and no real sense of what the roster was ultimately being built to become.
That clarity finally arrived yesterday.
With major commitments to Austin Reaves earlier this summer and Kessler on Wednesday, the Lakers now have a defined three-man core. Dončić, Reaves, and Kessler are the backbone of the franchise, a much needed starting point, before you can begin refining the roster around the margins.
A team that just navigated a gap year with every key player except Dončić on an expiring contract now has its core locked in for at least the next three seasons (assuming Dončić exercises his 2028-29 player option), with five players under contract for four years. That should provide the stability, and eventually, the continuity every contender needs and, perhaps more importantly, an outline of the Lakers’ long-term vision.
Kessler was the franchise center Dončić wanted so badly, and from the people I’ve spoken to I can confirm he pushed hard for this move, then perhaps that was simply the cost of doing business. If Kessler becomes the long-term defensive anchor the Lakers believe he can be, and this core grows into a perennial contender, two future first-round picks and a pair of swaps may ultimately prove to be a reasonable price to pay.
Even if the price the Lakers paid for Walker Kessler was one I had hoped they could avoid, it is understandable given both their superstar mandate and the realities of today’s center market. Kessler could finally become the long-term interior partner Dončić has wanted ever since arriving in Los Angeles, something he only experienced briefly alongside Dereck Lively II in Dallas. So, the center part of the vision, together with Reaves as the secondary creator and ball-handler who can seamlessly switch between on-ball and off-ball roles, is clear.
To me, this looks like a Dončić-preferred team build. A heavily offense-oriented group with a rim-rolling big man and plenty of shooting around him, now with an extra JJ Redick “dribble, pass, shoot” flavor. Beyond Kessler, the roster lacks defensive talent and is clearly skewed toward offense. This is where I think the front office sometimes has to protect the superstar—and even the coach—from themselves by providing more balance. That said, this should be a very fun offensive team, built around both Dončić’s and Redick’s basketball philosophies.
The roster is now fully aligned with the Dončić and Reaves timeline. Reaves, at 28, is the oldest established rotation player. Everyone else, apart from developmental pieces Adou Thiero, Cameron Carr, and Bronny James, is between 25 and 27 years old. Pelinka said he wanted the Lakers to get younger, and they executed that vision almost to perfection. I still think this group could use a veteran voice like Smart in the locker room, but the age profile is remarkably coherent.
Shooting and spacing: Coaching legend Chuck Daly once said, “Offense is spacing, and spacing is offense.” Listening to JJ Redick over the last couple of years, I believe that quote captures one of the defining principles of his offensive philosophy. In that context, Mamukelashvili, a high-volume, quick-release stretch big who can play both power forward and even small-ball center, makes much more sense. All of the Lakers’ new additions, besides Kessler—and even he has been working to extend his range beyond the three-point line—are capable, high-volume three-point shooters. That brings me to my next point.
Three-point volume: Throughout the LeBron era, the Lakers consistently ranked in the bottom third of the league in three-point attempt rate. Interestingly, even adding Dončić—the NBA’s leader in three-point attempts per game—didn’t change that significantly. The Lakers still finished last season with the league’s ninth-ranked offense, built on a mid-range-heavy shot diet and league-best efficiency inside the arc. James, Ayton, Hachimura, and even Kennard are all players who are most comfortable operating in the mid-range. And while Hachimura and Kennard were elite three-point shooters by percentage, neither generated volume on the level of the league’s true high-volume marksmen. Replacing them with players who are willing and able to fire from three at a much higher volume could be the mathematical adjustment that pushes the Lakers’ offense from very good into the league’s elite.
There is one other mathematical advantage this offense could gain, and Kessler may be the key to unlocking it: offensive rebounding. The Lakers finished in the bottom five in offensive rebound rate last season. If one of the league’s best offensive rebounders can lift them even to league average, that could become another meaningful boost to an offense already built around spacing and shooting.
More speed, more dribbling: I mentioned Redick’s offseason comments about wanting more players who can dribble, pass, and shoot. The Lakers added exactly that, while also filling another area of weakness from last season: speed. Grimes and Sexton are fast guards, and Mamukelashvili is a skilled big who can push the ball in transition, attack off the dribble in the half court, and serve as a connecting passer who can either finish a play or keep the advantage moving.