Yet this will not last long and, already, Rockets GM Daryl Morey is up to his tricks. Reports are circulating he's scheming to trade a plate of Texas brisket to the Timberwolves for Jimmy Butler. If Morey pulls that off, the Rockets will have three All-Stars in their starting five, second only to the Warriors four last season.
LeBron must beware of Rondo’s old team, which is playing like it isn’t missing Rondo as much as some folks were led to believe. The New Orleans Pelicans is flourishing with a breezy style that’s a carryover from their surprising run to the 2018 West semifinals. Nikola Mirotic (28 points per game) is averaging nearly as many points as Anthony Davis (30.3 ppg) and ex-Laker Julius Randle is fitting right in next to Davis.
The San Antonio Spurs, speaking of unexpected teams, are off to a good start. Behind DeMar DeRozan, they could make it 22 straight playoff appearances ... even after all their offseason roster moves and early injuries. And Patrick Beverley recently said the LA Clippers are the best team in LA (but take that for what it’s worth).
Still, it all shows you that nobody is rolling out the red carpet for the Lakers just because they added LeBron.
The Nuggets missed the playoffs on the final regular season day last season and they’re perhaps wiser for it. Nikola Jokic is making his top-three center case and Denver’s Defensive Rating is among the league's best.
What they saw Thursday was a controlled and efficient game from LeBron (28 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists), Lonzo Ball stripping Jamal Murray in the open floor for one of his five steals, former Warriors role player JaVale McGee scoring 21 points on his 16 shots and a highly entertaining energy boost from Lance Stephenson off the bench.
Nuggets coach Mike Malone was an assistant from 2005-10 in Cleveland and therefore saw the LeBron Effect first-hand in those formative years.
“Sure, the West is tougher,” Malone said, “but also this is his first time playing with all those guys. As he said, this will take time. It doesn’t happen overnight, just as it didn’t last year in Oklahoma City when they brought in Paul George and Carmelo Anthony and everybody thought they were going to be great right away. Playing with LeBron isn’t easy. It's easy, but it isn’t easy. When we traded for guys like Wally Szczerbiak, he comes in and says 'I’ve never been this open in my life.’ He had a hard time making shots because he was so open.
“LeBron is bringing all those guys confidence up. Josh Hart, Kyle Kuzma, they’ll be better off for it. He’s a great player and slowly the team will round into form. My definition of greatness is, what can you do for everyone around you? Can you take them to new heights? And he has done that repeatedly throughout his career. He’s doing the same thing now in LA.”
A week into the season tells us this about the Lakers: They’ve played four of their five games against playoff teams, winning only one but taking the other three well into the fourth quarter. They’re two missed LeBron free throws from a winning record. LeBron is MVP-like and sturdy as ever, and the other pieces are slowly dropping into place.
Whether it’ll be good enough to make traction in a tough conference will take months to sort out. Yes, the West is better. But that’s also because the Lakers fueled by LeBron, no longer the post-Kobe pushovers, are better as well.
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Veteran NBA writer Shaun Powell has worked for newspapers and other publications for more than 25 years. You can e-mail him here, find his archive here and follow him on Twitter.
The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA, its clubs or Turner Broadcasting.
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