There’s a Shakespearean irony unfolding in the Western Conference semifinal series between the Lakers and Thunder.
It’s a tale of two superstars: LeBron James and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.
Between them, they have a total of six MVPs, but the irony is that through the first two games of the series, the two best players on the floor are not the ones deciding the outcome.
It’s everyone else.
When James and SGA share the stage, this series tightens.
The numbers reflect that.
If both players played the entire 48 minutes, the games would be an extremely close back-and-forth heavyweight fight. But the moment either superstar heads to the bench, everything tilts.
And someone should call Harry Styles, because right now, it’s tilting in only one direction.
Let’s start with James, because at 41 years old, what he’s doing in the playoffs is downright absurd.
Every minute he’s on the court, he’s in full control. He dictates the pace, manipulates defenders, and is carrying the Lakers offense deep into the postseason without the NBA’s leading scorer in Luka Doncic.
James has played 77% of the available minutes in this series. That’s not a typical workload for a quadragenarian.
When he’s on the floor, the Lakers are competitive. They’re always within striking distance, especially early in the games where they have led.
But within those two-to-three minute breathers he takes each quarter, that is where the series collapses like a house of cards.
In the 22 total minutes that James has not been on the floor, the Lakers are a -18.
If not for a brief second-quarter pulse on Thursday when Austin Reaves led the Lakers on a little run, they would have lost every single stint that James has been on the bench in the series.
“Being undermanned it’s hard. We’re trying our best with the rotations we got,” Lakers head coach J.J. Redick admitted.
The truth is that when LeBron sits, the Lakers don’t just struggle — they unravel.
But the Thunder have the exact opposite problem.
When SGA sits, the Thunder dominate in his absence.
When SGA left the floor with 10:34 remaining in the third quarter of Game 2, the Lakers were up 66-61. That should have been the window the Lakers needed. With the MVP on the bench, that was the moment they could swing the game and even the series.
Instead, it became the breaking point of the series.
OKC ripped off a 32-14 run the rest of the quarter as SGA sat with four fouls.
“In the non-Shai minutes in the second half we got blitzed. 32-to-14. Seven turnovers. They shot 14 free throws during that stretch,” Redick said. “We’ll look at everything and try and see how we can be better in those minutes.”
Better might not cut it because through two games, OKC is an astonishing +26 when SGA is off the floor.
That’s right, the Thunder are absolutely thumping the Lakers when the soon-to-be back-to-back MVP is not in the game.
Meanwhile, the Lakers are hemorrhaging points the second their star heads to the bench for a breather.
That’s a 44-point swing in non-superstar minutes across two games the Thunder have won by 36 combined points.
You don’t need advanced analytics to understand that math.
This series has exceeded expectations when the two stars are on the floor. But when they’re not on the floor it reveals what we’ve known all along.
This series wasn’t about James vs. SGA. It was about infrastructure. It was about depth. It was about identity.
And right now, OKC has all three. And the Lakers just have a 41-year-old.
There are other issues plaguing the Lakers as well.
They’re getting outshot from three. They’ve coughed up 37 total turnovers. They’re losing the second-chance points battle 38-17, which is basically like handing over extra possessions like party favors.
Those feel more like symptoms though. The real disease is what happens when James and SGA sit.
Through two games, the Lakers have slowed down SGA by throwing doubles, blitzes, hedges, and traps at him. But when he’s gone, they go back to man-to-man defense. The focus and aggression disappears. The communication softens. The physicality dissolves.
“We need to up our physicality,” said Lakers’ guard Luke Kennard. “When Shai is off the floor, we really have to sit down and guard.”
Kennard and Reaves must step up offensively in the James-less minutes, as well.
In the SGA-less minutes, the Lakers need to treat the Thunder’s primary ball-handler as if that’s the reigning MVP. Throw two guys at him and force him into mistakes.
Or, go back to playing the connected, physical defense they played against the Rockets when Kevin Durant missed five games.
Because right now this series isn’t being decided by its two superstars.
It’s being decided by everything that happens when they’re not playing.
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