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    JJ Redick reemphasizes Lakers are ‘winning because of our team’
    • May 2, 2026

    HOUSTON — The Lakers had just advanced to the second round of the playoffs – where a daunting task against the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder awaits – after thoroughly handling the Houston Rockets in Game 6.

    And while LeBron James, at 41, naturally commanded the postgame spotlight with his 28-point effort in the 98-78 victory, the series clincher on Friday was a full-team effort. So, when Lakers coach JJ Redick picked up the microphone after Game 6 at the Toyota Center, he said his mind went to the collective.

    Marcus Smart drew three charges and tallied a stuffing block on Rockets forward Jabari Smith Jr., who is eight inches taller than the veteran guard. Rui Hachimura scored 21 points, drilling five 3-pointers, to record his 10th career 20-plus-point playoff performance. Deandre Ayton continued to crash the boards, closing a three-game stretch to end the first-round series with a combined 43 rebounds, while halting Houston center Alperen Sengun from getting in an offensive flow. And Austin Reaves, in just his second game back from returning from a Grade 2 left oblique strain, added 15 points in a starting role.

    But Redick’s mind didn’t sway to just the collective, but also to an interaction with local media he had after the Lakers defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 127-113 on March 31. On that day, the Lakers closed their 16-2 run across 18 games at the end of March, a run in which James’ role shrunk into the background behind Reaves and Luka Doncic.

    “I remember there was a press conference that we did after one of our games during our 16-2 stretch,” Redick said. “And you guys were like really hammering home a point about a specific player. … I said, ‘The reason our team is winning is because of our team, because each guy is starring in his role and contributing to winning.’ And that’s the story of this playoff series for us, where each guy had moments that helped us win the game.”

    Reporters asked Redick on March 31 about James embracing his newfound standing on the Lakers, on a night when he tallied 14 points, six assists and five rebounds.

    Later in the press conference, a reporter asked the Lakers’ head coach about how James, who stuffed a layup attempt from Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell with a chase-down block against the backboard just five seconds into the game, inspires his teammates with effort plays such as the swat.

    Redick then provided credit to James, who he said Friday had the “greatest career of any NBA player.” But the second-year Lakers coach wanted to make clear on March 31 – it’s not just James or Doncic who sparked the March to remember for the Lakers, it’s a performance of totality.

    “Again, I say this all the time,” Redick said March 31. “There are a million different forms of leadership and every guy has their own responsibility to lead in whatever way they can.”

    Redick continued: “Maybe you guys aren’t hearing me – our team right now is the reason that we’re winning. Our team; because each guy has contributed to winning.”

    The player-by-player contribution hasn’t been clearer since April 2, when Doncic and Reaves suffered regular-season-ending injuries in the last game the Lakers played in Oklahoma City before the second round gets underway Tuesday.

    Luke Kennard carried the Lakers to a Game 1 victory with a 27-point showing over the Houston Rockets before adding 22 points in the Game 2 victory. In Game 6, the Lakers leaned on Jake LaRavia and Jaxson Hayes for defensive stops, holding Smith and Sengun to uncomfortable shots even when spelling the starting unit.

    Even James, who has played in more playoff games than any player in NBA history, had to shift back to the spotlight with Doncic – the league’s scoring champion (33.5 ppg) – unavailable for the entirety of the first round, nursing his left hamstring back to health.

    “I would say we were a totally different team before April 2,” James said. “And for them to accept the fact to allow me to lead them and kind of command them in a way that I think I saw fit, being an extension of our coaching staff on the floor, it means a lot to me.”

    If James was going to bring the passion Friday, then so were his teammates, Hachimura said. The Japanese forward pointed to a halftime speech from Smart, meeting while up 18 points at the break to try to stave off a Houston comeback effort.

    “Marcus said it to everybody,” Hachimura said. “He said, ‘Look, Bron brought the whole energy, so we got to bring it too.’ Everybody else got to bring it and I think we did that in the second half, and we closed out the game.”

    ​ Orange County Register 

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