Connect with us

Sports

How Los Angeles Lakers Might Need Bronny James in NBA Playoffs

The Los Angeles Lakers just can’t catch a break.

After Luka Doncic’s regular season ended with a hamstring injury, the Lakers just got another dose of brutal injury luck. Austin Reaves is also done for the remainder of the remainder of the regular season due to an oblique strain.

There’s no timetable for Doncic or Reaves, arguably the best two Lakers players, to return. Of course, Los Angeles will remain hopeful that they can play in the NBA Playoffs, but there’s still five more regular season games to get through before those decisions.

For years, a viral internet social media post that reads, “accidentally became important at work and it’s ruining my life,” has become quite the viral meme.

For Lakers point guard Bronny James, that meme might’ve turned into a reality.

Could Bronny really play in the postseason?

Without Doncic or Reaves, Luke Kennard is the only healthy ball handler in Los Angeles that has gotten consistent minutes throughout the regular season. Of course, LeBron James is a ballhandler and can efficiently run an offense – but that takes him out of his current role.

There’s a real world, if Doncic and Kennard can’t suit up, that Bronny could end up playing significant minutes in the first round of the NBA Playoffs.

Lakers coach JJ Redick has been trusting Bronny a bit more in his second NBA season. As a rookie, he played in just 27 games. This year, he’s already appeared in 37 games. That could be as many as 42 games – especially with the new need for a point guard in Los Angeles.

Bronny averaged just a tick under eight minutes per night when he was called on to enter action for the Lakers this season. He’s played a much bigger role for the South Bay Lakers, where Bronny has played six games this season. In those 14 G League appearances, Bronny has averaged 15 points per game.

That’s not exactly the sort of production that screams to the Lakers that the 21-year-old is ready for action in the NBA Playoffs. The lights are brighter, the pace is faster and the game is way more physical in the postseason.

But out of necessity, could Redick find himself desperate?

In reality, Bronny isn’t going to see postseason minutes. The Lakers still have Kennard and Jake LaRavia would be ahead of Bronny in a playoff rotation if push came to shove. 

The Lakers are currently the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference. Right now, they’d be matched up with the Minnesota Timberwolves in the first round. However, there’s still more than one week in the regular season, and the seeding can change with all of this injury news.

Before his injury, Doncic was playing at an MVP level. LeBron has enjoyed his role as “OG in residence,” contributing as a consistent third option with Doncic and Reaves handling the workload every night.

If Doncic and Reaves can’t suit up for Game 1 of the postseason, James is back to being the No. 1 option for the Lakers. 

In that scenario, nobody should be surprised if Bronny gets a few minutes of run in the postseason. If the Lakers find themselves with their backs against the wall without their best two players against an athletic Anthony Edwards or a talented Houston Rockets team, they might as well bank on chemistry and genetics.

source

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

On cusp of playoff berth, Canadiens vie for sweep of Devils

NHL: Montreal Canadiens at New Jersey DevilsApr 4, 2026; Newark, New Jersey, USA; Montréal Canadiens left wing Juraj Slafkovský (20) reacts to missing a shot in the penalty shootout against the New Jersey Devils during overtime at Prudential Center. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Salus-Imagn Images

The Montreal Canadiens have a basket of Easter eggs to hunt when they play host to the New Jersey Devils on Sunday in the second half of a home-and-home series.

Not only are the Canadiens (45-21-10, 100 points) on a quest to claim both halves of the mini-series after winning a 4-3 shootout clash on Saturday. They are now on a realistic push to chase the Atlantic Division crown thanks to an eight-game winning streak.

With six games remaining in the regular season, Montreal sits second in the Atlantic Division, two points back of the Tampa Bay Lightning and tied with the Buffalo Sabres, with one game in hand.

A single point will clinch a playoff spot, but the Canadiens — who last hit the century mark in the 2016-17 season — are looking for more.

“I feel 100 points is good, but we’re trying to get the best possible position for us to start (the playoffs) at home,” goaltender Jakub Dobes said. “We’re trying to finish first.”

Running their winning streak to eight came on a wild ride. The Canadiens staked a 3-0 lead before the midway point of the second period, but the Devils clawed back.

Oliver Kapanen scored the shootout winner in the fifth round to end a perfect five-game road swing.

Now to bring those winning ways to their sure to be frenzied fans.

“I know there’s gonna be a lot of energy in the building,” Montreal coach Martin St. Louis said. “We’re trying to earn that every game. I think they see we try to battle hard every game and respect that. I think that’s the foundation of our success.”

The Devils technically are still alive in the playoffs but will need all kinds of help and have no room for error.

New Jersey (39-34-3, 81 points) is seven points outside a playoff spot with six games remaining.

Even so, forcing extra time after falling behind by a trio of goals is a sign the Devils plan to go down swinging.

“Even if they scored we just kept working,” said forward Jesper Bratt, who continues to pile up the points. “We knew we were going to somehow get a goal if we kept working, kept the momentum up, and that’s what happened.”

As their likely disappointing season winds down, the Devils certainly have plenty of players making their mark.

Bratt has collected seven goals and 15 assists over the past 14 games, while Dawson Mercer has scored three goals in his past two games, Captain Nico Hischier has collected 10 points during a seven-game point streak (two goals, eight assists) and Jack Hughes has racked up 33 points (13 goals, 20 assists) in 19 games following the Olympic break.

Getting another crack at the Canadiens, and a chance to play spoilers, gives the Devils a bit more motivation on top of the revenge factor.

“Bell Centre, a good atmosphere again,” defenseman Jonas Siegenthaler said. “It’s kind of like a mini-series. We want to go there (Sunday) and do our best.”

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Avalanche face Blues, hoping to clinch top seed in the West

NHL: Colorado Avalanche at Dallas StarsApr 4, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; Colorado Avalanche defenseman Josh Manson (42) and center Nathan MacKinnon (29) and center Martin Necas (88) and center Brock Nelson (11) celebrates an empty goal scored by MacKinnon against the Dallas Stars during the third period at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Colorado Avalanche are a win away from clinching the top seed in the Western Conference after a gritty 2-0 road victory at Dallas on Saturday.

They will try for that victory when they host the St. Louis Blues on Sunday night.

Colorado (50-15-10, 110 points) has an eight-point lead over the Stars, who can only earn 10 more points the rest of the way. The Avalanche, who took the season series from Dallas with Saturday’s win, have won 50 games for the fourth time in the last five years.

One of those 50 victories came against St. Louis (32-31-12, 76 points) in Colorado on Dec. 31. Nathan MacKinnon had two goals in the 6-1 win and leads the NHL with 51 after his empty-netter Saturday, and is third in the league with 122 points (71 assists).

Offensive-minded defenseman Cale Makar had an assist in the New Year’s Eve game but is sidelined with an upper-body injury suffered Monday night against Calgary, but the Avalanche have plenty of other weapons. Martin Necas has a career-high 94 points (36 goals, 58 assists) and Brock Nelson, with 33 goals, gives Colorado three players with 30 or more.

There are two others with 20 goals and Parker Kelly can make it three if he can get one in the final seven games. Kelly’s previous career high was eight goals but he surpassed that in mid-January. The bottom-six forward has seen time on the top two lines and credits MacKinnon for helping him improve offensively.

“He’s helped a lot with my offensive game, probably more than the outside public would see,” Kelly told The Denver Gazette. “It’s always good little pointers that I would have never thought of before with myself. Great leader, great teammate, and there’s a reason he’s the best in the world.”

The Blues have surged since the Olympic break to get into the chase for the wild card. Their 6-2 win at Anaheim on Friday night improved their record to 12-3-3 since Feb. 4, and they are 6-2-2 in their last 10.

The victory over the Ducks ended a two-game skid and came with another strong game from leading scorer Rob Thomas. Thomas had a goal and two assists and now has 53 points (18 goals, 35 assists) in just 57 games this season.

His two assists Friday night set up Dylan Holloway for power-play goals, including the last one to ice the game.

“He’s the most underrated passer in the league,” Holloway said of Thomas. “Such a nice pass and I was kind of blessed to have that lay right on my tape like that.”

St. Louis has moved into contention despite being a seller at the trade deadline. The Blues dealt Brayden Schenn and Justin Faulk last month in the midst of a four-game winning streak. Holloway, who leads St. Louis with 19 goals, has scored seven of those since the trade deadline.

He is fourth on the Blues with 40 points behind Pavel Buchnevich’s 44 points (17 goals, 27 assists) and Jordan Kyrou’s 41 points (17 goals, 24 assists).

-Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading

Sports

Amaka Agugua-Hamilton no longer coach at Virginia

NCAA Womens Basketball: Virginia at LouisvilleFeb 22, 2026; Louisville, Kentucky, USA; Virginia Cavaliers head coach Amaka Agugua-Hamilton calls out instructions during the second half against the Louisville Cardinals at KFC Yum! Center. Mandatory Credit: Jamie Rhodes-Imagn Images

Virginia parted ways with Amaka Agugua-Hamilton as its head women’s basketball coach after four seasons.

The university announced the news Saturday about Agugua-Hamilton, who helped the Cavaliers become the initial First Four team to advance to the Sweet 16 of the Women’s NCAA Tournament after defeating seventh-seeded Georgia 82-73 in overtime in the first round, then upsetting second-seeded Iowa 83-75 in double overtime in the second round.

Virginia’s season came to an end after dropping a 79-69 decision to third-seeded TCU on March 28.

The Cavaliers, who finished 20-12 this season, posted a 70-58 record with a 29-42 mark in ACC play under Agugua-Hamilton.

The university issued a brief statement on Saturday, saying only that she will not return to the role and that a national search will begin immediately.

–Field Level Media

source

Continue Reading