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Sports Updates > News > Basketball > Luka Doncic as a Laker: What we’ve seen a year in and what’s next
Basketball

Luka Doncic as a Laker: What we’ve seen a year in and what’s next

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Last updated: February 23, 2026 12:06 pm
Published February 23, 2026
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One year ago Tuesday, played his first game with the , debuting ESPN’s Shams Charania broke the shocking news that the had traded their franchise player to L.A.

With the Lakers still digging out from ill-advised moves after winning the 2020 NBA championship and adding Doncic, the trade has yet to shift the balance of power in the Western Conference.

The Lakers’ 32-20 record is virtually the same as it was at this time last year, when they were 32-19 after winning in Doncic’s debut.

But adding an MVP candidate in his prime — and equally important, having him agree to a last summer that has Doncic under contract through at least 2027-28 — has already made a dramatic difference in how the Lakers do business. A team that had run through the Klutch Sports-represented duo of and is now built around Doncic’s timeline.

Let’s revisit the first 365 days Doncic has spent playing for the Lakers — and preview what lies ahead as they try to return to championship contention.

Predictably, Doncic’s debut performance was forgettable. Returning from an absence of longer than a month due to a calf strain, he missed 6 of 7 3-point attempts in a victory over the lottery-bound , finishing with 14 points on 5-of-14 shooting. It wasn’t until his fourth game (with the All-Star break in between) when Doncic finally scored at least 20 points in a game as a Laker.

After shaking off the rust, Doncic averaged 28.2 points and 7.5 assists on 44% shooting in 28 games for the Lakers last season. That level of performance, historic for nearly all other players, was merely pedestrian for him. Both his shooting and playmaking were Doncic’s lowest marks since his rookie campaign.

In the wake of the injury-marred campaign, with the added motivation of responding to anonymous criticism of his conditioning and commitment from sources in the Dallas front office, Doncic transformed his physique last summer.

It’s impossible to say exactly how much that change has factored into Doncic’s ability to play in 42 of the Lakers’ first 50 games with no absence longer than three games before he Thursday against the . However, he has certainly proved more durable than Davis, who managed just 29 regular-season games with the Mavericks before being traded to the last week.

So far, Doncic’s improved conditioning hasn’t translated into notably better performance than his Dallas peak, suggesting those conditioning woes might have been overstated.

Doncic’s 32.8 points per game this season are virtually identical to his last two full campaigns with the Mavericks, albeit in slightly fewer minutes. (Doncic’s usage rate is 38% this season.) Perhaps the most notable change: Doncic is leading the league in free throws made (8.5) and attempted (10.9) per game, surpassing his career-high average of 10.5 foul shots in 2022-23.

Of course, Doncic didn’t really need to improve his production, having finished third in MVP voting in his final full season with Dallas. During Doncic’s first 365 days with the Lakers, only reigning MVP of the has produced more regular-season wins above replacement player than Doncic’s 14.1.

The most intriguing move the Lakers made since adding Doncic was one that was ultimately nixed. Days after the Doncic deal, the Lakers agreed to send , a first-round pick and another swap to the for center , a 23-year-old lob threat who would have been an ideal pick-and-roll partner for Doncic.

Although the Lakers the trade because of concerns over Williams’ physical condition, the move represented the first indication that they were prioritizing winning during Doncic’s prime rather than building the best team possible in the twilight of James’ career.

That became clearer in June when the Lakers allowed James to play out the option year of his most recent extension rather than signing him to a new, long-term contract. James’ agent, Rich Paul, told Charania then that and would be monitoring the team’s moves.

Stephen A. Smith assesses the Lakers one year after trading for Luka Doncic.

The Lakers’ additions last summer fit the same philosophy as the Williams deal: They replaced veteran 3-and-D wing , 32, with , who turned 24 in November, and filled their void at center after trading Davis by acquiring .

Since undoing the Williams deal, the Lakers have yet to use their remaining first-round picks in a trade.

The result is a team unlikely to make a deep playoff run this season. The Lakers are fifth in the West but have the conference’s eighth-ranked point differential. The Lakers rank sixth in . Simulations based on have L.A. winning one playoff series just 25% of the time, making another first-round exit the overwhelmingly likely outcome.

The Lakers are looking ahead to the summer as the time to change their fortunes.

As good as Doncic is, acquiring him didn’t solve the Lakers’ biggest problem: a lack of role players capable of supporting their stars. It is something they’ve failed to address for years. In fact, the Doncic trade exacerbated the issue by sending out the best 3-and-D player the Lakers had developed since the 2020 title run in guard .

The Lakers are hoping to try again this summer. After exchanging one expiring contract () for another () in their lone in-season trade, the Lakers have just three other players besides Doncic under guaranteed contract for 2026-27: Knecht, LaRavia and reserve forward .

If the Lakers let James walk and see Ayton and veteran guard exercise player options, L.A. would have more than $50 million in cap space to build around a core of Doncic and unrestricted free agent . Reaves’ $21 million cap hold will surely be far less than he makes this summer, meaning the Lakers can spend that space then go over the cap to re-sign him.

Beyond that, by waiting until the offseason to trade first-round picks, the Lakers will be able to offer up to three first-rounders as opposed to the one they previously had available. They can trade their 2026 first-round pick as soon as it’s made in addition to ones in 2031 and 2033.

The way the Mavericks built a Finals team around Doncic and should be a model for the Lakers.

Between missing the playoffs in 2023 and winning the West a year later, Dallas drafted a rim-running center in and acquired another via trade in . The Mavericks also found two defensive-minded forwards in (free agency) and (trade) who also provided enough shooting to space the floor.

If Dallas is willing to do business with the Lakers again after firing its general manager who made the Doncic trade (Nico Harrison), Gafford and Washington would be sensible trade targets this summer. So too would Mavericks forward , the team’s replacement after Jones left in free agency following the Finals.

The unrestricted free agent market seems most likely to yield a center, with of the and of the realistic possibilities.

The Lakers also could make a run at guard , who was traded from the to the before the deadline. The Cavs’ tax bill might make them reluctant to match a strong offer to Ellis.

Restricted free agency is trickier for a team such as the Lakers that can’t afford to wait out the matching period, but forward — an L.A.-area native who played at — might be gettable via sign-and-trade because of Denver’s tax situation.

In many ways, the Lakers’ position this summer is similar to the period after they acquired Davis to pair with James in 2019. The Lakers waited to make that move official, saving enough cap space to sign 3-and-D wings and Danny Green along with center JaVale McGee. The Lakers leveraged players’ desire to play in L.A. to hit on multiple minimum signings, adding Rajon Rondo and bringing back Dwight Howard.

The result was championship-caliber depth that the Lakers sacrificed over the next year in pursuit of more shot creation. Trading for Doncic offered the Lakers a way out of that jam. Now, it’s up to them to maximize their opportunities this summer to take advantage.

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