Lakers newsletter: Deciphering Spencer Dinwiddieâs postgame thoughts
![Spencer Dinwiddie sits on the bench before a game last month.](https://ca-times.brightspotcdn.com/dims4/default/eb6e91a/2147483647/strip/true/crop/8192x5461+0+0/resize/1200x800!/quality/75/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcalifornia-times-brightspot.s3.amazonaws.com%2F94%2F10%2Ffe933f864cea9f5fa2b92e5d5cf1%2F1406770-sp-lakes-pistons-16-gmf.jpg)
- Share via
Hello everyone, this is Dan Woike and welcome back to the L.A. Timesâ Lakers Newsletter, where Iâm maybe a little bit jealous to not be writing from South Korea like our Dodgersâ coverage team. Alas, I get Indianapolis next week instead.
All things Lakers, all the time.
Get all the Lakers news you need in Dan Woike's weekly newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
This week, I wanted to try and take you inside one of my favorite interviews of the season â a media scrum we had with Spencer Dinwiddie.
A writerâs commentary
Monday morning after the Lakers had a workout, we spoke to guard Spencer Dinwiddie. Always known as a smart, independent thinker around NBA circles, weâve slowly gotten to know Dinwiddie since the team added him after the NBA trade deadline via the buyout market.
(I had a small head start. Years ago in my role as a national NBA writer, I wrote about Dinwiddie and his sights on being a disruptor in the sneaker space. You can read it here).
Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times
Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Become a subscriber.
While the conversation was a good one, touching on a bunch of different stuff, including Kyrie Irvingâs incredible game-winner from Sunday, letâs focus and deconstruct a couple of his most interesting answers.
He was asked about the line between wanting to fit in and not wanting to be passive.
âAgain, I mean, I have great teammates. Credit to them. But like I said, there wasnât a huge vacuum created by a trade or something and I was stepping into 20-30, whatever, possessions or something of that nature. As you see, some games itâs 0-for-3, some games itâs three-for-three. So, sometimes, in terms of the sexy stuff, itâs hard to glean anything from that. Last game, obviously, percentage wise was great. But I think more so than anything, youâre going to have to see my impact in defense, effort, plus-minus, connectivity and stuff like that. Making the extra pass. Those dot-connecting plays are probably where Iâm going to be integrated, obviously, more so, first and foremost. And then depending on which lineups are used - who is in? Who is out? If we have, God forbid, any injuries or something of that nature then some of that other stuff opens up.â
Dinwiddieâs actually led the Lakers in plus/minus since joining the team. Heâs a plus-65 in 15 games, four points ahead of Anthony Davis and nine points ahead of LeBron James. He wasnât really defensive as he explained his role, but you could tell he wanted to make it clear how he was mattering.
He was later asked about how proud he was to lead the team in plus/minus despite averaging less than five points per game.
âYeah of course. I think, to be completely candid, the best team I was on, so far, the farthest Iâve gone was conference finals with Dallas. We had a guy that started for us, Reggie Bullock. He would pick up 94, sometimes heâd go 0-for-3, sometimes heâs three-for-three from three or whatever. One of the things he talked about was just giving that effort, picking up 94 regardless. Obviously, I donât necessarily pick up 94. But when you talk about plus/minus, impacting and he helped us a lot. He did the sacrificial things on that team that allowed Luka and myself and Jalen to have fun and basically just ISO everybody every play. And you know, he may or may not touch it for five times in a row. Same way with the Dorian Finney-Smithâs of the world and Maxi Kleber and Dwight Powellâs. Those types of guys are what make a team really special. Obviously, you do need the generational LeBron, Luka-level talent. But after that, you are going to need, whether itâs four-through-15 or three-through-15 to be like just locked in, focused, dedicated to the goal. Dot connectors. Sacrificial in mindset and nature. And it doesnât mean ânot aggressive.â It just means like, âHey, you may have to swing-swing and give up one of your looks.â You may only shoot four times. But if you can continue to try to take charges, try to be in the right position, all of this stuff, you guys can go far.â
(Letâs jump in here â Dinwiddie is articulating the value of role players to winning. A job he hasnât really had.)
âLike I said, it is technically foreign for me from what Iâve done in my career. I feel so sometimes like Iâm in a Reggie Bullock role getting graded on a Spencer scale sometimes. Where as on a Reggie Bullock scale â no shot, again, thatâs my dog, like I said, he was great for us â I feel like Iâm doing really well. On a Spencer scale, obviously, Iâm doing [poor]. But like, Iâm also not in that Spencer position either, you feel me? I came here understanding some of that was going to happen, right? Iâm in good spirits and a good space. I wish we wouldâve won a couple more games that we dropped. But overall, the house isnât on fire in my mind. If you gave me 20 attempts or whatever, Iâd go out there and score 30. Like, as yâall have seen throughout my career, thatâs not lacking anything. Youâd see more dunks and step-back threes and all the other fun stuff youâre accustomed to seeing from me.â
We can forgive ââSpencer scaleâ as a phrase, and as someone who has covered Reggie Bullock for the entirety of his NBA career, Iâve got a soft spot. (Plus, that guy has had such a long NBA career, he bought himself a private island. Google it!) But, like Spencer said, I donât think this was a shot. And while Iâm maybe a little skeptical about Dinwiddieâs scoring after he basically quit shooting in Brooklyn, I think thereâs been genuine acceptance of the Bullock role. It was illuminating, though, to see a player so openly address how outside forces value players and how it can affect someone.
So we asked, as he looks to whatâs next, what role he sees for himself?
âThatâs kind of a loaded question. I mean, obviously, the way [things] shook out in Brooklyn kind of put me more so in this box than maybe like my game being in that box. Itâs not like Iâm 35 or coming off injury or washed or anything. I mean, last year, I believe I was the most efficient isolation player in the playoffs. In the second half of the season, after going to Brooklyn, I was like top five in assists. I led the league in assists in I think the month of March. When I was co-starting with Luka, we were like the fourth, fifth seed in the West, you know? Like, Iâm one of them guys. Letâs not get it twisted. But I also understand being a part of a bigger unit. Like, Iâve been the No. 1 option on a Brooklyn team, averaged 21 (points per game). Played with a generational star in Luka and been like, âOh, hey, like, Iâm probably not gonna average 20-plus.â But I still might have average 17, 18, and be the second guy and do this, that and the third because this is where Iâm at. Then also being the third guy if JB (Jalen Brunson) is cooking. Or, obviously, now, fitting into a group that already has a lot of established roles, talent, etc. And saying, âHey, Iâll do this.â But in terms of can I go out there and cook people? Of course. So would I rather be cooking or chasing people 94 [feet[? I mean, who wouldnât rather be cooking? Like, most people that chase 94, itâs cause they canât cook like that. It just so happens that, luckily enough, God blessed me with me the athleticism to do both.â
Thereâs no shortage of confidence, and conceding to a life of being a role player requires a hefty ego adjustment. Itâs probably why so many players struggle with it. The most important thing here is ââHey, Iâll do this.â Heâs totally bought into what the Lakers have asked. As far as his ability to cook, there are going to be a moment or two where the Lakers need him to get into that part of his bag. Itâll be interesting to see if itâs there. But I love how he doesnât doubt that the offense-first part of his game is merely sitting on ice.
Song of the Week
âSay Goodbyeâ by Future Islands
Speaking of people who can just go out there and cookâŠ
In case you missed it
Anthony Davis plays and Lakers overcome shaky start in blowout win over Hawks
Why would Kobe Bryantâs dad auction NBA championship ring the Lakers legend gifted him?
Shot-clock craziness and an Anthony Davis injury plague Lakersâ loss to Warriors
Plaschke: No Anthony Davis? Struggling Lakers have no chance if heâs out
Darvin Ham staying positive ahead of critical stretch for Lakers
Anthony Davis and Lakers bullied, beaten by Sacramento Kings, again
âCanât skip detailsâ: Lakers left to look for solutions after another loss to Kings
Johnny Buss, brother of Lakers owner Jeanie Buss, is running for president
Why did the âKing of Collectiblesâ cast doubt on their million-dollar LeBron James card?
Until next time...
As always, pass along your thoughts to me at [email protected], and please consider subscribing if you like our work!
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.