BREAKING NEWS: Los Angeles Lakers Acquire Top Tier Shooting Guards, Norman Powell And Anfernee Simons In A 3 Team Trade Deal. Sending Rui Hachimura To…
WASHINGTON — Rui Hachimura and the Lakers had just wrapped a 5-1 road trip as he stood by his locker near the door.
Being back inside the Wizards building felt a little weird to Hachimura, his first game back in Washington after the Lakers acquired him last year at the trade deadline in a move that’s run parallel to long stretches of winning basketball.
As he talked about the ways he’s grown as a pro since leaving the Wizards, he mentioned two of his teammates, LeBron James and Anthony Davis. These “big guys,” he said, “it’s a different game. But I’m used to it.”
“Used to it?” Davis parroted from across the room. Hachimura laughed and shook his head before continuing on.
The joke wasn’t totally clear, other than Davis playfully hijacking Hachimura’s interview. But the undertone, that the Lakers and the Japanese star were comfortable, used to one another, was fully on display.
Hachimura, still just 26, is in the middle of his best stretch of pro basketball. He’s become an efficiency monster playing off the Lakers’ top offense options. On the six-game trip, his defense and rebounding ticked up.
Since moving into the starting lineup for good on Feb. 3, Hachimura’s made 59% from the field and 45% from three-point range.
“You can see, like on offense, I can cut to the rim, I can get wide-open threes,” he said after the Lakers beat the Wizards 125-120 — a game in which Hachimura had 19 points and seven rebounds. “And defensively, we’re all switching. It’s easy. We’re very physical, can get rebounds and all that. So I think it’s good. We just have to keep building this.”
The building to this might have taken longer than people, including Hachimura, wanted.
He began the season coming off the bench, his rhythm disrupted by three different multi-game absences due to injury. Lakers coach Darvin Ham experimented with different lineup combinations, with Hachimura’s minutes a regular casualty.
Asked generally about Hachimura before Thursday’s game, Ham offered some reasons as to why the Lakers didn’t just automatically hand him the keys to a starting role.
“Just him trying to focus on the small things. Constantly on him about his awareness and activity defensively. Just his communication, him being in the right spot early. He’s been drawing some tough individual matchups. And it’s kind of like when that guy doesn’t have the ball it’s like, ‘Whew, I can relax,’” Ham said. “It’s not like that. It takes all five to get a stop. And after you do your job on the ball, that ball gets swung. Now you’ve got to get in position to help and support your teammates who supported you earlier in the possession. Just him doing the little things. Sprinting back in transition guarding his guy, once he’s done guarding his guy, his activity and alertness and awareness on the weakside of the defense.”