LA Lakers Officially Trade Cam Reddish to sign Golden State Warriors Star for $101.3 Million 

Welcome to our Lakers Season Preview Series! For the next several weeks, we’ll be writing columns every week day, breaking down the biggest questions we have about every player the Lakers added this offseason. Today, we take a look at Cam Reddish.

 

“Resembling Cam Reddish. So full of potential but never given a real chance to develop.”

 

These are lyrics from J. Cole’s “Pi” from his mixtape “Might Delete Later.” While the raps were spectacular, like most of the music coming from the genre, it’s an exaggeration and fabrication of reality.

 

I don’t know when J. Cole wrote these lyrics, but they would have been most appropriate in November of last season.

 

That was the best month for Reddish as a Laker last year, averaging 8.3 points, 2.8 rebounds and 1.3 assists per game. His best stretch during that month was a four-game span in mid-November, where he averaged 15.3 points and 3.3 rebounds. He also had the best plus-minus on the team, +8.3.

 

It looked like maybe the Lakers struck gold by taking a flyer on the 2019 lottery pick, putting him in a scenario where his best qualities could shine.

 

However, Reddish not only regressed to the mean, he had the worst season of his career. He averaged 5.4 points, 2.1 rebounds and one assist per game and his season was constantly interrupted by an ankle injury.

 

Due to his dip in performance and inability to stay healthy, Reddish only participated in 48 games for the Lakers.

 

With a mediocre season and a player option available, Reddish opted in this summer and has returned to Los Angeles. So, what can fans expect from him under coach JJ Reddick?

If you are an optimist, Reddish’s best role on a good Lakers team is around 15-23 minutes, double-digit points and flirting with a 40% average from 3-point range.

 

In this scenario, with limited minutes, Reddish can produce decent offensive production and can bring some intensity off the bench with timely jumpers or the occasional dunk.

 

Defensively is where he can truly stand out and give the team a solid backup on-ball defender. All teams who aspire to succeed need as many of those as possible and if Reddish can be one of them, even in limited play, it’d be a huge help.

 

He understands his ability to stay in the NBA will revolve around doing the little things that impact winning and he embraces that role.

 

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