#3 Kyle Kuzma didn’t blossom into a 3rd star


Two years into the LeBron James-Anthony Davis All-Star combo, the LA Lakers are still waiting for Kyle Kuzma to become their third star and find his identity as a player.
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Is he a small forward or a power forward? Is he a 3-point shooter or a slasher? Is he a specialist or an all-around player?
No one seems to know for sure and, unfortunately, neither does Kuzma.
The talented 25-year-old averaged 12.9 points and 6.1 rebounds per game while shooting 36.1 percent from beyond the arc. These are respectable numbers for a role player, but the expectations for Kuzma are way higher. After teasing LA Lakers fans with an 18.7-point average in his second season, he has gradually regressed and become somewhat of an enigma.
When James and Davis were both out for a significant period during the regular season, Kuzma could have stepped up and been a 20-point scorer from that point on. However, the LA Lakers forward only averaged 15.7 points in 14 games, showing a lack of feel for the game that the best players possessed.
#2 LeBron James and Anthony Davis were injured

Valentine’s Day could not have been much worse for Davis. The eight-time All-Star suffered a calf strain and Achilles tendonosis against the Denver Nuggets, which caused him to sit out 30 games. It was the most he had missed in a season, and that’s not counting other injury-related DNP’s.
James followed suit more than a month later when he sustained a high right ankle sprain against the Atlanta Hawks which caused him to miss 26 games, including games he skipped when he re-aggravated the injury two games after his comeback.
The LA Lakers struggled without their superstars and during the games they played while trying to re-acclimate themselves to playing with their teammates and vice versa.
By the time the postseason arrived, the LA Lakers were once again hit with a spate of injuries that took out Davis again, Caldwell-Pope and Caruso, who missed the second half of their last game against the Phoenix Suns.
James played every game against the Suns but he was clearly far from being 100 percent, needing perhaps more rest to recover from the ankle sprain.
#1 The LA Lakers faced the Phoenix Suns in the first round

There were so many scenarios that could have played out during the final games of the regular season. The LA Lakers could have been seeded between fifth and eighth in the tough Western Conference depending on how the last two weeks of the season played out.
The LA Lakers' first-round opponent could have been the Utah Jazz, Denver Nuggets, LA Clippers, Denver Nuggets or Portland Trail Blazers. Instead, they got the worst possible matchup by facing a Finals-bound Phoenix Suns team that owned the third-best net rating in the regular season (5.9), and currently have the second-best defensive rating (106.7) and second-highest net rating (6.9) in the postseason.
As the playoffs progressed, it became clear that the only reason why the LA Lakers had a 2-1 series lead against the Suns was because Chris Paul suffered a shoulder injury in the first game that hampered his play in the first round. After Game 4 with the series tied at 2-2, Paul’s team showed why they were the second-best regular season team in the league, and quite possibly the best team in the postseason when they dismantled the Lakers in the next two games.
If the LA Lakers had faced any of the aforementioned four teams, who knows how far they could have gone in the postseason.
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