Los Angeles Lakers

Los Angeles Lakers:  Record last season: 17-65

Postseason results: None

Additions: Luol Deng, Timofey Mozgov, Brandon Ingram, Jose Calderon, Thomas Robinson, Yi Jianlian, Ivica Zubac

Subtractions: Kobe Bryant, Brandon Bass, Roy Hibbert, Ryan Kelly

Biggest move: Drafting Brandon Ingram (Losing Kobe?)

Projected finish: 15th in the Western Conference

Entertainment ranking: 19. Kobe Bryant dubbed himself “Vino” because he aged like fine wine. His talented but inexperienced successors, D’Angelo Russell and Brandon Ingram, are both under 21. Call them Sprite and Schweppes? — Ben Golliver

Power ranking: 28. Luke Walton, young talent and a bizarre crop of vets should make for a much more watchable season, but that’s the only comfortable assumption here. — Jeremy Woo

One number: 5.8. Lakers fans were understandably befuddled when GM Mitch Kupchak opened the free-agency period by signing Timofey Mozgov to a four-year, $64 million contract. Mozgov?!? Sure, the 7' 1" center had just won a championship with the Cavaliers, but he was barely a factor during the title run. After losing his starting job during an injury-plagued season, Mozgov averaged just 5.8 minutes in the postseason and didn’t even get on the court eight times.

Kupchak and first-time coach Luke Walton are hoping that Mozgov, 30, still has some quality basketball left in the tank. After finishing with the league’s worst defense, the Lakers wasted no time moving on from ponderous Roy Hibbert, whose clunky offensive game also made him a poor fit. While Mozgov isn’t necessarily the most agile center either, he’s a capable finisher in pick-and-rolls, and he has a knack for creating opportunities with off-ball cuts. He has even spent some time in the preseason honing a three-point stroke.

This new marriage is bound to face some tough moments, given the Lakers’ youth and lack of defensive talent, but Mozgov is excited to be back in his team’s plans. “[Walton] said I’m going to play a lot,” he told the L.A. Daily News. “I really like it.” — Ben Golliver

Scouting report: The best-case scenario is that D’Angelo Russell becomes a high-level starter, Brandon Ingram is in the Rookie of the Year mix, and they get a clear sense for how Julius Randle fits into their plans. And they still might not win 25 games. . . . They should change more than any other team, with Kobe Bryant retiring and [coach] Luke Walton taking over for Byron Scott. They’ll play fast, take more threes, run less isolation and have a lot more oppor-tunity for their young prospects, which is how they should have played last year. . . . Russell is their most important player. The style shift will work if he makes it work, and it will fail if he’s not quite ready. Give him a mulligan for last year because Bryant dominated everything. If Russell “gets it,” he’ll be a superstar. He’s ready for a breakout. . . . Ingram has off-the-charts talent, but it will take him a few years to be an impact guy. His lack of strength will hurt him, and he needs to tighten up his handle. I see him as a skilled all-around offensive player but not quite elite. . . . Randle has the biggest question marks. Is he a starter? A guy off the bench? A trade chip? Maybe Walton sees Randle as a Draymond Green type. He can handle the ball a little bit, but can he make the reads? I don’t think Randle has shown a clear skill set. He’s pretty easy to guard. He goes left over and over, and he goes to his spin move over and over. . . . Larry Nance Jr. could wind up being more important than Randle. He’s a more natural fit as a small five, he plays with great energy, and he’s an above-the-rim threat. Everything he does translates to winning.

Bottom Line: Coach Luke Walton won 73 games with the Dubs last year. It might take him three years to win that many here.

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