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Lakers News: East All-Star Free Agent Amenable to Joining LA This Summer

Los Angeles is no doubt amenable to having him.
Feb 20, 2022; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Team Durant guard Dejounte Murray (5) shoots between Team LeBron
Feb 20, 2022; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Team Durant guard Dejounte Murray (5) shoots between Team LeBron | Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports

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Six-time All-Star swingman DeMar DeRozan, a Compton native, was one of the Los Angeles Lakers' potential free agent targets during the team's ill-fated 2021 offseason, as All-Stars LeBron James and Anthony Davis sought to form a fresh "Big Three" in Tinseltown.

Instead, they landed on former 2017 MVP point guard Russell Westbrook, for whom they offloaded much of their 2020 championship team. L.A. finished 33-49 in 2021-22 and ultimately had to trade Westbrook midway through the 2022-23 season to even make the playoffs. DeRozan, meanwhile, had the best regular season of his career after agreeing to a sign-and-trade with the Chicago Bulls. He made an All-NBA Second Team and returned to the All-Star Game for the first time in years, while leading the Bulls to the Eastern Conference's No. 6 seed and a swift playoff exit.

Now 34, DeRozan is poised to become a free agent this summer, should he not agree to terms on a contract extension with Chicago prior to July 1. The 6-foot-6 swingman has performed admirably during his last two years with the Bulls, but the team's unwillingness to make any player-related trades at all or to add meaningful free agent additions has doomed it to two consecutive seasons of play-in misery. K.C. Johnson of NBC Sports Chicago has reported that the Bulls tendered DeRozan an offer in the range of a two-year, $80 million deal to stick around.

When asked on FanDuel TV's "Run It Back" by cohost Chandler Parsons about whether he'd be interested in joining his hometown team, DeRozan offered a coy-if-open-minded answer.

"Everybody knows I'm a Kobe guy at the end of the day," DeRozan said. "Always been a Kobe guy. Been a Laker fan since Day 1. You can't never say no about playing home, especially if you're playing for a historic team like the Lakers. Time will tell, we'll see where the cards fall. Until then, I'll see what happens. I always want to be where I'm wanted."

Would DeRozan solve all of L.A.'s problems? No, but he is a great playmaker and efficient scorer who rarely gets hurt. He's flawed for a modern player (he doesn't defend well and is a low-volume three point shooter) he's but great at what he does well. Los Angeles could put together a package in a sign-and-trade deal that could probably allow him to get at least within a range of the money Chicago offered him, but it would limit the rest of the talent up and down the roster. Would it be worth taking the risk?

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Alex Kirschenbaum
ALEX KIRSCHENBAUM

Currently also a scribe for Newsweek, Hoops Rumors, The Sporting News and "Gremlins" director Joe Dante's film site Trailers From Hell, Alex is an alum of Men's Journal, Grizzlies fan site Grizzly Bear Blues, and Bulls fan sites Blog-A-Bull and Pippen Ain't Easy, among others.