Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Lakers Sign Brandon Ingram

The Los Angeles Lakers have signed forward Brandon Ingram, it was announced today by General Manager Mitch Kupchak. Per team policy, terms of the deal were not released.

Drafted with the second overall selection of the 2016 NBA Draft in June, Ingram averaged 12.2 points (second on the team), 4.2 rebounds, and 1.8 assists over his five games (all starts) at the 2016 NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. Following his Summer League play, Ingram was selected by USA Basketball to participate as a member of the 2016 USA Men’s Select Team.

The 18-year-old was the consensus ACC Freshman of the year in his lone collegiate season at Duke, while also earning a consensus Second Team All-ACC selection. He finished the season ranked sixth in the ACC in scoring (17.3), seventh in three-point percentage (.410) and minutes played (34.6), ninth in three-pointers made per game (2.2), 10th in blocks (1.4), and 13th in rebounds (6.8).

The Kinston, NC native was Duke’s leading scorer in the NCAA Tournament, averaging 23.0 points per game to go along with 6.3 rebounds and 2.7 assists over the three games, scoring at least 20 points in each contest and playing in 119 of a possible 120 minutes of action.

The 6’9’’ Ingram was a member of USA Basketball’s 2015 United States Junior National Select Team and was a Parade All-American as a senior at Kinston High School. He won four straight 2A state championships, becoming one of two players in history to win four consecutive North Carolina State Championships, and was MVP of the state championship game as a senior.

Friday, August 19, 2016

Larry Nance, Jr. is impressed with Lakers rookies Brandon Ingram and Ivica Zubac

If one thing was made clear in Larry Nance, Jr.’s appearance on the Basketball Insiders podcast on Tuesday, it’s that the sophomore forward could not be more pleased with the Los Angeles Lakers’ offseason. He’s enjoying working with his fellow young players, the team’s new head coach and free agency additions, as well as being pretty high on the team’s new rookies, Brandon Ingram and Ivica Zubac.
"I'm really impressed with both of the guys,” Nance, Jr. told host Alex Kennedy. “I didn't get to see much of college basketball last year, but obviously Brandon is a terrific talent, and he can do it in so many different ways, whether it's shooting or driving he's just so versatile with his wingspan and the way he can move and stuff like that.”
All of those skills are enough to make Nance, Jr. think it’s a little strange how fixated people are on Ingram’s weight, or more accurately in the case of the skinny small forward who has an alarm on his phone reminding him to eat, lack thereof.
“I think people are going to be impressed. He's not a baby. He's not a baby,” Nance, Jr. repeated for emphasis. “He's stronger than he looks, and I think he's going to be really impressive, whether it's this year, next year, or two years down the line I don't know.”
Nance, Jr. knows Ingram is still just 18-years old, and while he may not think Ingram is a “baby,” he does think people should understand he still has plenty of growing to do.
“What I looked like at 18 compared to what I look like now, come on. You can't predict what a kid's going to be at right now,” said Nance, Jr. “I think he's going to be really good sooner rather than later, but he's a heck of a talent."
Nance, Jr. is no less impressed with the player whose Wikipedia-reported death he avenged in Las Vegas Summer League.
"Big Zubac is my guy. He's hilarious. His English is really spotty still, but he's so excited to be a part of everything,” said Nance, Jr. “I had never heard of him before we picked him, but he's really good.”
As a defensive minded center, Zubac is also the exact type of player Nance, Jr. says he can see himself fitting well alongside moving forward.
“At summer league he had to be one of the most efficient players there,” praised Nance, Jr. "He was efficient, he was a shot blocker, he was physical, he's a joy to play with because he's got your back. If you get beat, you know he's going to be there to contest the shot and stuff like that, so I look forward to learning and growing with him, and I think if I got to play with him in the second unit, that would be a pretty good defensive rotation there."
The Lakers haven’t had a whole lot of good defensive lineups over the last several years, so if he and Zubac can help create such a pairing it would surely be a welcome change for the organization.
However, even if he can’t do so on the court in the regular season just yet, Nance, Jr. did joke he’s looking forward to Zubac lightening his load off of it.
“I don't know if Brandon is my rookie, but Zubac is definitely carrying my bags.”

Lakers News: Brandon Ingram Remains One Of Two Unsigned First Round Picks

The Los Angeles Lakers made Brandon Ingram the latest piece of the young core expected to return the team to its former greatness when they took him second overall in the 2016 NBA Draft.
Despite the lofty expectations for Ingram eventually, especially after his performance in the Lakers’ Summer League finale, Ingram still has yet to sign his rookie deal.
According to Bobby Marks of The Vertical, Ingram is one of only three first-round picks who have yet to sign their contracts:
That list, however, quickly dwindled to only two as Shams Charania of The Vertical reported that Thon Maker is set to sign his rookie deal with the Bucks:
Ingram not signing his deal is no cause for concern. It has been reported that the Lakers are simply conserving their salary cap space in case some beneficial deal becomes available. The Lakers reportedly have an unnamed trade target and in addition to Ingram, both Tarik Black and Marcelo Huertas have yet to sign their deals either.
With the rookie scale, there is very little wiggle room for Ingram and his agent to negotiate as the most Ingram can make is 120 percent of the scale. The maximum Ingram can make is just under $24 million over four years.
It is only a matter of time before Ingram signs his deal, but the Lakers are smart in keeping their options open before having the players officially sign. When the Lakers traded for Jeremy Lin, the draft pick they received in the deal was used to take Larry Nance Jr. so good things can come from holding off.

What is the hold up on Brandon Ingram?

Ingram is one of two Lottery Pick rookies who has not signed their rookie contract

You'd expect that before summer league, Brandon Ingram would already have his rookie deal in placed. It happened with D'Angelo Russell and Larry Nance Jr. last year and Julius Randle the year before. (Clarkson didn't receive his deal until after summer league). So what is taking Mitch Kupchak and Jim Buss so long to give the kid his deal?

Some Believe - The Lakers are looking into a deal that will send Brandon Ingram to either Sacramento or Oklahoma City for either DeMarcus Cousins or Russell Westbrook. Impatient Laker fans has been itching to get their hands on one of those two and they are ultimately believing the Lakers are already shopping to move Ingram elsewhere.

Some Believe - The Lakers won't sign Ingram at all. They have Luol Deng already to fill in the small forward spot.

Okay let's hit the pause button for those kinds of Laker fans. Anyone with a brain knows that the Lakers are not and have not been shopping suitable destinations to move Ingram out of here, also the Lakers have no intentions in trying to trade for a superstar player.

Okay what we know is that Brandon Ingram is one of two rookies in the lottery who has not yet signed their rookie contract - the other being Domantas Sabonis or Thon Maker. So what's the real reason Ingram has not signed his contract? Well, it all begins with the team's intentions to be rid of Nick Young. The team has held back on signing Marcelo Huertas and Tarik Black to deals as well. Possibly getting ready for a minor deal that involves all three for a younger/vet player. It is unclear that if the Lakers are looking to move Black because Luke Walton has promised him his chance to shine with suitable playing time, it is clear they have intentions to move Young out of here.As much as I like Huertas, having him and Jose Calderon off the bench seems puzzling.

We also have to take in the fact that the Lakers also have a plan of bringing in another free agent, possibly for training camp. They want to make sure they have enough room in the salary cap to make that move before they sign Ingram.

So no impatient Laker fans, Ingram will not be traded anytime soon.

Kupchak Reflects On 2016 Draft

General Manager Mitch Kupchak came out of the 2016 NBA Draft having secured Brandon Ingram with the second-overall pick and Ivica Zubac with the 32nd.

Afterward, he met with the Los Angeles media to discuss the two new Lakers along with the draft process and immediate future.

Below is a transcription from the Lakers' practice facility in El Segundo.

Q: On his thoughts about 32nd pick Ivica Zubac:
Kupchak: We saw a young, big, developing player. When I was over there this year back in January or February, I watched him. He’s young and he’s big and he’s got skills. He did remind me of NBA players that, in this league, have made it. But he is a young player. So if he continues to work hard and develop, he has a chance to stick in this league and be a good player. But our knowledge of the European players is clearly not what it is to our knowledge of players in this country. We don’t see them as often and they play a different game: Fewer number of games, and in Europe the young players don’t play much. A lot of times the coaches over there will play the veteran players and the young players will hardly play at all, so you have to go to practice to scout a player who’s 19 years old. So you don’t get the same body of work to examine as you would in this country. It makes it a little more difficult, so you do rely on your international scout a little bit more than you would a domestic scout.

Q: On if Zubac will be on the Lakers’ roster next season:
Kupchak: I believe he would like to play next year and we wouldn’t be opposed to that.

Q: On the potential for Zubac to join their D-League affiliate, the Los Angeles D-Fenders:
Kupchak: Right now, the D-Fenders really aren’t in the equation in terms of this pick. It’s not something that was discussed. We hope to get him over to play in Summer League. We don’t know if that’s something we can do yet. As I mentioned, it’s not quite as easy with the European guys; logistics and contracts. I do believe he is under an existing contract, but he does have an NBA out. So can those kinds of things be addressed in the next 10 days? I’m not sure. But we would like to bring him over and get him to play in Summer League if that’s possible.

Q: On how much interest they showed Zubac:
Kupchak: We were in contact with all the representatives. There’s always an indication of who you like and who you don’t like. Certainly, his representative knew from the get-go that he’s a player that we liked. … I don’t know how that (interest) is translated to the player, but certainly going into the pick there was, from their point of view, an understanding that: “Hey, the Lakers might take you if you’re there.”

Q: On how much international scout Antonio Maceiras influenced the Lakers making this pick:
Kupchak: Antonio Maceiras is our international scout. And when I go to Europe, he arranges all the players and all the games for me to go see. As I mentioned, he arranged for me to go scout this player. We also looked at, for the last 10 days, film. There was a workout in New York last week with a bunch of international players, three or four of which were drafted in the first round today. There’s a body of ability that we try to assess. Sometimes it’s a workout that’s controlled by a representative. Sometimes it’s on film and sometimes it’s a practice and sometimes it’s a game and sometimes it’s relying on your scout. But without Antonio Maceiras, we would not have made this pick.

Q: On if he feels that the team got better with these picks:
Kupchak: I think we’ve added more talent. I do. Clearly we’re very happy with Brandon. The No. 2 pick, under most circumstances, is a player that’s gonna have an impact right away. It’s not a player that we anticipate won’t play. Clearly he’s gonna play and hopefully he’s productive and gets better quickly. Ivica, we don’t know that yet. There’s probably a bigger learning curve for him. And a lot of it has to do with Summer League and training camp and how he plays in front of our coach and how our coach wants to play and how quickly he comes along. I don’t think language skills are gonna be a problem with him. His English is pretty good. We’ve drafted players in the past where that was a hinderance: the language barrier. That’s not gonna be the case here

Q: On if he likes the team’s crop of young players:
Kupchak: We like the young Lakers core. It doesn’t mean we’re not gonna pursue some veteran leadership. When July 1 rolls around, I think we will. I think history tells you that a bunch of young guys on a team is probably not a good thing. They look around for leadership and advice from somebody who’s been through this a couple of times, and if there’s nobody to talk to then they really don’t know how to handle the situation. So I think we will look to add some veteran leadership and hopefully not only leadership, but guys who can help us win games. It’s unlikely that would come about trade, although it’s possible. But it’s more likely to come about through free agency.

Q: On how he sees the team’s approach to free agency:
Kupchak: It’s gonna depend on the free agent.

Q: On which players Zubac reminds him of:
Kupchak: I do have a couple players in mind, but I don’t want to share that with you to be honest with you. One of the guys I’m thinking about turned out to be a heck of a player, and I just don’t want to label that player.

Q: On Zubac’s style of play:
Kupchak: He started playing late, (has) a body that’s still developing. You may say he’s not as fluid or … clearly still growing into his body and becoming more comfortable on certain parts of the court. But we’ve been through drafting young players of size in the past. And I’m not comparing him to Andrew Bynum, but Andrew was 17 years old, (he was) big, long, gangly, almost clumsy at first. So that’s what you deal with when you deal with big men. I was a big player. You kind of develop late. That’s kind of what you’re dealing with when you have somebody who’s of that size, starting playing late, is still growing and developing into their body.

Q: On if he worries when the player he picks seems to have dropped in the draft:
Kupchak: All the general managers, after the draft, are very happy with the way the draft went. They’re always saying, “We though he’d be a first-round pick and he dropped and we didn’t think he’d be there and we’re ecstatic to draft him.” I think that’s just the nature of the business. … There’s always going to be somebody somewhere that drops or doesn’t take place the way you thought it would take place. And every year we’re happy with who we draft. The reality is you have to wait a couple of years and look back on it and see if you were right: The guy should have been higher and he dropped and you had him pegged correctly and you were happy to draft him at a lower number. So yes, we did think (Zubac) would be drafted higher. I don’t read many of the mock drafts. A lot of people do. I’m aware that he could have been drafted in the first round, and he almost was drafted in the first round. There were other guys right next him that we thought would be drafted and they went 20 slots past him. So I don’t know. … Were we wrong or was the mock draft wrong? We don’t know. We’ll have to wait and see. We did think he’d be gone earlier. We did think he’d be a first-round pick. But there’s so much that goes into the draft. You have 30 teams. They’re all trying to figure it out. A lot of times a team that’s definitely going to pick at 24 or 25 — a player they didn’t think was going to be available all of sudden is available — and they take that player. And then that one player they were going to take slides. Then they slide to a point where someone like us comes along and we have a pick available and we have a need at that position and we take him.

Q: On if he thinks the team will land a superstar free agent this year:
Kupchak: It might not be different. I think this year is different. In years passed, our team was different. We didn’t have nearly enough cap space as we do this year. I may have talked a couple of times about what we tried to sell a summer ago or two summers ago. We just didn’t have that much to sell in terms of: “Well, I’m going to come to Los Angeles. Whom am I going to play with?” Last summer was: “Well, you get to play with Kobe, but Kobe’s been injured.” “Is he going to be healthy, Mitch?” “Well, I don’t know that.” “Then who else am I going to play with?” “You’re going love playing with Julius Randle, but he only played one game. Then you’re going to love playing with the No. 2 pick who hasn’t played at all.” So we didn’t have as much to sell last year and the year before. And we only had enough money for one (max) player last year, too. So I think this year we have more to sell. We have Julius, D’Angelo (Russell), Jordan Clarkson, who’s a year further along, and Larry Nance, who unexpectedly had a good year. We added Lou Williams, who had a good year. Now we have the No. 2 pick and the No. 32 pick, who may be a good player and may not a good player. And on top of that, we had enough cap room to add multiple players of a maximum contract or add one player and save some money for next summer. Or maybe use all the money and divide it up between three and four players. So I think our asset allotment is better, and I think the circumstances are better.

Q: On how patient he plans to be with the development of his young players:
Kupchak: I don’t think there’s a plan in terms of: If it doesn’t work in a year from now, we’re going to break it up; O if we don’t win 36 games or 42 games or 48 games, it’s over. That’s not the plan at all. I think what we’d like to do is put together a group of players that are growing, fun to watch and improve as the season goes along. Clearly (we have) the intent to keep the interest of our supporters, fans, partners, TV, season-seat holders. You do have to win games. That doesn’t mean we have to win 40 or 45 or 50. It may not even mean you have to make the playoffs. I don’t know what it’s going to take to make the playoffs next year. Maybe you got to win 48 games to get into the West and we win 47 — or maybe we win 37. But as long as the team is fun to watch, our fans and our partners can see a team that’s growing and getting better as the season goes along — I think that’s the barometer that’s best for us.

Q: On if he thinks the team is heading in the right direction:
Kupchak: I do. We earned it a little bit. The past two years we’ve lost a lot of games No one really looked down on us and gave us a gift. We earned the last two No. 2 picks. It’s not like they gave it to us. But we did get lucky with the Lottery the last two years. So that was some luck. But I do feel like we have a lot more going for us this year than we did last year. And that’s not because it’s anything we did or didn’t do differently. It’s just the nature of this business.

Q: On if he knows who will be in the room during the pitch to free agents:
Kupchak: It depends. We do have a plan. I don’t think we’re going to have to rely on our partners as much as we have in the past. We can focus a little bit more on the basketball side of it, because we do have more to sell. The franchise and the city have always sold themselves. I’m not sure we’ll concentrate as much on that as we did last year. I think clearly myself, Jim (Buss), Luke (Walton). Depending on how quickly things move, there may be meetings or not be meetings. Things may be done quickly. They may take a week or two. There may not be face-to-face meetings. There may be a couple. It all depends on how quickly things move.

Q: On if he has signed any undrafted free agents:
Kupchak: Not yet. But I’m hoping we’re close. I’m expecting a call.

Q: On if they tried to buy a second-round pick:
Kupchak: We tried, yeah. It’s a mad house the last hour. You’re kind of chasing your tail trying to buy a pick. Everybody’s trying to buy picks. The team that you’re trying to buy a pick from says, “Well, if our guys there we’re going to use it. But if he’s not there, we’ll sell it. But we really don’t want to sell. We want a future pick. You’re not going to do it for a future pick? Well, this team offered us this.” That takes minutes then that pick is gone and you’re going down and you’re kind of just chasing it. So it’s nerve-wracking. The stakes aren’t nearly as high as the first round. So to some degree it’s kind of fun because you’re scrambling and it gets a little exciting. You’re trying to nail a player that you thought would be drafted and isn’t drafted. But we did not get anybody.

Lakers, Ingram Look Toward Building Future

Los Angeles Lakers
PRESENTED BY 
Toggle Search Input
Social Menu

Brandon Ingram is interviewed after being drafted by the Lakers on June 23, 2016.
(Mike Stobe/Getty Images)
Lakers, Ingram Look Toward Building Future

by Joey Ramirez Digital Reporter
Posted: Jun 24, 2016
Brandon Ingram has heard the criticism.

Scouts and media members applaud his ever-stretching wingspan and pinpoint shooting ability, but — even minutes after being drafted — his thin, 195-pound frame comes into question.

Ingram’s first interview as a Laker on Thursday included a comment about how skinny the 6-foot-9 18-year-old is.

But Ingram is fine with outsiders suggesting he pack on a few pounds.

“It just gives me motivation to show these guys that the skinny part doesn’t matter,” Ingram said in a conference call with the Los Angeles media. “It got me here today. I was the No. 2 pick, of course. Being skinny didn’t mean anything when I was battling each and every guy each and every night.”

Indeed, his frame didn’t stop him from averaging 17.3 points at Duke en route to being named ACC Freshman of the Year.

For what it’s worth, his new head coach, Luke Walton, didn’t express an ounce of worry about his lankiness.

“I don’t see concerns about his weight,” Walton said. “He’s young. He’ll naturally get stronger. Talking to some of the coaches that were here when he came and did his workout — even though he’s skinny, he had strength to him in the individual workout that he did. So that’s good to hear and that’s not a concern of mine.”

That purple and gold looks good on ya, @b_ingram13 #NBADraft
A photo posted by Los Angeles Lakers (@lakers) on Jun 23, 2016 at 5:39pm PDT
Ingram’s frame and knack for outside scoring has drawn comparisons to seven-time All-Star Kevin Durant, whom he grew up a “really, really big fan of.”

General Manager Mitch Kupchak acknowledged the “striking” similarities between the two, but cautioned that “Brandon has a long, long way to go” before he is on the level of the 2014 MVP.

However, Kupchak sees plenty of promise in the second-overall draft pick who shined at Duke, particularly in the NCAA Tournament, where he averaged 23.0 points on 45.1 percent shooting.

“He played big minutes,” Kupchak said. “He started in an excellent league with excellent competition. In that regard, there’s been a lot that’s already been proven. We look at him and his age and his body type and his willingness to work and be coached. We think (with) his upside and the potential in him — right now there is no ceiling on him.”

Walton — who only joined the team three days before Draft Night since he was part of Golden State’s playoff run as an assistant — saw that same capability in the highlights that the Lakers sent him and that he found online.

“You can tell pretty quickly, when a kid is that special, what he can do on a basketball court,” Walton said.

Walton called his length and skill set “very impressive and unique,” then zoned in on Ingram’s potential on the defensive end.

Though the two are extremely different players, Walton compared Ingram’s natural feel for defense to Draymond Green’s.

“It’s tough to coach,” Walton said. “Kids that are really good at it kind of have a knack for doing it. We have a kid up in Golden State, Draymond, who we didn’t coach to be such a phenomenal team defender. He just was because he sees the game like that. It means that the player’s pretty intelligent. And I think that Brandon fits that mold.”

Walton doesn’t expect Ingram — who took a few games to get comfortable in college — to immediately become the focal point of the Lakers’ offense, but he does see him gradually making more of an impact.

The former Blue Devil himself expects that his malleable game will benefit his teammates as well as himself.

“I think if I have a lot of attention on me, it gets other guys open, and I know all those guys work on different things in the offseason,” Ingram said. “I expect to see those guys’ numbers go up on their percentages, not just me.

“Being able to shoot the 3-ball — I know (Jordan) Clarkson can shoot the ball. D’Angelo Russell can shoot the ball and of course Anthony Brown can shoot the ball. Just seeing a lot of guys shoot the ball well. It’s not just my percentage going up. It’s everyone’s percentage going up.”

Coach K Foresees Ingram Becoming 'Very Special Player


LAS VEGAS — Brandon Ingram is only 18 years old. He spent just one season at Duke under head coach Mike Krzyzewski.

But in that short time Krzyzewski, who is also coach of the U.S. Olympic team, saw a combination of skill set and mentality that makes him  that Ingram will someday become one of the NBA’s brightest stars.

“Brandon is very smart about people, about the game, and he’s a willing learner,” Krzyzewski said on the second day of USA training camp on Tuesday. “I’m telling you, he’s a no-maintenance guy. I love that kid. I think he’s going to be very special (in) some time.”

Ingram’s brief career with the Blue Devils was enough for his former coach to extend an invitation to be part of the USA Select Team — a group of the NBA’s top young players who are tasked with scrimmaging the national team before its run at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

Seeing Ingram suit up against some of the best players in the world reminds Krzyzewski of when those stars were in Ingram’s sneakers just a few years ago.

“When one of our own guys from Duke is good enough to be part of that process,” Krzyzewski said, “I look back — not that I’m saying he’s Kevin Durant — at Kevin Durant at 17 (years old) on a Select Team; Kyrie Irving at a young age, Klay Thompson.

“So now Brandon has that opportunity, and you learn from it. But I’m proud of him. I love Brandon. Brandon’s a no-maintenance, great guy.”


Meanwhile, the second pick of the 2016 NBA Draft tries to keep some perspective on the praise that his college coach heaps on him.

“I like compliments, but if you settle right now and not be the player that you’re supposed to be, it’s going to be really ugly,” Ingram said.

That inclination to shrug off his own hype is just part of the reason that those like Krzyzewski feel so optimistic about his future.

The coach even projects unwavering confidence about Ingram’s biggest critique: his slender, 6-foot-9, 190-pound frame.

“Everyone talks about him being thin,” Krzyzewski said. “He’s strong: strong-minded and strong-willed. And he’s stronger physically than people think.”

Now, Krzyzewski isn’t promising that Ingram will become a superstar the second he hits the Staples Center floor, instead citing that he will need an “adjustment period” while jumping from college to the NBA, just like he did when he went from ESPN’s No. 3 high school recruit in 2015 to ACC Rookie of the Year in 2016.

Krzyzewski recalls Ingram taking nearly a month to find his rhythm at Duke. In fact, he didn’t truly seem comfortable until the eighth game of the season, when he dropped 24 points on 10-of-15 in a victory over Indiana.

From there, it was on.

“After that, Amile Jefferson got hurt, so he was placed in an even more prominent role,” Krzyzewski said. “Then he just built. He is going to get so much better. The thing about him is he loves the process. He loves the game. He’s a great teammate.”

Ingram also loves his former coach, who he says still feeds him pieces of advice every day.

“Playing one year under Coach K feels like you’ve played for three years,” Ingram said. “I learned so much from him; gained a lot of wisdom and knowledge from him.”


Krzyzewski says that part of his message to Ingram is to “be himself and be instinctive,” and the rookie Laker has soaked it up.

“I’m not trying to be anyone else,” Ingram said. “I just know that being myself is what got me here right now.”

Krzyzewski forecasts a remarkable career for Ingram because he sees him as the type of player that shouldn’t “color with numbers.” He feels that Ingram should play and develop how he sees fit rather than feel pressured to play a certain way.

For a player so often compared to Durant, it means painting his own future rather than filling in the lines that someone else drew.

“Color it the way you think it should be colored,” Krzyzewski said. “With the really good players and the instinctive guys, you should always color that way.”

by Joey Ramirez Digital Reporter
See here: http://www.nba.com/lakers/news/160719coachk-ingram?cid=tw




Lakers News: Brandon Ingram bought a house for his parents


Los Angeles Lakers rookie Brandon Ingram was just taken second overall in the 2016 NBA Draft. Being picked that high has its perks. While Ingram has yet to officially ink his contract as the Lakers look to hold on to as much cap space as possible throughout their offseason, when he does he’ll suddenly have more money available to him than he’s ever seen.

Fittingly, the always quiet and understated Ingram isn’t planning to buy anything too audacious with his first big payday.
“I haven’t,” Ingram told Ian Begley of ESPN.com when asked if he had made his first big purchase (h/t CBS Local). “But probably something for my family. Well, actually I just got my mom a house, and my dad. Probably a car for myself.
“It was something I've always dreamed of,” Ingram continued. “[My parents] provided so much for me, it was just a no-brainer. You always think about giving back to your family so, knowing that they did so much for me, I had to give back to them.”
This is a really nice gesture from Ingram, who seems to be uncommonly mature for the second-youngest player in the draft. In addition to a good player, the Lakers seem to have added a good person to their young core.


The Lakers' Brandon Ingram jokes with the Nuggets' Jamal Murray before they heard their names called

The Lakers' Brandon Ingram jokes with the Nuggets'

For the rest of the night, as Silver continues to welcome first-rounders, Ingram gets taken to the NBA's high-tech social media station, which featured a snapchat session, Vine session and GQ Instagram session; and Ingram notes he'd use his favorite song "Lockjaw" by Kodak Black and French Montana, if he were to turn it into a music video.

"That's my boy," Ingram shouts in the background as his good friend, Jamal Murray of Kentucky goes No. 7 to the Denver Nuggets.
By the end of the night, Ingram has more than 100 congratulatory text messages from friends and family. One of them is from his mentor, ex-NBA player Jerry Stackhouse, who coached Ingram's AAU team. Another is Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski, who Ingram says influenced him with his determination as a coach.
"Even Coach K thinks he can be a better coach each and every day," Ingram says. "So if he thinks that, I can definitely be a better basketball player. You're always becoming; you've never arrived. And I use that day by day just for me to work hard each and every day, and know that no matter how good I worked out today, no matter how good I thought I was today, I can always get better and always be a better person."
Growing up, Ingram was always looking up to others. His older brother, Donovan, played basketball at UT-Arlington and let a young Brandon play with older kids. Once he got to Duke, he'd draw portraits of NBA stars he idolized like Kevin Durant, Carmelo Anthony and Chris Paul. And now he's got several statues — including Magic Johnson — outside Staples Center plus the Kobe Bryant legacy barely in the rear-view mirror.
For Ingram, that's exactly how he wants it. The Hollywood-sized expectations, that is. "It gives you motivation," he says.

After all, Ingram will have his late aunt's fear of suffering adage to keep him motivated in Los Angeles.

Brandon Ingram puts on his metallic draft day suit.

Brandon Ingram puts on his metallic draft day suit.

Ingram has become masterful at containing his emotions and blocking out the noise. Growing up, his father, Donald, was a high school and collegiate official — instilling in Brandon a unique respect for referees. "He knows not to yell at them," his father says sheepishly. His mother recalls opposing players looking at his lackadaisical swagger and dismissing him before her son would have a "Clark Kent-to-Superman" transformation on the hardwood. In his freshman season at Duke, the social media criticism was loud early on. He's under-performing. He's being too unselfish. He's not playing with an edge. And heading into this draft, the skeptics pointed to Ingram's slender physique as a clear-cut weakness, all while he was conditioning rigorously and eating six meals a day to bulk up.

"He knows where to direct his emotions," Donald Ingram says. "His response is always on the court. He channels the criticism by winning. That shows a lot about his strength on the inside. Everybody’s talking about his strength on the outside with his frame. But that inner strength is what (the Lakers) are drafting.

Family driven 'THEY'RE WHY I'M HERE'

Brandon Ingram greets NBA commissioner Adam Silver

NEW YORK — With 15 family members gathered around Brandon Ingram's 7-foot-3 wingspan posing for a photo on the final phase of a whirlwind NBA draft night, the emotion finally started to pour out of the Los Angeles Lakers' No. 2 pick.

One family member out of the picture is Ingram's great aunt, Leatha Smith, who died last summer shortly before he transformed into a lottery pick as a versatile 6-9 forward at Duke.
Ingram, slightly choked up in the moment after a night of elation following his memorable handshake with commissioner Adam Silver, says his great aunt was with him Thursday on his heart — literally. Ingram, who sported a metallic silver jacket on draft night, has a tattoo on his chest that honors his deceased family members, and another one on his right arm with a quote from his great aunt that, at his core, drives him as a man.
Fear of suffering is far worse than suffering itself.
"She's the reason I'm here," Ingram says proudly. "All this family (pauses), they're why I'm here."
Ingram's mother, Joann, adds of the impact on her son: "She helped raise him for five years and they were very close. Sometimes these type of moments bring out what's underneath all the tattoos and relaxed personality."

Walton Break Down Ingram Pick


  The Lakers took another step into the future by drafting Duke’s Brandon Ingram with the No. 2 pick in the 2016 NBA Draft.
Between selecting Ingram and using the 32nd pick, General Manager Mitch Kupchak and head coach Luke Walton gave their thoughts on the newest Laker.
Below is a transcription from the Lakers’ practice facility in El Segundo:
Mitch Kupchak
Q: On comparisons between Ingram and Kevin Durant:
Kupchak:
 Obviously it’s unfair. I can see why people would make the comparison. I think they’re both gifted players. If you look at their time in college as freshmen, the similarities are striking in terms of size, body build and body type. But beyond that, Brandon has a long, long way to go. He’s got a lot of work in front of him. Having said that, we’re ecstatic to have him. He visited with us about 10 days ago, worked out in this gym. We had a couple of dinners with him and got to know him, so we’re pleased. I’m excited about having him in Los Angeles, and we’re hopeful we can get him here in a week, introduce him to (the media) and get him in Summer League.
Q: On if he received trade offers for the No. 2 pick:
Kupchak:
 As you might imagine, there’s a lot of interest in the No. 2 pick. Much was made about a so-called “cliff” between (picks) one and two, then a drop. That’s not always the case. There are a lot of good players in this draft. In particular if you looked at the top 10 players, it’s a very, very talented group. Brandon was the one that came in and visited. We didn’t know for sure until 10 minutes ago that Brandon would be available at No. 2. So up until 10 minutes ago, there was just a little bit of anticipation, although this is what was expected.
Q: On what the team saw from Ingram in his predraft workout:
Kupchak:
 The workouts were against nobody other than what we call a “1-on-0 workout.” We had our assistant coaches — some of whom were young enough to still play. So they participated in the workout and provided a little bit of a 2-on-2 kind of atmosphere. But (we measure) his skill level, his length, his athleticism — we do a lot more than just play; a lot of individual skills, ball handling up and down, running, shooting the ball. You can only see so much in 1-on-1, 2-on-2 against your assistant coaches. We also do a battery of physical testing — 8-10 different tests designed to establish quickness, foot speed, jumping — things that you might imagine would be important on the basketball court. We had two dinners. The first dinner was much more formal because it’s the first time we met him. But at the second dinner, five or six of our players showed up somewhat unannounced. We mentioned to them at this building that we were going to have dinner that evening. They were free to come and join us. And Julius (Randle), D’Angelo (Russell), Jordan (Clarkson), Anthony Brown and Larry Nance all showed up for dinner. And they all sat around Brandon and the older people moved to the other side of the room and the younger people kind of hung out together. It looked like they all got along well, so that was good.
Q: On moving on in the post-Kobe Bryant era:
Kupchak:
 Despite the fact that we’re losing an icon that’s been with us for 20 years, this is a new chapter going forward. We’re going to miss Kobe to no end. I still look back on it and it’s hard for me to imagine that he’s not going to be on our roster and not on my board in our office. Having said that, we have to move on and we have a new coach. We’re moving into a new facility about two blocks from here that’s going to make this facility look tiny. It’s going to be state-of-the-art. Our coaching staff and players got considerable experience last year. Brandon needs to work, get stronger and get himself progress as quick as possible. But I think the other players are ahead of schedule.
Q: On if there is one part of Ingram’s game that impressed Kupchak most:
Kupchak:
 I wouldn’t say there’s one thing. I guess if I had to pick one thing, it would be potential. We’re not picking a player that hasn’t played much and kind of came off the bench and you’re kind of trying to project what he may turn into — we’re picking a player that played at what some might say is a very established college basketball program.* He played big minutes. He started in an excellent league with excellent competition. In that regard, there’s been a lot that’s already been proven. We look at him and his age and his body type and his willingness to work and be coached. We think (with) his upside and the potential in him — right now there is no ceiling on him. But to date, he has had a pretty good career in a pretty good conference for a one-year player.
*Note: Kupchak went to North Carolina, the rival school of Duke.
Q: On why they didn’t trade the No. 2 pick:
Kupchak:
 Obviously there’s nothing that piqued our interest, although at this time of year teams are serious. They recognize that the second pick is valuable. Hopefully we’re not in this position again. And we realized that the pick is valuable. The third and fourth picks are valuable. On the way down, they get less and less valuable. But clearly at the top these picks have a lot of value. We listened. Yeah, there were a lot of calls. There’s nothing there that made sense for us to consider.
Q: On if the Lakers would have taken Ingram if they had the first pick:
Kupchak:
 It’s hard to say because we did not get the other player (Ben Simmons) to come in and work out for us. That’s something that we tried to do. And our feeling was that it may have been a commitment, so that would have been a nice thing for us to do, which would be to get him in here, work him out, interview and go to dinner with him twice and get some reassurance as to which direction we wanted to go. Going into it based on what we felt, we felt we would be very lucky to get Brandon into this city and this organization.
Luke Walton
Q: On if he feels that they drafted the best player available:
Walton:
 We got the player that I wanted in the draft. I don’t know if he’s the best or not, but he’s the player I wanted for sure. What he has the potential of doing and what he can already do at his age with his length and skill set is very impressive and unique.
Q: On how much he was able to watch Ingram while coaching with Golden State during its playoff run:
Walton:
 I’ve seen him play in college games and the (NCAA) Tournament. I’ve seen some highlights that (the Lakers) sent me and some highlights on the internet. You can tell pretty quickly, when a kid is that special, what he can do on a basketball court.
Q: On if he sees Ingram as a potential leader:
Walton:
 I like it. It’s a very important aspect to what causes winning in this league. You need leadership. You need cohesiveness. You need chemistry. And everything I’ve heard about this kid — he brings all those to the table along with his skill set.
Q: On if he is the kind of player that the offense can be run through:
Walton:
 It’s too early to say that. I think eventually you can. But he’s coming in as a young kid in a man’s league. Obviously we’re gonna expect him to have an impact for us this season, but we’ll kind of take that as it goes.
Q: On concerns about him being too thin for the NBA:
Walton:
 I don’t see concerns about his weight. He’s young. He’ll naturally get stronger. Talking to some of the coaches that were here when he came and did his workout — even though he’s skinny, he had strength to him in the individual workout that he did. So that’s good to hear and that’s not a concern of mine.
Q: On how best to develop the Lakers’ young players:
Walton:
 Hard work. That’s how you succeed in anything. We’re going to put together a great staff here. We have young players that are talented and, from what I understand by talking to them in the three days that I’ve been here and watching them show up every day, even though it’s only June, getting there work in on the court and in the weight room, I expect them to get better individually and as a team.
Q: On what he expects from the Lakers’ young core:
Walton:
 I’m not putting expectations on it. It is a young core. I think this now gives us seven players under contract. So there’s a lot that still needs to be filled out. But to me, I’m putting the focus on how hard we’re working; how the staff is helping improve them individually; how we’re getting them to buy in the system and the culture that we’re trying to create here. Those are things that I feel if you focus on, the wins will just start coming.
Q: On what impressed him most about Ingram:
Walton:
 His ability to make reads on the court defensively is one of the favorite things I’ve seen him do. Whether that’s switching onto different players or coming on the weak side and blocking shots — a lot of that is timing. It’s tough to coach. Kids that are really good at it kind of have a knack for doing it. We have a kid up in Golden State, Draymond (Green), who we didn’t coach to be such a phenomenal team defender. He just was because he sees the game like that. It means that the player’s pretty intelligent. And I think that Brandon fits that mold.
Q: On the types of players he wants to put around the young core:
Walton:
 You need some vets for sure; some leadership on the court. Even if it’s vets that aren’t playing big minutes, as a coaching staff it’s our job to hold them accountable. As a player, you learn just as much if not more from the vets on your team when you’re young and trying to find your way on how to do things the right way and how to work and what should be done on long road trips to take care of yourself — and all these things. A lot of that comes from veteran leadership. I think that we will be searching out some guys like that. Obviously with the cap space we have, we’ll be searching out some All-Star caliber players as well. You kind of try to make a nice mixture of all that.
Q: On finding a balance with how many veterans to add:
Walton:
 There’s not an answer for that, I don’t think. I think it’s a feel thing. We’re going to stress competition here. We’re going to compete. If that means a young guy that we’re developing isn’t out there developing the way he should be, then he’s got to get out of the game. There’ s no reason to let someone develop if they’re not developing the right way. We’ll be sure to do that and do our best to win every game we’re in.
Q: On if it is easier to build a certain culture when most of the players are at a similar moment in their career:
Walton:
 I don’t know if it’s easier. This is obviously new for me, but it’s exciting. I know that much. I love the fact that we have young guys that are hungry and trying to prove themselves still. That’s exciting for me and I think it’s going to make this challenge and this journey fun.

Why KD comparisons don't faze Lakers' Brandon Ingram

LAS VEGAS – It’s a commonly used cliché: He was born for this. In sports it’s used — and often misused—to describe an athlete so gifted that his future must have been preordained. Big-armed quarterback? Born for this. Unparalleled speed on skates? Born for this. A feathery jump shot? Yep: born for this.
Brandon Ingram? The Lakers’ top pick might be — wait for it — born for this. Kinston, N.C., thinks so. The small town (population: 21,000) near the Carolina coast saw Ingram’s talent. It was familiar: Jerry Stackhouse called Kinston home. Pistons guard Reggie Bullock did, too. Ingram had that kind of talent — maybe more. So a city plagued by gun violence wrapped a protective bubble around the skinny kid in the old Kevin Durant sneakers and faded Nolan Smith jersey.
“Anything violent, they kept me away from it,” Ingram told The Vertical. “If I’m somewhere and knowing something is going down, they just keep it away from me. They knew that I had the potential to go somewhere. And if they see me anywhere but the gym, they’d say, ‘Well, why are you not in the gym?’ So, I was always in the gym.”
Indeed. Most kids have hobbies. Leisure activities. Ingram didn’t. When he was 10, he trailed his brother, Bo, to local parks. Begged him to let him play. Often, Bo, seven years older, wouldn’t. When he did, the games were unrelenting. Bruised arms, scraped knees, rolled ankles — Ingram went home with all of it. With a lesson, too.
“All those guys being physical with me. Just knowing that I needed to become tougher, much more tougher,” Ingram said. “And if I was going to be a skinny guy, I needed to be strong inside. So, I knew I had to be strong mentally.”
 
 
 
 
Brandon Ingram vs. Kevin Durant: Catch-and-Shoot J
As he got older, his basketball obsession grew. He played after school. When he got home, he challenged Bo to one-on-one on the battered hoop in the backyard. “I was a senior in high school before I beat him,” Ingram said. When it got dark, his father, Donald, who managed the local rec center, opened up the gym. “It was an all-access pass,” Ingram laughed.
The work paid off. Ingram won a state championship his first year at Kinston. He went on to win three more. A stringy, 6-foot-2 guard as a freshman grew, by his own estimation, two inches every year to finish high school as a slender 6-8 forward. Spins, fadeaways, step-backs — Ingram had it all. He averaged 24 points and 10 rebounds as a senior. Legend had it that in four years, Ingram never missed a free throw. So? “Most definitely, that’s true,” Ingram said.
Last month, the Lakers tabbed Ingram with the second overall pick in the draft. Overnight, Ingram, 18, became the face of one of the NBA’s most storied franchises. It’s not the type of position he has always been comfortable in. For years, Ingram was shy about playing in front of crowds. It wasn’t until eighth grade, when he joined Stackhouse’s AAU team, that he took to it. He was a star in high school but needed Mike Krzyzewski to tell him at the 2015 McDonald’s All-American Game that he had pro potential. He could score on anyone but wasn’t always assertive in high school and was briefly benched for listless play at Duke.
The Lakers hope he grows into the role. They see Ingram as a multi-position player. At 6-9, 190-pounds, Ingram will need to bulk up. He was eating six meals a day, some 5,000 calories, Ingram said, before the draft and he hopes to be 210 pounds next season. But the talent is undeniable.
Durant sees it. For months, scouts have compared Ingram to Durant. And Durant understands why. “He reminds me of myself, but he’s a little farther along than I was at that stage,” Durant told reporters at Team USA practice in Las Vegas on Wednesday. For Ingram, there is no higher compliment. He grew up wearing Durant’s sneakers. His walls were covered with Durant posters. He mimicked many of Durant’s moves. He worshipped him when he was at Texas, cheered him in Seattle, followed his career closely in Oklahoma City. The Lakers hope they found the next Durant; Ingram knows it will be a while before he gets there.
“It’s a very special comparison,” Ingram said. “But, of course, I know I’m not him. I know I’m not him yet, but I have the potential to make my own brand. Of course, you grow up with him as an idol, and in a few months he’s going to become my rival. It’s going to be a dream come true. I think just watching him for so long and having the ability to actually learn and play against him is just going to be a special motivation for me as a competitor and someone who really looked up to him.”

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Brandon Ingram has an app on his phone to remind him to eat



From the moment he was drafted, the consistent caveat just about every analyst has added to their thoughts about Brandon Ingram has been some variation of “he has to put on weight.” The Los Angeles Lakers’ latest draft pick is incredibly skinny, with just 195 pounds precariously clinging to his 6’9 frame, and he’ll likely struggle at times to deal with the strength of the more developed veterans in the NBA this season.

That issue was on full display at Las Vegas Summer League, with Ingram going through games where he was unable to get to his preferred/most effective spots on the floor, and the idea that he needs to add weight served as the crux of Baxter Holmes of ESPN’s latest feature on the young wing.
There is a ton of detail and insight from personal trainers on why Ingram should be careful about how quickly he packs on weight withing (all Lakers fans should read the piece in it’s entirety) but one detail stuck out as Ingram attempts to add bulk to his lithe frame:
Ever since late June, [Ingram’s] life has been a whirlwind -- jetting to New York to be drafted (and endorse a deodorant stick), then heading to his North Carolina hometown, then to Los Angeles to be introduced as a Laker, then to Las Vegas for NBA summer league and to practice against Team USA, then to L.A. to house hunt (and endorse an oatmeal chocolate chip protein bar), then back to North Carolina to catch his breath.
Along the way, every element of his jet-set life has been interrupted by a reminder app on Brandon Ingram's iPhone -- the little app that dings every three to four hours, every ... single ... day, telling him to eat. On a recent afternoon in Las Vegas, Ingram sank into a hotel room couch and explained how he aims for six feedings every 24 hours: breakfast, then a snack, then lunch, then a snack, then dinner, then a midnight snack. "It gets sickening," Ingram says, sounding tired, "but I just try to stick to it."
A lot of people would probably kill for that problem, but it does make for interesting questions about how the Lakers should balance trying to allow for Ingram to have effectiveness immediately versus his long-term health.
Ingram will struggle while playing against grown men for the first time this season, to be sure, but as is noted by Holmes in the feature, the Lakers didn’t draft Ingram for just this year. The team hopes he can be a centerpiece for their franchise for years to come, and to do so he’ll have to remain healthy, a goal that could apparently be put in jeopardy by gaining weight too rapidly.
Such concerns are something the Lakers should (and almost certainly will) keep in mind as Ingram goes through lulls in his play due to his lack of an NBA body, and fans should do the same.
Ingram will likely play a more supplementary role in his first season as he adjusts to life as a professional, meaning his box score numbers are probably not going to be eye-popping enough for him to win Rookie of the Year or other such early accolades. He’ll also probably have games where he looks like the best prospect from the 2016 class.
The key will be having patience with Ingram as he goes through both. Maybe everyone should just follow Ingram’s lead, and set a reminder to do so on their iPhone.