The franchise began in 1946 as theDetroit Gems of theNational Basketball League (NBL).[10] After one season, a new ownership relocated the team toMinneapolis, Minnesota,[11][10] and renamed the team as theMinneapolis Lakers.[12] The Lakers won the 1948 NBL championship before joining the rivalBasketball Association of America, where they won the 1949 BAA championship. Following the merger of the NBL and the BAA into the NBA in 1949, the Lakers won four of the next five NBA championships.[13] After struggling financially in the late 1950s, theyrelocated to Los Angeles before the1960–61 season.
After Riley departed and Abdul-Jabbar, Johnson, and Worthy retired, the Lakers struggled in the early 1990s. It was not until 1996 when the team traded with theCharlotte Hornets for the draft rights toKobe Bryant and signed centerShaquille O'Neal that the Lakers returned to dominance during the early 2000s. The superstar duo, along with Hall of Fame coachPhil Jackson, led the Lakers to three consecutive championships between2000 and2002, securing the franchise's second "three-peat".[15] The dynamic "Shaq-and-Kobe" era ended when the Lakers traded away O'Neal after the team lost to theDetroit Pistons in the2004 Finals. It was not until the Lakers traded forPau Gasol that Bryant and Jackson returned to the NBA Finals, losing to the Celtics in2008 but winning championships in2009 and2010. The 2010 Finals marked the latest matchup of the Lakers and Celtics, with Los Angeles winning its 16th title.
Jackson retired in 2011, and the Lakers endured their longest playoff drought in franchise history. Gasol departed in 2014, and Bryant retired in 2016. After rebuilding seasons with young, highly rated prospects, the Lakers signed superstarLeBron James in 2018.[16] In 2019, the team traded several of those prospects for starbig manAnthony Davis.[17] The Lakers—led by James, Davis, and coachFrank Vogel—won the team's 17th championship in2020, tying the Celtics for the most titles until 2024.[18] In February 2025,the Lakers traded Davis while acquiringLuka Dončić.
The Lakers hold the record forNBA's longest winning streak, 33 straight games, set in 1971–72.[19] 26 Hall of Famers have played for Los Angeles, while four have coached the team. Abdul-Jabbar, Johnson, O'Neal, and Bryant won a combined eight NBA MVP awards with the Lakers.[20]
1946–1954: Beginnings and Minneapolis dynasty with George Mikan
Minneapolis team co-owner Benjamin Berger
The franchise was founded in 1946 as theDetroit Gems and played in theNational Basketball League (NBL) during the 1946–47 season where it finished last in the league with only 4 wins in 44 games. Though the team was scheduled to continue in the NBL the following season,[21] its ownership, faced with high losses due to low attendance and lack of homecourt, decided on selling the team toBen Berger andMorris Chalfen ofMinnesota for $15,000.[11][22]
Minneapolis sportswriterSid Hartman played a key, behind-the-scenes role in helping put together the deal and later the team.[23] Inspired by Minnesota's nickname, "Land of 10,000 Lakes", the team rechristened themselves the Lakers.[24][25] Hartman helped them hireJohn Kundla fromCollege of St. Thomas to be their first head coach, meeting with him and selling him on the team.[26][27]
As the franchise had the worst record in the NBL the previous season, it got the first pick in the 1947Professional Basketball League of America dispersal draft, which they used to selectGeorge Mikan. Led by Mikan, the Lakers had a solid roster, which also featured forwardJim Pollard and playmakerHerm Schaefer.[28] In their first season, they led the league with a 43–17 record, later winning the NBL championship that season.[29]
Hall of FamerGeorge Mikan (#99) led the Lakers franchise to their first five NBA championships. He is described by the NBA's official website as the "first superstar" in league history.[13]
In 1948, the Lakers moved from the NBL to theBasketball Association of America (BAA), and Mikan's 28.3 point per game (ppg) scoring average set a BAA record. In the1949 BAA Finals they won the championship, beating theWashington Capitols four games to two.[30] Following the season, the BAA and the NBL merged to form theNational Basketball Association (NBA).[31] In the newly formed league, the Lakers improved their record to 51–17 and won their third straight professional championship.[32] In the 1950–51 season, Mikan won his third straight scoring title at 28.4 ppg and the Lakers went 44–24 to win their second straight division title.[33] One of those games, a 19–18 loss against theFort Wayne Pistons, became infamous as the lowest scoring game in NBA history.[34] In the playoffs, they defeated theIndianapolis Olympians in three games but lost to theRochester Royals in the next round.[28]
During the1951–52 season, the Lakers won 40 games, finishing second in their division.[35] They faced theNew York Knicks in theNBA Finals, which they won in seven games.[36] In the1952–53 season, Mikan led the NBA in rebounding, averaging 14.4 rebounds per game (rpg), and was named MVP of the1953 NBA All-Star Game.[33] After a 48–22 regular season, the Lakers defeated theFort Wayne Pistons in the Western playoffs to advance tothe NBA Finals.[36] They then defeated the New York Knicks to win their second straight championship.[37] Though Lakers star George Mikan suffered from knee problems throughout the1953–54 season, he was still able to average 18 ppg.[38]Clyde Lovellette, who was drafted in1952, helped the team win the Western Division.[38] The team won its third straight championship in the 1950s and sixth in seven seasons when it defeated theSyracuse Nationals in seven games.[37]
1954–1958: Post-Mikan dry spell
Following Mikan's retirement in the 1954 off-season, the Lakers struggled but still managed to win 40 games. Although they defeated the Rochester Royals in the first round of the playoffs, they were defeated by the Fort Wayne Pistons in the semifinals.[39] Although they had losing records the next two seasons, they made the playoffs each year.[35] Mikan came back for the last half of the1955–56 season, but struggled and retired for good after the season.[40] Led by Lovellette's 20.6 points and 13.5 rebounds, they advanced to the Conference Finals in 1956–57. The Lakers had one of the worst seasons in team history in 1957–58 when they won a league-low 19 games.[41] They had hired Mikan, who had been the team's general manager for the previous two seasons, as head coach to replace Kundla. Mikan was fired in January when the team was 9–30, and Kundla was rehired.[35][42]
The Lakers earned the top pick in the1958 NBA draft and used it to selectElgin Baylor. Baylor, who was namedNBA Rookie of the Year and co-MVP of the1959 NBA All-Star Game, averaged 24.9 ppg and 15.0 rpg helping the Lakers improve to second in their division despite a 33–39 record.[43] After upsetting the Hawks in six games in the division finals, they returned to the NBA Finals, but were swept by the Celtics, beginning their long rivalry.[44]
1958–1968: Move to Los Angeles and Celtics rivalry
Elgin Baylor (left) andJerry West (right) led the team to a total of ten NBA Finals appearances in the 1960s and 1970s. Nicknamed "Mr. Clutch", West's silhouette is featured on the NBA's official logo.[45][46]
In theirlast year in Minneapolis, the Lakers went 25–50. On January 18, 1960, the team was coming off a loss and traveling to St. Louis when their plane crash-landed.[47] Snow storms had driven the pilot 150 miles (240 km) off course when he was forced to land in a cornfield. No one was hurt.[48] Their record earned them the number two pick in the1960 NBA draft. The team selectedJerry West fromWest Virginia University.[49] During the 1960 off-season, the Lakers became the NBA's first West Coast team when ownerBob Short decided to move the team to Los Angeles.[50] Led by Baylor's 34.8 ppg and 19.8 rpg, Los Angeles won 11 more than the year before in West's first season.[51] On November 15 that season, Baylor set a new NBA scoring record when he scored 71 points in a victory against the New York Knicks while grabbing 25 rebounds.[52] In doing so, Baylor broke his own NBA record of 64 points. Despite a losing record, the Lakers madethe playoffs.[35] They came within two points of theNBA Finals when they lost in game seven of their second round series against St. Louis.[53]
Led by Baylor and West at 38.3 and 30.8 ppg respectively,[54] the Lakers improved to 54–26 in1961–62, and made thefinals. In a game five victory, Baylor grabbed 22 rebounds and set the still-standing NBA record for points in a finals game with 61,[55] despite fouling out of the game.[56] The Lakers, however, lost to the Celtics by three points in overtime of game seven.[54]Frank Selvy, after making two jumpers in the final 40 seconds to tie the game,[57][58] missed a potential game-winning 18 footjump shot in regulation, a miss which he said in June 2010 still haunted him more than 40 years later.[58]
Los Angeles won 53 games in1962–63, behind Baylor's 34.0 ppg and West's 27.1 ppg[59] but lost in the NBA Finals in six games to the Celtics.[59] After falling to 42–38 and losing in the first round of the1964 NBA playoffs to the Hawks, the team won 49 games in 1964–65. The Lakers surged past theBaltimore Bullets in the division finals, behind West's record-setting 46.3 ppg in the series.[60] They lost again to the Celtics in the Finals however, this time in five games.[61]
Los Angeles lost in the finals to Boston in seven games again in 1966, this time by two points.[62] Down by 16 entering the fourth quarter, and 10 with a minute and a half to go, the Lakers mounted a furious rally in the closing moments, which fell just short.[63] After dropping to 36 wins and losing in the first round of the1967 NBA playoffs, they lost inthe finals to the Celtics again in 1968.[35] Los Angeles moved to a brand-new arena,The Forum, in 1967, after playing seven seasons at theLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.
1968–1973: The arrival of Wilt Chamberlain
Wilt Chamberlain played for Los Angeles for five seasons during the late 1960s and early 1970s. He was an integral part of their1971–72 team that is considered one of the best in NBA history.[64]
On July 9, 1968, the team acquiredWilt Chamberlain from thePhiladelphia 76ers for Darrell Imhoff,Archie Clark, andJerry Chambers.[65] In his first season as a Laker, Chamberlain set a team record by averaging a league-leading 21.1 rpg.[66] West, Baylor, and Chamberlain each averaged over 20 points, and Los Angeles won their division.[67] The Lakers and Celtics again met in thefinals, and Los Angeles had home court advantage against Boston for the first time in their rivalry. They won the first game behind Jerry West's 53 points,[68] and had a 3–2 lead after five.[69] Boston won the series in seven games however,[70] and earned their 11th NBA Championship in 13 seasons.[71] West was named the first-everFinals MVP; this remains the only time that a member of the losing team has won the award.[72] In1970, West won his first scoring title at 31.2 ppg, the team returned to thefinals, and for the first time in 16 years, they did not have to face the Celtics; instead playing the New York Knicks, who defeated them 4–3.[73][74] Thenext season the Lakers were defeated by theMilwaukee Bucks, led by future Laker Lew Alcindor (now known asKareem Abdul-Jabbar) in the Western Conference Finals.[75]
The1971–72 season brought several changes. OwnerJack Kent Cooke brought inBill Sharman as head coach,[76] and Elgin Baylor announced his retirement early in the season after realizing that his legs were not healthy enough.[76] Sharman increased the team's discipline.[77] He introduced the concept of theshootaround, where players would arrive at the arena early in the morning before a game to practice shots.[78] They won 14 straight games in November and all 16 games played in December.[76] They won three straight to open the year of 1972 but on January 9, the Milwaukee Bucks ended their winning streak by defeating the Lakers, 120–104.[79] By winning 33 straight games, Los Angeles set a record forlongest winning streak of any team in major American professional team sports.[80][81] The Lakers won 69 games that season, whichstood as the NBA record for 24 years until the Chicago Bulls won 72 games in 1995–96.[82] Chamberlain averaged a low 14.8 points but led the league in rebounding at 19.2 a game.[83] West's 9.7 assists per game (apg) led the league, he also averaged more than 25 points, and was named MVP of the1972 NBA All-Star Game.[83] The team failed to score 100 points just once all year,[84] and at the end of the season, Bill Sharman was namedCoach of the Year.[85] The Lakers went on to reach thefinals against theNew York Knicks where they would avenge their 1970finals loss by defeating them 4 games to 1. Chamberlain tallied 24 points and 29 rebounds in game five and won theNBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award.[86][87]
The Lakers won 60 games in the1972–73 season, and took another Pacific Division title.[88] Wilt Chamberlain, playing in his final season, again led the league in rebounding and set the NBA record for field-goal percentage at 72.7% which stood for several decades.[88] The team defeated the Chicago Bulls in seven games in the conference semifinals, then theGolden State Warriors in five in the Western Division Finals.[88] They played the New York Knicks in the1973 NBA Finals. Los Angeles took the first game by three points, but New York won the series in five games.[89]
1973–1979: Building "Showtime"
During the1973–74 season, the team was hampered by the loss of West, who played only 31 games before his legs gave out.[90] Goodrich, averaging 25.3 points, helped the team to a late-season surge.[90] Trailing the Golden State Warriors by three games with seven left to play, the Lakers rallied to finish 47–35 and win the Pacific Division.[90] They madethe playoffs but managed just one win against Milwaukee in the conference semifinals. Following the season, West retired due to contract disagreements with Cooke, and filed a suit for unpaid back wages.[91]
After missing the playoffs in the1974–75 season, the Lakers acquiredKareem Abdul-Jabbar, who had won three league MVPs by that time.[92] Abdul-Jabbar wanted out of Milwaukee, demanding a trade to either New York or Los Angeles.[93] He was traded forElmore Smith,Brian Winters,Junior Bridgeman, andDave Meyers. Abdul-Jabbar had his fourth MVP season in1975–76, leading the league in rebounding, blocked shots, and minutes played.[94] The Lakers struggled in January, going 3–10, and finished out of the playoffs at 40–42.[94]
West and Cooke settled their differences—and the former Laker's lawsuit—and Cooke hired him to replace Sharman as the team's coach.[95] West became upset, however, when Cooke refused to spend the money necessary to acquire forwardJulius Erving, who the Nets were selling.[96] Behind another MVP season from Abdul-Jabbar, Los Angeles won the Pacific Division, finishing the 1976–77 season a league-best 53–29.[97] They defeated the Warriors in a seven-game series to open the postseason before being swept by Portland in the Western Conference Finals.[94] During the off-season, Los Angeles picked upJamaal Wilkes from Golden State and signed first-round draft pickNorm Nixon.
In the first two minutes of the first game of the 1977–78 season, Abdul-Jabbar punched Bucks centerKent Benson for an overly aggressive elbow and broke his hand.[98] Two months later, a healthy Abdul-Jabbar got into an altercation withHouston Rockets centerKevin Kunnert after a rebound. The team's starting power forward,Kermit Washington, who was averaging 11.5 points and 11.2 rebounds,[99] entered the fight, and whenRudy Tomjanovich ran in from the bench to break up the action, Washington punched him in the face.[100] Tomjanovich nearly died from the punch, suffering a fractured skull and other facial injuries, which prematurely ended his playing career.[101] Washington, who stated that he assumed Tomjanovich was a combatant, was suspended for two months by the NBA, and released by the Lakers.[102] The team won 45 games despite being down a starter in Washington and not having Abdul-Jabbar for nearly two months, but lost in the first round of the playoffs to Seattle.[103] During the 1978–79 season, the team posted a 47–35 record but lost to the SuperSonics in the semifinal round of the playoffs.[94]
Magic Johnson along with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar led the "Showtime" Lakers to five NBA titles in the 1980s.
In the1979 NBA draft, Los Angeles selected 6-foot-9-inch (2.06 m)point guardMagic Johnson fromMichigan State with the first overall pick.[104] It took Johnson's teammates time to acclimate themselves to his passing ability, as his "no-look" passes often caught them unaware. Once they adjusted, his passing became a key part of Los Angeles' offense.[105] The Lakers won 60 games in Johnson's rookie year, and defeated thePhiladelphia 76ers in six games in the1980 NBA Finals. Johnson won the Finals MVP award, after starting at center for the injured Abdul-Jabbar in game six, and tallying 42 points, 15 rebounds, and seven assists.[106] The team fell off in the1980–81 season, though, as the Lakers lost Johnson for most of the season to a knee injury.[107] The team turned in a 54–28 record and finished second behind thePhoenix Suns in the Pacific Division.[107] TheRockets, led byMoses Malone, defeated Los Angeles in the first round ofthe playoffs.[107]
Early in the1981–82 season, Johnson complained to the media about head coachPaul Westhead and demanded a trade.[108] Westhead was fired shortly after Johnson's criticisms, and although Lakers' ownerJerry Buss stated that Johnson's comments did not factor into the decision, Johnson was vilified by the national media and booed both on the road and at home.[109][110][111] Buss promoted assistant coachPat Riley to "co-head coach" with Jerry West (although West considered himself Riley's assistant) on November 19 and the team won 17 of its next 20 games.[107][112][113] Nicknamed "Showtime" due to the team's new Johnson-led fast break-offense, the Lakers won the Pacific Division title and swept both theSuns andSpurs in the1982 playoffs.[114] Los Angeles stretched its postseason winning streak to nine games by taking the first contest of theNBA Finals from the76ers.[107][115] The team won the Finals 4–2 to finish a 12–2 playoff run.[107] On draft night in1982, the Lakers had the first overall pick (the result of a trade with Cleveland midway through the 1979–80 season, when the Lakers had sent Don Ford and a 1980 first-round pick to the Cavaliers for Butch Lee and their 1982 selection) and selectedJames Worthy fromNorth Carolina.[116] TheLakers won the Pacific Division at 58–24, but Worthy suffered a leg injury in the last week of the season and missed the rest of the season.[117] Nevertheless, they advanced to playPhiladelphia in the1983 NBA Finals after defeatingPortland andSan Antonio.[117] The Sixers, however, won the series and the championship in four games.[116] After the season West replaced Sharman as the team's GM.[118]
In the1983–84 season, Los Angeles went 54–28, and playedBoston in theFinals for the first time since1969.[119] The Lakers won two of the first three games. However,Kevin McHale's hardclothesline foul of Lakers forwardKurt Rambis on a fast break is credited as a turning point of the series.[120] Boston won three of the next four to win the title and send Los Angeles's record to 0–8 in Finals series against the Celtics.[119]
Using the past year's Finals defeat as motivation,the team won the Pacific Division for the fourth straight year and lost just two games in theWestern Conference playoffs. In theNBA Finals, theCeltics were again the Lakers' final hurdle. Los Angeles lost game one of the NBA Finals by a score of 148–114, in what is remembered as the "Memorial Day Massacre".[121] The Lakers, behind 38-year-old Finals MVP Abdul-Jabbar, recovered to defeat the Celtics in six games.[122] The team won the title in theBoston Garden and became the first visiting team to ever win an NBA championship in Boston, as theGolden State Warriors later achieved this feat in2022.[121]
Los Angeles draftedJames Worthy first overall in 1982. "Big Game James" recorded his only careertriple-double in the Lakers' game seven victory over the Pistons in the 1988 NBA Finals.[123]
In the1985–86 season, the Lakers started 24–3 and went on to win 62 games and their fifth straight division title.[124] TheRockets, however, defeated the Lakers in five games in theWestern Conference Finals. Houston won the series whenRalph Sampson hit a 20-foot jumper as time expired in game five at The Forum.[124]
Prior to the1986–87 season, the Lakers movedA.C. Green into the starting lineup, and acquiredMychal Thompson from the Spurs.[125] Johnson won his first career MVP Award while leading the Lakers to a 65–17 record,[125] and Michael Cooper was named NBA Defensive Player of the Year.[125] Before the season, Riley had made the decision to shift the focus of the offense to Johnson over the 40-year-old Abdul-Jabbar.[126] The Lakers advanced to theNBA Finals by sweeping theNuggets, defeating theWarriors in five games, and sweeping theSuperSonics in theWestern Conference Finals.[127] The Lakers defeatedBoston in the first two games of the Finals, and the teams split the next four games, giving Los Angeles their second championship in three seasons.[125] The series was highlighted by Johnson's running "baby hook" shot to win game four at Boston Garden with two seconds remaining.[128] Johnson was named the NBA Finals MVP, in addition to regular season MVP.[129] At the Lakers' championship celebration in Los Angeles, coach Riley brashly declared that Los Angeles would repeat as NBA champions,[125] which no team had done since the1968–69 Boston Celtics.
Looking to make good on Riley's promise in the1987–88 season, the Lakers took their seventh consecutive Pacific Division title with a 62–20 record. They swept theSpurs in the first round of theWestern Conference Finals before pulling out a tough seven-game series win over theUtah Jazz led by youngstersKarl Malone andJohn Stockton. A seven-game Western Conference finals win over theDallas Mavericks propelled the Lakers to theNBA Finals once again. In their seventh trip to the Finals in nine years, they met theDetroit Pistons. Los Angeles would take the series in seven games, and James Worthy's game seventriple-double earned him a Finals MVP award.[130] The win marked their fifth title in nine years, but would also mark their last title until2000.
Following the 1989 Finals, on June 28, 1989, after 20 professional seasons, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar announced his retirement.The Lakers still cruised through the Pacific Division, winning their ninth consecutive division crown with a 63–19 record. However, after beating theRockets in the first round, they lost four games to one in the second round of the playoffs to theSuns.[133] Riley announced he was stepping down after the season citingburnout,[134] and was replaced byMike Dunleavy.[135] Riley's departure received a mixed reaction from the players. They respected his contributions, but some, such as Worthy and Scott, had grown tired of his intense practices and felt he tried to take too much credit for the team's successes.[136] Following the season, 1987Defensive Player of the Year winnerMichael Cooper decided to play in Europe and was waived at his request.[137]
The1990–91 Lakers failed to win the Pacific Division for the first time in 10 years, but still finished with a 58–24 record. After cruising through theWestern Conference playoffs, the Lakers found themselves in theNBA Finals once again, their ninth trip to the Finals in 12 years. The 1991 Finals represented a changing of the guard as the Lakers were defeated in five games by theChicago Bulls, led by superstarMichael Jordan.[138]
1991–1996: Post-"Showtime" dry spell
The Lakers started the1991–92 season by winning the internationalMcDonald's Open in Paris, France, in October with Magic Johnson being named the tournament MVP.[139][140] However, on November 7, 1991, Johnson announced he had tested positive forHIV and would retire immediately.[141]
In theirfirst season without Johnson, the team won 43 games to earn the eighth seed in theWestern Conference playoffs.[35] The Lakers were defeated in the first round byPortland. Following the season, head coach Mike Dunleavy was fired.
The Lakers would lose 43 games in1992–93 underRandy Pfund, their first losing season since 1976. The Lakers would still make the playoffs, and would become the first eighth seed to win the opening two games on the road against a number one seed when they took a 2–0 lead againstPhoenix.[142] They lost the next two games at home however, then game five in Phoenix in overtime.[142] During the1993–94 season, Pfund was fired during the season that would result in the Lakers failing to make the playoffs for the first time since 1976. Magic Johnson, would coach the final 16 games of the season with former teammate Michael Cooper as his lead assistant.[143] Johnson decided not to take the job permanently due to what he felt was a lack of commitment from certain players, and Los Angeles ended the season with a 10-game losing streak to finish 33–49.[144][145]
Under new coachDel Harris, Los Angeles made the playoffs each of the next two seasons but was eliminated in the second and first rounds respectively.[146][147] The team was led by young guardsNick Van Exel andEddie Jones.[148] Johnson came out of retirement to return as a player in the1995–96 season to lead the then 24–18 Lakers to a 29–11 finish.[149] After some run-ins with Van Exel, displeasure with Harris's strategies, and a first-round loss to theRockets, Johnson decided to retire for the final time after the season.[150]
1996–2004: O'Neal and Bryant dynasty
Shaquille O'Neal (left), andKobe Bryant (right), helped the Lakers win three straight NBA titles. Though they played well together on the court, the pair had an acrimonious relationship at times in the locker room.[151][152]
During the 1996 off-season, the Lakers acquired 17-year-oldKobe Bryant from theCharlotte Hornets forVlade Divac; Bryant was drafted 13th overall out ofLower Merion High School inArdmore, Pennsylvania inthat year's draft, by Charlotte. Los Angeles also signed free-agentShaquille O'Neal.[153] Trading for Bryant was West's idea, and he was influential in the team's signing of the all-star center.[154] "Jerry West is the reason I came to the Lakers", O'Neal later said.[155] They used their 24th pick in the draft to selectDerek Fisher.[156] Duringthe season, the team tradedCedric Ceballos to Phoenix forRobert Horry.[157] O'Neal led the team to a 56–26 record, their best effort since 1990–91, despite missing 31 games due to a knee injury.[158] O'Neal averaged 26.2 ppg and 12.5 rpg and finished third in the league in blocked shots (2.88 bpg) in 51 games.[158][159] The Lakers defeated thePortland Trail Blazers in the first round of theplayoffs as O'Neal scored 46 points in Game 1 against the Trail Blazers, marking the highest single-game playoff scoring output by a Laker since Jerry West scored 53 against the Celtics in 1969.[158] In the next round, the Lakers lost in five games to theUtah Jazz.[158]
In the1997–98 season, O'Neal and the Lakers had the best start in franchise history, 11–0.[160] O'Neal would miss 20 games on the season due to an abdominal injury.[160] Los Angeles battledSeattle for the Pacific Division title most of the season. In the final two months, the Lakers won 22 of their final 25 games,[160] finishing 61–21, but still finished second to Seattle in the standings.[160] The Lakers defeatedPortland three games to one in the first round to advance to face Seattle. Although the Sonics won the first game, the Lakers responded with four straight wins, taking the series,[160] but were swept by theJazz in theWestern Conference Finals.[160]
During the1998–99 season, All-Star guardEddie Jones and centerElden Campbell were traded to the Charlotte Hornets.[161] The team also acquiredJ. R. Reid,B. J. Armstrong, andGlen Rice.[162] Head coach Del Harris was fired in February after a three-game losing streak and replaced on an interim basis by former LakerKurt Rambis.[163] The team finished 31–19 in the strike-shortened season, which was fourth in the Western Conference.[164] The Lakers defeatedHouston in the first round of the playoffs, but were swept bySan Antonio in the next round. Game four of the series would be the last game ever played at theGreat Western Forum.[165]
The Lakers at theWhite House following their 2001 NBA championship
Before the1999–2000 season, West was prepared to hire Rambis as the team's full-time coach before an outcry from fans and members of the organization caused him to seek out a bigger name.[166] Los Angeles hired formerChicago Bulls coachPhil Jackson, who had coached that team to six championships, and gave him a lucrative $6 million a year contract.[167] He brought along assistantTex Winter and they installed Winter's version of thetriangle offense.[168] The Lakers signed veteransBrian Shaw,John Salley,Ron Harper, andA.C. Green, who was a Laker during the "Showtime" era.[157] The team also moved to a new arena, the Staples Center.[169]
Led by league MVP O'Neal, theLakers won 31 of their first 36 games.[170] They finished 67–15, the highest win total since they won 65 in the1986–87 season.[170] Then eliminatedSacramento andPhoenix in the first two rounds of theplayoffs.[171] After the Lakers took a three games to one lead in the Western Conference Finals againstPortland, the Trail Blazers won the next two games to force a game seven.[172] The Lakers, who trailed by 15 points in the fourth quarter, would go on 19–4 run to tie the game and eventually win 89–84 to advance to theNBA Finals.[172] In their first trip to the Finals since1991, the Lakers defeatedReggie Miller and theIndiana Pacers four games to two win their first title since1988.[173] West retired from his spot in the team's front office after the season after a power struggle between him and Jackson over control of the team's operations.[174] After the season, starters Rice and Green left the team,[175] and Los Angeles signedHorace Grant.[176]
Championship banners from Minneapolis and Los Angeles & retired jerseys, hanging in the rafters of Crypto.com Arena in 2024
The Lakers won 58 games in2001–02. In theplayoffs, they sweptPortland and defeatedSan Antonio four games to one to advance to the Western Conference Finals to faceSacramento.[181] The series would go on to be known as one of the greatest playoff matchups in NBA history. The series extended to all seven games and ended in a Lakers victory.[182] In game one, Bryant scored 30 points as the Lakers won, 106–99. The series would then shift in Sacramento's favor, with the Kings winning the next two games. Facing a deficit in game 4, the Lakers had the ball with under 20 seconds to play. After misses by both Bryant and O'Neal, Kings centerVlade Divac tapped the ball away from the rim in an attempt to wind down the clock. It went straight intoRobert Horry's hands, who drained a game-winning three with under three seconds to play. After the Kings won game five on a buzzer-beater byMike Bibby, the Lakers were faced with a must-win game six. In one of the most controversial playoff games in league history (Tim Donaghy'sbetting scandal), the Lakers would win by four points.[183] The Lakers went on to win game seven in overtime, with the Kings missing numerous potentially game-saving shots and free throws. The Lakers then achieved a three-peat by sweepingJason Kidd and theNew Jersey Nets in theNBA Finals.[184] O'Neal won each of the Finals series' MVP awards, making him the only player besidesMichael Jordan to win three consecutive Finals MVPs.[185]
TheLakers would attempt a four-peat the following year, but started the2002–03 season 11–19.[186] However, they finished the season 39–13 to finish 50–32.[187] They defeatedMinnesota in the first round of theplayoffs, but the four-peat attempt ended as they were eliminated bySan Antonio in six games in the second round.[188]
During the 2004 off-season, the team entered a rebuilding phase when O'Neal was traded to theMiami Heat forLamar Odom,Brian Grant,Caron Butler, and a first-round draft pick.[197] Bryant and O'Neal hadclashed in the past,[198] and the media credited their feud as one of the motivating factors for the trade.[199] Jackson did not return as head coach, andwrote a book about the team's 2003–04 season, in which he heavily criticized Bryant and called him "uncoachable".[200][201][202] The Lakers front office said that the book contained "several inaccuracies".[203]
The Lakers also tradedRick Fox and Gary Payton to Boston, forChris Mihm,Marcus Banks, andChucky Atkins before the2004–05 season.[204] Derek Fisher, frustrated with losing playing time, opted out of his contract and signed with the Warriors.[204] The team hiredRudy Tomjanovich to replace Jackson.[204] After sitting out the first half of the2004–05 season, Malone announced his retirement on February 13, 2005.[205] Tomjanovich coached the team to a 22–19 record before resigning due to health problems.[206] AssistantFrank Hamblen was named interim head coach to replace Tomjanovich for the remainder of the season.[207] Bryant (ankle) and Odom (shoulder) suffered injuries, and the Lakers finished 34–48, missing the playoffs for only the fifth time in franchise history and the first time since1994.[35]
With the tenth overall pick in the2005 NBA draft, the Lakers selectedAndrew Bynum, a center fromSt. Joseph High School inMetuchen, New Jersey.[208] The team also traded Caron Butler and Chucky Atkins toWashington forKwame Brown andLaron Profit.[209] Jackson returned to coach theteam after Rudy Tomjanovich resigned midway through the previous season.[210] On January 22, 2006, Bryant scored 81 points againstToronto, the second-highest total in NBA history.[211] Ending the season 45–37, the team made theplayoffs after a one-season absence.[212] After taking a three games to one lead in the first round,Phoenix came back to take the series in seven games.[213]
Inthe following season, the Lakers won 26 of their first 39 games,[214] but lost 27 of their last 43—including seven in a row at one point—to finish 42–40.[214] They were eliminated in thefirst round byPhoenix again.[214] Frustrated by the team's inability to advance in the playoffs, Bryant demanded to be traded in the off-season.[215] Buss initially agreed to seek a trade,[216] but also worked to try to change Bryant's mind.[217]
2007–2011: Bryant and Gasol championships
After re-acquiringDerek Fisher, the Lakers started the2007–08 season with a 25–11 record, beforeAndrew Bynum, their center who was leading the league in field-goal percentage, went out for the year due to a knee injury in mid-January.[218] In what would become a crucial transfer for the franchise's return to championship form, they acquired the six-time all-star power forwardPau Gasol from theMemphis Grizzlies in a trade in early February and went 22–5 to finish the season.[219] The Lakers' 57–25 record earned them the first seed in theWestern Conference.[220] Bryant was awarded the league's MVP award, becoming the first Laker to win the award since O'Neal in 2000.[221][222] Inthe playoffs, they defeated the Nuggets in four games, the Jazz in six, and the defending champion Spurs in five, but lost to theCeltics in six games inthe NBA Finals.[223]
In the2008–09 season, the Lakers finished 65–17; the best record in the Western Conference.[224] They defeated theJazz in five games, theRockets in seven and theNuggets in six, to win the Western Conference title. They then won their 15th NBA championship by defeating theOrlando Magic in five games inthe NBA finals.[225] Bryant was named the NBA Finals MVP for the first time in his career.[226]
The Lakers with PresidentBarack Obama following their 2010 NBA championship
The Lakers, who had addedRon Artest (Metta World Peace)[227] in place ofTrevor Ariza in their starting lineup, finishedthe 2009–10 season with the best record in theWestern Conference for the third straight time. On January 13, 2010, the Lakers became the first team in NBA history to win 3,000 regular-season games by defeating theDallas Mavericks 100–95.[228] They defeated theOklahoma City Thunder, theUtah Jazz, and thePhoenix Suns in theWestern Conference playoffs. Inthe finals, the Lakers played theBoston Celtics for the 12th time. They rallied back from a 3–2 disadvantage in the series and erased a 13-point deficit in the fourth quarter of the seventh game to defeat the Celtics. This series win gave them their 16th NBA title overall and 11th since they moved to Los Angeles.[229] Bryant was named Finals MVP for the second year in a row, despite a 6–24 shooting performance in game seven.[230]
After much speculation, head coach Phil Jackson returned for the2010–11 season.[231] In theplayoffs, the Lakers defeated theNew Orleans Hornets in the first round.[232] But their opportunity for a three-peat was denied by theDallas Mavericks in a four-game sweep of the second round. After the season, it was announced that Jackson will not be returning to coach the Lakers.[233]
On July 4, 2012,Steve Nash of the Phoenix Suns agreed to asign-and-trade deal that would send him to the Lakers in exchange for the Lakers' 2013 and 2015 first round draft picks, 2013 and 2014 second round draft picks, and $3 million. The trade was made official on July 11, 2012, the first day the trade moratorium was lifted.[239] On August 10, 2012, in a four-team trade the Lakers traded Andrew Bynum and acquiredDwight Howard.[240] The combination of these players with Bryant and Gasol led media outlets to refer to them as a"superteam" comparable to the 2003-04 Lakers.[241][242] On November 9, 2012, Mike Brown was relieved of coaching duties after a 1–4 start to the2012–13 season.[243] Assistant Coach Bernie Bickerstaff took over as interim head coach, leading the Lakers to a 5–5 record. On November 12, 2012, the Lakers hiredMike D'Antoni as head coach.[244] On February 18, 2013, Lakers owner Jerry Buss died from cancer at age 80.[245] On the court, D'Antoni coached the Lakers to a 40–32 record the rest of the way to finish 45–37, their worst record since2007. The Lakers clinched a playoff berth on the final game of the season and finished seventh in the Western Conference after beating the Houston Rockets on April 16, 2013.[246][247] The Lakers battled injuries all season, the most prominent of which is theAchilles tendon rupture to Kobe Bryant that ended his season after 78 games. The absence of Bryant was sorely felt as the Lakers were swept by the San Antonio Spurs in the first round of the2013 NBA playoffs.[248] Nevertheless, Bryant passed Lakers legend Wilt Chamberlain to become the fourth all-time leading scorer in NBA history on March 30, 2013, against the Sacramento Kings.[249]
On December 8, 2013, Bryant played in his first game since tearing his Achilles tendon on April 12, 2013.[250] However, on December 17, 2013, he suffered a broken bone in his knee, and did not return for the remainder of the season.[251][252] On March 25, 2014, the Lakers scored 51 points in the third quarter against the New York Knicks, the most points scored in a quarter in the history of the franchise.[253] The Lakers went on to miss the NBA playoffs for the first time since 2005, for just the second time in the last two decades and for just the sixth time in franchise history. On April 30, 2014, Mike D'Antoni resigned from his position as head coach after a 27–55 season.[254]
After spending the majority of the off-season without a head coach, the Lakers named former playerByron Scott as the new head coach.[255] After the season, he was the frontrunner to become the new Lakers head coach. Scott interviewed three times for the position, which had become vacant afterMike D'Antoni's resignation.[256] On July 28, 2014, he signed a multi-year contract to coach the Lakers.[257]
During the first game of the2014–15 season, the seventh overall pick in the2014 NBA draft,Julius Randle went down with a broken leg, which ended his rookie season. The Lakers began their season losing 10 of their first 16 games. After playing only 35 games, Kobe Bryant tore a rotator cuff in his shoulder ending his season.Nick Young was also forced to end his season with a fractured kneecap, leaving the team with a record of 14–41.[258] With 27 games left in the regular season, Byron Scott gave rookieJordan Clarkson more playing time. Clarkson, the 46th overall pick in the 2014 draft, finished his rookie season with game stats of 11.9 ppg, 3.2 rpg, 3.5 apg, and shooting 44.8% from the field.[259] The Lakers' season ended with a record of 21–61, the fourth worst record in the league and at the time the worst record in franchise history.
The next season, the Lakers had the second overall pick of the2015 NBA draft, which they used to selectOhio State freshman point guardD'Angelo Russell. The team also selectedLarry Nance Jr. with the 27th overall pick.[260] On November 30, 2015, Bryant announced he would retire at the end of the season after 20 seasons with the team.[261] In Bryant's last season the team missed the playoffs for the third straight year with a 17–65 record, the worst in franchise history.[262]
2016–2018: Post-Bryant era
Frank Vogel, who coached the Lakers for three seasons
On April 24, 2016, the Lakers announced that they would not exercise their option on Byron Scott's contract for the following season.[263] On April 29, the team announced another former Laker,Luke Walton, as their new head coach. At the time of his hiring, Walton was an assistant coach for theGolden State Warriors, who were in theplayoffs, so he could not officially begin his duties as head coach until the Warriors' playoff run was over.[264] The Lakers earned the second overall pick in the2016 NBA draft,[265] and selectedBrandon Ingram fromDuke University.[266] The team also selectedIvica Zubac with the 32nd overall pick.[267]
On July 9, 2018, the Lakers signedLeBron James to a four-year, $154 million contract.[277][278] By the Christmas Day game, the Lakers were six games over .500 before James sustained a groin injury leading to several weeks of missed games. Ball and Ingram also ended their seasons early due to injuries. On February 7, 2019, Zubac was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers along withMichael Beasley in exchange forMike Muscala.[279]
On April 9, 2019, Johnson stepped down as the team's president of basketball operations,[280] and two days later, the Lakers parted ways with head coach Walton after the team failed to reach the playoffs for the sixth straight year.[281]
2019–2025: James and Davis era
On May 13,Frank Vogel was named the Lakers' head coach.[282] The Lakers received the fourth overall pick in the2019 NBA draft lottery.[283] On July 6, the Lakers acquiredAnthony Davis from theNew Orleans Pelicans for Ball, Ingram, Hart, and three first-round picks, including the number four overall in the 2019 draft.[284] This trade officially ended the young core era of the Lakers; only Kuzma remained out of the group of players.
Following thesuspension of the 2019–20 NBA season on March 11, the Lakers were one of the 22 teams invited to theNBA Bubble to participate in the final eight games of the regular season.[289] The Lakers finished the regular season with a 52–19 record, entering the playoffs for the first time since 2013,[290] and as the top seed for the first time since 2010.[291] They advanced to the NBA Finals for the first time since 2010.[292] They defeated theMiami Heat 4–2 to win the2020 NBA Finals,[293] and James was named the Finals MVP for the fourth time in his career.[294] A championship dedicated to Bryant, the win gave Los Angeles their 17th championship in franchise history, tying the Boston Celtics for the most all-time.[295][296] Primary Lakers ownerJeanie Buss, who took over the team in 2017, would also become the first female controlling owner of an NBA team to win the NBA Finals.[297]
On June 20, 2024,JJ Redick was hired as head coach of the Lakers.[302]
On June 27, 2024, the Lakers selectedBronny James, the son of LeBron, at 55th overall in the2024 NBA draft, forming the first father-son duo in NBA history.[303] On October 23, 2024, the team made NBA history as being the first one to have father and son (LeBron James & Bronny James) play together as they beat Minnesota Timberwolves on their season opening game.[304]
2025–present: The arrival of Luka Dončić
On February 1, 2025, the LakerstradedAnthony Davis,Max Christie, and a first-round pick in 2029 for all-star guardLuka Dončić,Maxi Kleber, andMarkieff Morris. The Jazz gotJalen Hood-Schifino, and two 2025 second-round picks.[305] The Lakers intended to trade Dalton Knecht, Cam Reddish, a 2030 pick swap, and their 2031 first-round pick to the Charlotte Hornets in exchange for Mark Williams. The trade was rescinded.[306]
The rivalry between theBoston Celtics and the Lakers involves the two most storiedbasketball franchises inNational Basketball Association (NBA) history. It has been called the best rivalry in the NBA.[307] The two teams have met a record 12 times in theNBA Finals, starting with their first Finals meeting in1959. They would go on to dominate the league in the 1960s and the 1980s, facing each other six times in the 1960s and three times in the 1980s.
The rivalry had been less intense since the retirements ofMagic Johnson andLarry Bird in the early 1990s, but in 2008 it was renewed as the Celtics and Lakers met in the Finals for the first time since 1987, with the Celtics winning the series 4–2. They faced off once again in the2010 NBA Finals, which the Lakers won in 7 games.
The two teams were tied for the highest number of championships, with 17 titles apiece, until the Celtics surpassed this record in the2024 NBA Finals; together, the 35 championships account for almost half of the78 championships in NBA history.
The all-time series record for the Lakers vs Celtics is 209–165 with the Celtics being the forerunners. Boston is the only NBA team with an overall winning record against the Lakers.[308]
The rivalry between the Lakers and theDetroit Pistons developed in the late 1980s.[309]: 228 Both teams faced each other in back-to-back finals appearances in the1988 NBA Finals, which the Lakers won in 7 games and the1989 NBA Finals, which the Pistons won in 4 games.
The rivalry reemerged in the early 2000s as both teams squared off against one another in the2004 NBA Finals, which the Pistons won in five games.
The Lakers have a lengthy history with theGolden State Warriors as both franchises relocated to California during the early 1960s. Geography does play a minor role in the rivalry; however there exists more respect between both teams and fans alike, unlike theDodgers–Giants rivalry of MLB, or the49ers–Rams rivalry of the NFL in which both teams express fierce animosity against one another.[310][311] The rivalry began to sprout during the 1970s as the two teams would meet six times in the postseason from 1967 to 1991. Both teams fluctuated in success at varying times, however; the Lakers recent rise following the signing ofLeBron James contributed heavily to adding a level of competition between both sides as James had previously faced the Warriors in four straight finals as a member of the Cavaliers. Both teams have met seven times in the postseason, combining for 38 division titles since both teams relocated to California in the early 1960s.[312][313] The Lakers lead the all time regular season series 262–173, and the postseason series 25–11.[314][315]
The rivalry between the Lakers and theLos Angeles Clippers is unique because they were the only two NBA teams to share an arena, theCrypto.com Arena, but since the Clippers' move toIntuit Dome in 2024, no NBA teams share an arena. It is also one of only two intra-city rivalries in the NBA, the other being the new crosstown rivalry between theNew York Knicks andBrooklyn Nets.
Los Angeles fans have historically favored the Lakers.[316][317] Some contend that the termrivalry was inaccurate until the Clippers became more successful.[318]
TheSan Antonio Spurs and the Lakers, developed what some would classify as a rivalry in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Since 1999, the teams have met in theNBA Playoffs five times, with the clubs combining to appear in seven consecutiveNBA Finals (from 1999 to 2005). Additionally, the teams combined to win five NBA championships from 1999 to 2003; the Spurs won the NBA championship in 1999, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014 while the Lakers won the championship in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2009 and 2010. From 1999 to 2004 the clubs' rivalry was often considered the premier rivalry in the NBA,[319] and each time the clubs faced each other in the playoffs the winner advanced to the NBA Finals. In 2008, the teams met again in the Western Conference Finals where the Spurs were handily defeated only to beat the Lakers when they met again in 2013.
The Kings and the Lakers have faced each other in the playoffs nine times between 1949 and 2002, and since the Kings moved to Sacramento in 1985, both have been based in California. The2002 Western Conference Finals was one of the most bitterly contested in NBA history, with many controversial calls in game 6.[320] The Lakers would win the series in game 7.
Ownership history
Historic ownership
The NBL'sDetroit Gems were founded byDearborn businessmen Morris Winston and C. King Boring, and began playing in the 1946–47 season. After the season, Ben Berger and Morris Chalfen purchased the franchise for $15,000, relocated it to Minnesota, and changed its name from the Gems to the Lakers.[11] General manager Max Winter bought a third of the club in their early years and sold his share to Mikan in 1954. Berger bought Mikan's share in 1956 giving him a controlling (two-thirds) interest.[321] After Mikan retired, attendance plummeted and the team lost money for several seasons, leading the ownership group to put the team up for sale in 1957.[322]Marty Marion, a retired baseball player and manager, and his business partner Milton Fischman attempted to purchase the team with the intention of moving the club toKansas City, Missouri.[322][323] Mikan offered to mortgage his home in an attempt to buy the team and keep the club in Minnesota.[324]
Ultimately, the Lakers were sold to a group of investors led by Bob Short.[321] The team was sold to Short's group with the agreement that it would not be relocated to Kansas City but kept in Minnesota.[325] Short's ownership group consisted of 117 Minnesota businesses and private citizens, who amassed a total of $200,000 for the purchase; $150,000 to buy the team and $50,000 to run it.[321] By 1958 Short had become 80% owner of the team by buying out his partners,[321] but the team was floundering. Attendance remained poor, and the NBA had put the Lakers on "financial probation", notifying them that if they did not meet certain ticket sales numbers they could be bought out by the league and relocated. Short was forced to move the team to Los Angeles in 1960; the club had lost $60,000 in the first half of the 1959–60 season alone.[326] The NBA's owners originally voted 7–1 against the move.[327] When Short indicated that he might take the team to a new rival league that was developing, however, the owners held another vote that same day and allowed the relocation (8–0).[328] Aided by Baylor's drawing power,[329][330] and the new locale, the team's finances improved when they arrived in LA.[331][332]
Short sold the team toWashington Redskins owner and publisher Jack Kent Cooke in 1965 for a then league record amount of $5.175 million.[333] Short insisted the deal be conducted in cash as he was wary of Cooke, so guards transported the money in a cart from one New York bank to another.[334] Cooke was a more hands-on owner than Short, and overhauled the team's operations.[335] He personally financed construction of the Forum in 1967 at a cost of $16.5 million.[336][337]
Jerry Buss owned the team from 1979 until his death in 2013.
In 1979, Cooke, who needed to raise money to fund a costly divorce,[338][339] sold the Lakers, theNHL'sLos Angeles Kings, the Forum, and some real estate to real estate investorJerry Buss for $67.5 million,[340] of which the Lakers constituted $16 million.[341] When Buss bought the team, the Lakers had won only one title since moving to Los Angeles.[341] In Buss' 33-plus seasons in charge of the team, the Lakers won ten NBA championships and sixteen conference championships, and missed the playoffs only twice.[342][343] He was elected to theBasketball Hall of Fame in 2010.[344] When he died in 2013,Forbes valued the team at $1 billion.[340]
Jeanie Buss has been the Lakers' controlling owner since 2013, and runs the team on behalf of the entire family.[345][346] Jerry Buss' six children hold the family's 66% controlling stake in the team via four related trusts,[347] which are managed by co-trustees Jeanie, Janie, andJohnny Buss as of March 2017.[348] A portion of the Lakers shares were reserved for Buss' ex-wife JoAnn, who died in 2019.[349][350] The trusts are set up to ensure that the family retains control of the team, as no one sibling can sell their individual stake.[349] However, the team can be sold if four of the six siblings vote in favor.[345] According to Janie Buss Drexel, Jerry Buss' children cannot necessarily pass on their full ownership rights to their own children, meaning that control over the Lakers goes to the "last man standing" among the siblings.[345]
Following Jerry Buss' death, day-to-day control over the team was initially split between Jeanie Buss (the official controlling owner and the head of business operations) andJim Buss (basketball operations).[349] In February 2017, Jeanie fired Jim after several disappointing seasons, which triggered litigation over who controlled the Lakers.[351][352][346] In March, the dispute was resolved in Jeanie's favor when the Buss siblings gave her lifetime operational control over the team,[347] "as long as the family owns the Lakers."[348] In October 2024,Forbes estimated that the Lakers were the third-most-valuable team in basketball, at $7.1 billion.[353]
In 1994, Buss sold a small stake in the team (variously reported at 4% or 4.5%) toMagic Johnson for a reported $10 million.[356][349]
In 1998, Buss sold a 25% stake in the team to the team's new landlordsPhilip Anschutz and Ed Roski Jr. for an undisclosed sum.[357] Anschutz eventually increased his personal stake to 27%.[355]
In 2010, Johnson sold his shares to Patrick Soon-Shiong for an undisclosed sum.[356]
In 2021, after the team extended itsCrypto.com Arena lease,[358] Anschutz sold his shares toLos Angeles Dodgers co-owners Mark Walter and Todd Boehly,[355] with Walter taking 20% and Boehly taking 7%.[354] It was reported that Anschutz sold his shares at a $5 billion team valuation, or $1.35 billion.[358] As part of the deal, Walter and Boehly reportedly obtained a right of first refusal if the Buss family sells the team.[358] Roski still owns 3% of the team.[349]
Mark Walter's acquisition of majority ownership
In June 2025, ESPN reported that the Buss family had agreed to sell majority control toLos Angeles Dodgers majority owner,Mark Walter, at a $10 billion team valuation. As part of the deal, Walter reportedly agreed to allow Jeanie Buss to continue running the team for "a number of years".[359] The Buss family will temporarily retain a 15% stake in the team,[359] the minimum stake for a principal team owner under NBA rules.[360] On October 30, 2025, the NBA Board of Governors had unanimously approved the sale.[361]
Fanbase and sponsors
Jerry Buss started the trend of allowing sponsors to add their name to team's stadiums when he renamed the Forum theGreat Western Forum in 1988.[362] From 2002 and 2007 the team averaged just over 18,900 fans, which placed them in the top ten in the NBA in attendance. In 2008, the team sold out every home game,[363] and in 2010, the Lakers had the most popular team merchandise among all NBA teams, and Bryant the most popular jersey.[364] In 2009 major sponsors includedVerizon Wireless,Toyota,Anheuser-Busch,American Express, andCarl's Jr., and the team's $113 average ticket price was the highest in the league.[365]
The Lakers have a jersey patch deal withBibigo that started during the 2021–22 season.[366] Alongside Bibigo, current major sponsors of the Lakers includeAmerican Express,Chevron,Nike, andMGM Resorts.[367] The Lakers sold a total of 767,626 tickets for the 2024–25 season, ranking 12th in the league.[368]
Given the team's proximity to Hollywood, the Lakers fanbase includes numerous celebrities, many of whom can be seen at the Crypto.com Arena during home games.[369]Jack Nicholson, for example, has held season tickets since the 1970s, and directors reportedly need to work their shooting schedules around Lakers' home games.[370]Red Hot Chili Peppers' song "Magic Johnson", from their 1989 albumMother's Milk, is a tribute to the former point guard, and frontmanAnthony Kiedis and bassistMichael "Flea" Balzary are frequently seen attending home games.[371]
The Lakers current wordmark, used since the 1999–2000 season. The version shown is used on their "Association" white jerseys.
The Laker nickname came from the state of Minnesota being theLand of 10,000 Lakes.[12][372] The team's colors are purple, gold and white.[373][6][374] The Lakers logo consists of the team name, "Los Angeles Lakers" written in purple on top of a gold basketball. The team usually wears white jerseys for Sunday and holiday home games.[373][375]
The Lakers have won 17 NBA titles and have appeared in the NBA Finals 15 other times.[35] These appearances include eight NBA Finals appearances in the 1980s. The best record posted by the team was 69–13, in 1972; the worst record was 17–65, in 2016.[35]
Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage
Bryant holds most individual team records for longevity including most games played (1,333), and most minutes logged (48,298). Johnson holds all significant assist records for the club including career assists (10,141), assists in a game (24), and highest assist average for a season (13.1). Johnson also has the mosttriple doubles, with his 138 over 100 more than the next closest player (Bryant; 17).Elmore Smith holds team records for blocks in a game (17), blocks per game for a season (4.85), and career blocks per game (3.93). The scoring records are mostly shared byElgin Baylor and Bryant, with Baylor having the highest average for a career (27.4) while Bryant has the highest points scored in a single game (81). Baylor, Bryant and West hold the top five single-season scoring averages, with Bryant occupying the first (35.4) and fourth (31.6) spots, while Baylor has the second (34.8), and third (34.0), and West the fifth (31.3).[376][377]
The Lakers hold several NBA records as a team including most consecutive games won overall (33) and most consecutive road games won (16), both of which came during the 1971–72 season,[378] highest field-goal percentage for a season at 54.5% (1984–85),[379] and highest road winning percentage at 0.816 (1971–72).[64] They also hold records for having (into the2009–10 season) the most wins (3,027), the highest winning percentage (61.9%), and the most NBA Finals appearances (31).[35][380] The 2000–01 team set the NBA record for best playoff record at 15–1, which was later broken by theGolden State Warriors in 2017.[381] The 1971–72 team holds franchise records in wins (69), most points scored, and largest margin of victory; both of the latter came in the team's 63 point win versus Golden State (162–99).[382] They also held the record for most wins at home in the regular season (going 36–5 in 1971–72, then 37–4 in both 1976–77 and 1979–80) unil the Boston Celtics set the current record of 40–1 in the 1985–86 season.
Home arenas
The Forum (left), served as the Lakers' home arena from 1967 to 1999, before they moved to their present home,Crypto.com Arena, then known as Staples Center (right).
The Lakers play their home games atCrypto.com Arena (formerly known as Staples Center), located atL.A. Live indowntown Los Angeles. The arena opened in fall 1999 and seats up to 18,997 for Lakers games.[383] Owned and operated byAEG and L.A. Arena Company, the arena is also home to the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks, and the NHL's Los Angeles Kings.[383] The team's lease runs until 2041.[358]
Before moving to Staples Center, for 32 seasons (1967–1999), the Lakers played their home games atThe Forum inInglewood, California, located approximately 10 miles (16 km) southwest of the team's current home.[169] During the 1999 preseason, the Lakers played their home games at the Forum before officially moving into Staples Center, and once again hosted a preseason game versus theGolden State Warriors on October 9, 2009, this time to commemorate the team's 50th-anniversary season in Los Angeles.[384]
The Lakers hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA.[387] A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[388] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.
The Lakers have had threefirst overall picks in their history: Elgin Baylor (selected in1958), Magic Johnson (selected in1979) and James Worthy (selected in1982).[391] The Lakers have also had sixlottery picks in their history: Eddie Jones (selected tenth overall in1994), Andrew Bynum (selected tenth overall in 2005), Julius Randle (selected seventh overall in 2014), D'Angelo Russell (selected second overall in 2015), Brandon Ingram (selected second overall in 2016) and Lonzo Ball (selected second overall in 2017).[391] Other draft picks include Jerry West and Gail Goodrich in the 1960s,Michael Cooper andNorm Nixon in the 1970s,A.C. Green andVlade Divac in the 1980s,Elden Campbell,Nick Van Exel, Derek Fisher andDevean George in the 1990s, andLuke Walton,Sasha Vujačić, andRonny Turiaf in the 2000s.[391]
Head coaches
Former head coach Phil Jackson led the team to five championships.
There have been 29 head coaches for the Lakers franchise.John Kundla coached the team in Minneapolis when they won their first fiveBAA/NBA championships from1949 to1954.[50]Pat Riley is second in franchise history in both regular season and playoff games coached and wins.[392] Phil Jackson broke Riley's regular-season wins record in 2009, and he passed Riley's playoff wins and games coached records in 2010.[392] Jackson, Riley, Kundla, and Bill Sharman have all been inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame for their coaching careers.George Mikan, Jim Pollard,Jerry West,Pat Riley, Magic Johnson,Kurt Rambis,Byron Scott andLuke Walton have all played and head-coached for the Lakers. Jackson, who had two stints as head coach, was coach from 2005 to 2011. In May 2011,Mike Brown was named his replacement for the 2011–12 season.[393] Brown was fired[394] on November 9, 2012, after a 1–4 start. Assistant coachBernie Bickerstaff served as interim head coach for five games before the Lakers selectedMike D'Antoni as their new head coach. D'Antoni resigned at the end of the 2013–14 season. In July 2014, Byron Scott was hired as head coach.[395] After the 2015–16 season ended, Scott was fired. On April 29, 2016, former Lakers playerLuke Walton was named as Scott's replacement,[396] and served as head coach until the end of the 2018–19 season.[397]Frank Vogel was named his successor on a multiyear deal announced on May 13, 2019.[398] Vogel was fired following the conclusion of the 2021–22 season.[399] On June 6, 2022,Darvin Ham was named as Vogel's successor as head coach.[400] However, Ham was fired by the Lakers on May 3, 2024, after the Lakers were eliminated in Game 5 of the first round by theDenver Nuggets. Among his accomplishments was leading the Lakers to their first In-Season Tournament championship.[401] On June 24, 2024, former NBA playerJJ Redick was hired as the 29th coach in team history.[402]
Hall of Famers, retired and honored numbers
The Lakers have 41 Hall of Famers (31 players, 5 head coaches, 1 assistant coach, and 4 contributors) who contributed to the organization.[403][404][405]
Lakers retired jerseys hanging inside theCrypto.com Arena in 2013. Since this picture was taken, the Lakers have modified the banners to more accurately reflect the jersey style each player wore.
The Lakers haveretired 14 jersey numbers and an honorary microphone in honor of their players and broadcaster:[415][416][417][418][419]
The NBA retiredBill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[420][421]
In addition, several other players and coaches who were instrumental to the franchise's success during its days in Minneapolis have a banner commemorating them as Hall of Fame members of the Minneapolis Lakers, although jersey numbers for these players are not retired by the franchise:[422]
For 41 years, Chick Hearn was the team's broadcaster until his death in 2002. He broadcast 3,338 consecutive games between November 21, 1965, and December 16, 2001.[423] Hearn came up with West's "Mr. Clutch" nickname.[424] He was a part of the team's "inner sanctum" when Cooke was owner, and was consulted on basketball decisions.[425]Paul Sunderland, who had filled in for a couple of games while Hearn recuperated in the2001–02 season, was named the permanentplay-by-play announcer.Stu Lantz was retained as thecolor commentator.[426] When Sunderland's contract expired in the summer of 2005, the team chose not to renew it.[427] Then,Joel Meyers moved in alongside Lantz as the television announcer, withSpero Dedes and former Laker playerMychal Thompson on the radio.[428]
For the2011–12 season,Bill Macdonald became the new television play-by-play announcer, joining Lantz who remained as the color analyst. Meanwhile,John Ireland joined Mychal Thompson to call the games on radio.[429]
Beginning in the2009–10 season, Lakers radio broadcasts were heard onKSPN (Los AngelesESPN Radio affiliate) in English andKWKW in Spanish.[428][430]KLAC had the team's radio broadcast rights from the1976–77 season until the2008–09 season.[430][431] Until 2011, telecasts had been split betweenKCAL-TV (road games) and Fox Sports West (home games), unless they are chosen for national broadcasts onABC.[432] KCAL had been the Lakers' over-the-air television broadcaster since 1977, dating back to when the station was theRKO General-owned KHJ-TV, the longest relationship between an NBA team and a television station. Prior to KHJ, Laker games were televised onKTLA. The Lakers had been on Fox Sports West since 1985, dating to when it was the original Prime Ticket and owned by Buss.[433]
On February 14, 2011,Time Warner Cable and the Lakers announced the formation of two new regional sports networks (one in English, one in Spanish) that would exclusively televise the team's games and related programming for 20 years starting with the2012–13 season.[434] The said networks were originally known as Time Warner Cable SportsNet, before it was renamedSpectrum SportsNet in 2016 uponCharter Communications' purchase of Time Warner Cable.[435]
^"Lakers x Bibigo".Lakers.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. September 21, 2021.Archived from the original on September 22, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 22, 2021.
^"About Us".CryptoArena.com. L.A. Arena Company, LLC.Archived from the original on March 1, 2023. RetrievedMarch 1, 2023.
^abSopan Deb (June 18, 2024)."The Celtics Have 18 Championships. The Lakers? 17. (And Maybe One More.)".The New York Times. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2024.A truly terrible N.B.L. team was the Detroit Gems, which played for only one season, going 4-40 in 1946-1947. Benny Berger, a Minneapolis businessman, purchased the Gems and relocated the franchise to Minneapolis. He renamed them the Lakers.
^abc"Pro cagers say adieu".Detroit Free Press. June 4, 1947. p. 16. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2024 – viaNewspapers.com.Morris Winston, Dearborn merchant who backed the Gems last season, has sold the franchise to Benny Berger of Minneapolis. The club will operate as a Twin Cities entry next season.
^abBarreiro, Dan."George Mikan: The First Icon".From the Official NBA Encyclopedia, Third Edition. NBA.com. Archived fromthe original on November 9, 2012. RetrievedNovember 20, 2010.
^Pearlman, Jeff (2021).Three-Ring Circus: Kobe, Shaq, Phil, and the Crazy Years of the Lakers Dynasty. Mariner Books.ISBN978-0-358-62796-8.OCLC1269511608.
^Jerry Crowe (April 27, 2009)."Minneapolis sportswriter helped raise the Lakers".The Los Angeles Times. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2024.In the summer of 1947, Hartman says, "I went to Detroit with a check in my hand. We bought the Gems for 15 grand." Later, in the so-called "Land of 10,000 Lakes," a naming contest determined that they would be rechristened the Lakers.
^"Lakers Fire George Mikan".Eugen Register-Guard. Associated Press. January 16, 1958.Archived from the original on April 21, 2021. RetrievedNovember 10, 2010.
^"Lakers Color Palette"(PDF).Los Angeles Lakers Design and Brand Guidelines. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. June 2018. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on November 12, 2020. RetrievedMay 15, 2023.
^Coon, Larry."NBA Salary Cap FAQ – 2011 Collective Bargaining Agreement". RetrievedApril 13, 2014.If the player is already under contract to, or signs a contract with a non-NBA team, the team retains the player's draft rights for one year after the player's obligation to the non-NBA team ends. Essentially, the clock stops as long as the player plays pro ball outside the NBA.
Alex Sacchare, ed. (1994).Official Nba Basketball Encyclopedia (2nd ed.). Villard.ISBN978-0-679-43293-7.
Alex Sacchare, ed. (2000).The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia (3rd ed.). Doubleday.ISBN978-0-385-50130-9.
Schumacher, Michael (2008).Mr. Basketball: George Mikan, the Minneapolis Lakers, and the Birth of the NBA. University of Minnesota Press.ISBN978-0-8166-5675-2.
Travers, Steven (2007).The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Los Angeles Lakers: Heart-Pounding, Jaw-Dropping, and Gut-Wrenching Moments from Los Angeles Lakers History. Triumph Books.ISBN978-1-60078-004-2.