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Lakers’ acquisition of Rui Hachimura is a sensible move

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The Lakers — the team whose trade aspirations have been dissected and discussed since the offseason — made a trade Monday, their fans collectively reacting in a singular way.

Finally.

The team sent a trio of second-round picks headlined by the Bulls’ second in the 2023 draft and guard Kendrick Nunn to Washington for Rui Hachimura, a 6-foot-8 hybrid forward who turns 25 in a couple of weeks.

Instead of starting trade season off with a blockbuster deal highlighted by either their 2027 or 2029 first-round picks, the Lakers struck a more sensible note in trading for the former lottery pick.

They addressed some obvious needs and better balanced their roster by swapping out a small guard for a big wing.

Hachimura is kind of a classic “buy low” player. He has the size and shooting you’d want out of a modern power forward, but durability and roster construction problems in Washington have kept him from taking any large developmental steps.

He’s a restricted free agent at the end of the season, giving the Lakers a head start on evaluating him as a role player alongside LeBron James and, soon enough, Anthony Davis.

The Lakers valued his size and hope he can address some of the team’s rebounding woes, though he’s been somewhat inconsistent on the glass.

Hachimura’s youth and potential, though, allow for the Laker’s front office to successfully thread the needle they’ve been focused on — improving the team in trade this year while also adding a piece that could matter for them in the long term.

When will LeBron James become NBA’s all-time leading scorer?

A look at LeBron James’ pursuit of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the all-time scoring record.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar points: 38,387

LeBron James points: 38,164

Points from record: 224 points

Projected games until record: 9

Projected record date: Feb. 9 vs. Bucks

He should help the Lakers’ second unit, though he was a starter the first two seasons of his NBA career.

The trade comes at a time when the Lakers have made a strong on-court argument that the team is worthy of investment.

Davis is on track to return this week, and without him, the Lakers just beat the Memphis Grizzlies and Portland Trail Blazers, coming back from one of the worst quarters in NBA history to steal a win on Sunday in Portland.

And James, despite being in Year 20, just won his second player of the week honors in the past three weeks.

Between now and the Feb. 9 trade deadline, the Lakers play eight games — six against teams that would currently be in the postseason plus one against the plenty dangerous Oklahoma City Thunder. The Lakers host San Antonio Wednesday on the second night of a back-to-back in the easiest game of the stretch.

But after starting the season 2-12, the Lakers have gone 20-13.

“I think the NBA’s a long season,” Patrick Beverley said Sunday. “It’s always predicated on the most conditioned team coming into training camp always start well. They even off, and the vets kind of catch their legs 20-25 games in. They win some games. It’s so competitive in this league, you can win any game. You can beat good teams. You can lose to anybody any night. I believe our early tests, our early injuries has prepared us for a lot going into the postseason, going into the down stretch of the season.

“Any adversity you’re fortunate with. For me and my teammates, you appreciate adversity. It helps you get through the tough times.”

The Lakers are hoping a big, young forward with some potential can help them through some tough times, too.

It might not be the big move — but the Lakers feel like they got better on Monday.

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