:''"Lakers" redirects here. For other uses, see
Laker.''
The 'Los Angeles Lakers' are a
National Basketball Association (NBA) team based in
Los Angeles, California. The Lakers play their home games at
Staples Center, which they share with the
Los Angeles Clippers, their sister team the
Los Angeles Sparks of the
WNBA, the
Los Angeles Kings of the
National Hockey League, the
Los Angeles Avengers of the
Arena Football League and the
NBA Development League's
Los Angeles D-Fenders.
The Laker franchise was founded in
Detroit before moving to
Minneapolis, where the team got its official title from the
state's nickname, and won 5 league championships within the various leagues before locating to Los Angeles. In the late
1970s and early
1980s, the Lakers popularity soared, with superstar players
Magic Johnson,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and coach
Pat Riley winning five titles in the that span, with 3 championship series
against their arch-rivals, the
Boston Celtics.
In the
2000s, the trio of coach
Phil Jackson,
Kobe Bryant and
Shaquille O'Neal brought three straight championships before falling apart, culminating in O'Neal being traded to the
Miami Heat. Only Bryant and Jackson remain from the champion years. Most recently, the team finished 42-40 in the
2006-07 NBA season, Jackson's second worst record of his coaching career.
The Lakers are notable for having (at the end of the 2005–06 season) the most wins (2,806), the highest winning percentage (61.5%), the most finals appearances (28) of any NBA franchise, and the second most championships (14, behind the
Boston Celtics' 16).
[1] They hold the record for the longest consecutive win streak (33) in
U.S. professional team sports. The franchise has only missed the NBA playoffs 5 times.
[2]
Home arenas
:
Minneapolis Auditorium (1947-1959)
:
Minneapolis Armory (1959-60)
::(Due to scheduling conflicts, the Lakers actually played in both the Auditorium and the Armory throughout the 1947-60 period. They also played some games in the
St. Paul Auditorium.)
:
Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena (1960-1967)
:
The Forum (formerly ''Great Western Forum'' from 1988-1999) (1967-1999)
:
Staples Center (1999-present)
Team history
Main articles: History of the Los Angeles Lakers

Lakers logo 1966-1991.
The Lakers began in 1946 when
Ben Berger and
Morris Chalfen bought the Detroit Gems of the
National Basketball League for $15,000 and relocated it to
Minneapolis. As the Gems had by far the worst record in the NBL, the Lakers had the first pick in the 1947 dispersal draft of players from the Professional Basketball League of America, which they used to select
George Mikan, later to become arguably the greatest
center of his time. With Mikan, new coach
John Kundla and an infusion of former
University of Minnesota players, the Lakers won the NBL championship in that 1947-48 season and joined three other NBL teams in jumping to the
Basketball Association of America, where they promptly won the 1948-49 BAA championship. The NBL and BAA merged to become the NBA in 1949.

Bryant in a Lakers uniform.
The Minneapolis Lakers were one of the dominant teams of the fledgling NBA. With
Hall of Famers George Mikan,
Vern Mikkelsen,
Jim Pollard,
Slater Martin, and
Clyde Lovellette, they were the NBA's first "dynasty", winning five championships in six years (1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954).
After their move to Los Angeles in 1960, the team would go on to feature Hall of Famers
Elgin Baylor,
Jerry West,
Gail Goodrich, and
Wilt Chamberlain. But despite the wealth of talent, they were repeatedly foiled by the
Boston Celtics, losing the championship to them six times in eight years. It wasn't until 1972, when the Lakers strung together a record 33-game win streak under
Coach of the Year Bill Sharman, that they were able to secure their first championship in Los Angeles.
However, even with the addition of
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the Lakers weren't able to win another championship until the arrival of
Earvin "Magic" Johnson in 1979, defeating the Philadelphia 76ers thanks to an MVP performance by the rookie Johnson, who, starting for the injured Abdul-Jabbar, had 42 points, 15 rebounds, and 7 assists to clinch the series. Under coach
Pat Riley, a former Laker player, the Lakers then went on to dominate the 1980s, appearing in the finals eight times in the decade and being crowned champions five times, including consecutive championships in 1987 and 1988, the first team to do so since Boston in 1969.
Although they made another finals appearance in 1991, they spent most of the 1990s fielding teams that were not considered legitimate title contenders. However, during the 1996 offseason, the Lakers signed
Shaquille O'Neal and acquired rookie
Kobe Bryant from the
Charlotte Hornets. Following the hiring of
Phil Jackson as head coach in 1999, the team returned to championship form; led by O'Neal, Bryant, and a talented supporting cast, the Lakers won three consecutive NBA Finals from 2000-02.
Most recently, the Lakers endured a series of off-the-court problems, largely the result of friction among O'Neal, Bryant, and Jackson. In 2004, O'Neal was traded to the
Miami Heat and Jackson temporarily retired. After the Lakers struggled in 2004-05, Jackson returned for the following season, and the Bryant-led team returned to the postseason, losing to the Phoenix Suns in the first round in both the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons. They start the offseason hoping to gain a stronger lineup.
Celebrity fans
.JPG)
Laker fan Jack Nicholson
Given the team's proximity to
Hollywood, the Lakers fan base includes many famous actors and musicians who are regularly seen at home games.
Jack Nicholson is the most prominent member of this group, having held season tickets since 1967.
[3] Other celebrities known as long-standing ticket-holders include
Denzel Washington,
Dustin Hoffman,
Andy Garcia,
Penny Marshall,
Ice Cube,
Sylvester Stallone,
Dyan Cannon,
Tobey Maguire, and
Ashton Kutcher.
The members of the Southern California-based
Red Hot Chili Peppers are also known to be longtime Laker fans.
The songs "Salute to Kareem" and "Magic Johnson", a tribute to the "
Showtime"-era Lakers, can be found on the band's album ''
Mother's Milk''.
As of the
2006-2007 season, Chili Pepper's bassist
Flea, a self-proclaimed Lakers fanatic, writes a blog on the Lakers for NBA.com.
[4]
Season-by-season records
Main articles: Los Angeles Lakers seasons
Logo and uniforms
The Lakers' home uniforms are unique in the fact that they are the only team in the NBA not to wear white normally at home. However, since the
2002-03 season the team has worn white jerseys on Sunday and holiday home games. The white jerseys were designed by Lakers owner Jerry Buss' daughter Jeannie Buss, in tribute to
Chick Hearn, who was regarded as the voice of the team for forty years until his death in
August 2002.
Players of note
In 1997, the NBA announced a list of the 50 best players in its history, and of them, eight played all or significant portions of their careers with the Lakers: centers
George Mikan,
Wilt Chamberlain,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and
Shaquille O'Neal; guards
Jerry West and
Magic Johnson; and forwards
Elgin Baylor and
James Worthy .
[5]
Basketball Hall of Famers
★ 23
Shawn Ram
★ 48
Max Prasad
★ 33
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
★ 22
Elgin Baylor
★ 13
Wilt Chamberlain
★ 25
Gail Goodrich
★ 42
Connie Hawkins
★ 32
Magic Johnson
★ 34
Clyde Lovellette
★ 22
Slater Martin
★ 11
Bob McAdoo
★ 99
George Mikan
★ 19
Vern Mikkelsen
★ 17
Jim Pollard
★ 42
James Worthy
★ 44
Jerry West
★ Coach
John Kundla
★ Coach
Bill Sharman
★ Coach
Phil Jackson
Retired numbers

Wilt Chamberlain played for the Lakers from 1968 to 1973, and has since had his number (13) retired.
★ 13
Wilt Chamberlain, C, 1968-73
★ 22
Elgin Baylor, F, 1958-71 (including team's last season in Minneapolis)
★ 25
Gail Goodrich, G, 1965-68 & 1970-76
★ 32
Magic Johnson, G, 1979-91 & 1995-96; Head Coach 1994
★ 33
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, C, 1975-89
★ 42
James Worthy, F, 1982-94
★ 44
Jerry West, G, 1960-74; Head Coach, 1976-79; General Manager, 1981-2002
★ MIC
Chick Hearn, Broadcaster, 1960-2002
'Honored Minneapolis Lakers:' Next to their retired numbers, the Lakers have hung a banner with the names of six
Hall-of-Famers who were instrumental to the franchise's success during its days in
Minneapolis:
★
John Kundla, Coach, 1948-59
★ 99
George Mikan, C, 1948-56 (did not play in 1954-55)
★ 17
Jim Pollard, F, 1948-55
★ 19
Vern Mikkelsen, F, 1949-59
★ 22
Slater Martin, G, 1949-56
★ 34
Clyde Lovellette, F-C, 1953-57
Current roster
Current depth chart
Notable former players
Notable Head Coaches
★
John Kundla -- First Head Coach, 1948-58 and 1959; 1949 BAA Champions; 1950 and 1952-54 NBA Champions; 1951 and 1957 NBA Western Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 423-302 in regular season, 60-35 in playoffs
★
Fred Schaus -- 1960-67; 1962-63 and 1965-66 NBA Western Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 315-245 in regular season, 33-38 in playoffs
★
Butch Van Breda Kolff -- 1967-69; 1969 NBA Western Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 107-57 in regular season, 21-12 in playoffs.
★
Joe Mullaney -- 1969-71; 1971 NBA Pacific Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 94-70 in regular season, 16-14 in playoffs
★
Bill Sharman -- 1971-76; 1972 NBA Champions, 1973 Western Conference Champions and 1974 NBA Pacific Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 246-164 in regular season, 22-15 in playoffs.
★
Paul Westhead -- 1979-81; 1980 NBA Champions. Win-Loss record: 111-50 in regular season, 13-6 in playoffs.
★
Pat Riley Head Coach 1981-90; 1982, 1985 and 1987-88 NBA Champions; 1983-84 and 1989 Western Conference Champions; 1986 and 1990 NBA Pacific Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 613-194 in regular season, 102-47 in playoffs.
★
Mike Dunleavy -- 1990-92; Win-Loss record: 101-63 in regular season, 13-10 in playoffs.
★
Randy Pfund -- 1992-94; Win-Loss record: 66-80 in regular season, 2-3 in playoffs.
★
Magic Johnson -- 1994 Win-Loss record 5-11.
★
Del Harris -- 1994–99; 1998 NBA Pacific Division Champions. Win-Loss record: 224-116 in regular season, 17-19 in playoffs.
★
Rudy Tomjanovich -- 2004-05; Win-Loss record: 24-19.
★
Phil Jackson -- 1999-2004 and 2005-present; 2000-02 NBA Champions and 2004 Western Conference Champions. Win-Loss record: 332-160 in regular season, 64-28 in playoffs.
High Points
Franchise leaders
★ 'Points'
★
★ Career:
Jerry West 25,192
★
★ Career average:
Elgin Baylor, 27.36
★ 'Rebounds'
★
★ Career:
Elgin Baylor, 11,463
★
★ Career average:
Wilt Chamberlain, 19.24
★ 'Assists'
★
★ Career:
Magic Johnson, 10,141
★
★ Career average:
Magic Johnson, 11.19
★ 'Steals'
★
★ Career:
Magic Johnson, 1,724
★
★ Career average:
Jerry West, 2.61
★ 'Blocks'
★
★ Career:
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 2,694
★
★ Career average:
Elmore Smith
★ 'Single season records'
★
★ Points:
Kobe Bryant, 2,832
★
★ Points per game:
Elgin Baylor, 38.3
★
★ Rebounds:
Wilt Chamberlain, 1,712
★
★ Rebounds per game:
Wilt Chamberlain, 21.1
★
★ Assists:
Magic Johnson, 989
★
★ Assists per game:
Magic Johnson, 13.1
★
★ Steals:
Magic Johnson, 208
★
★ Steals per game:
Magic Johnson, 3.43
★
★ Blocks:
Elmore Smith, 393
★
★ Blocks per game:
Elmore Smith, 4.85
★ 'Single game records'
★
★ Points:
Kobe Bryant, 81
★
★ Rebounds:
Wilt Chamberlain, 42
★
★ Assists:
Magic Johnson, 24
★
★ Steals:
Jerry West, 10
★
★ Blocks:
Elmore Smith, 17
Individual awards
'
NBA Most Valuable Player of the Year
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1976, 1977, 1980
★
Magic Johnson - 1987, 1989, 1990
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 2000
'
NBA Finals MVP'
★
Jerry West - 1969
★
Wilt Chamberlain - 1972
★
Magic Johnson - 1980, 1982, 1987
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1985
★
James Worthy - 1988
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 2000, 2001, 2002
'
NBA Defensive Player of the Year'
★
Michael Cooper - 1987
'
NBA Rookie of the Year'
★
Elgin Baylor - 1959
'
NBA Coach of the Year
★
Bill Sharman - 1972
★
Pat Riley - 1990
★
Dell Harris - 1995
'
All-NBA First Team'
★
George Mikan - 1949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954
★
Jim Pollard - 1949, 1950
★
Elgin Baylor - 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969
★
Jerry West - 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973
★
Gail Goodrich - 1974
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1976, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1986
★
Magic Johnson - 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004
★
Kobe Bryant - 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007
'
All-NBA Second Team'
★
Vern Mikkelsen - 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955
★
Jim Pollard - 1952, 1954
★
Slater Martin - 1955, 1956
★
Clyde Lovellette - 1956
★
Dick Garmaker - 1957
★
Jerry West - 1968, 1969
★
Wilt Chamberlain - 1972
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1978, 1979, 1983, 1985
★
Magic Johnson - 1982
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 1999
★
Kobe Bryant - 2000, 2001
'
All-NBA Third Team'
★
James Worthy - 1990, 1991
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 1997
★
Kobe Bryant - 1999, 2005
'
NBA All-Defensive First Team'
★
Jerry West - 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973
★
Wilt Chamberlain - 1972, 1973
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1979, 1980, 1981
★
Michael Cooper - 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988
★
Kobe Bryant - 2000, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007
'
NBA All-Defensive Second Team'
★
Jerry West - 1969
★
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - 1976, 1977, 1978, 1984
★
Michael Cooper - 1981, 1983, 1986
★
A.C. Green - 1989
★
Eddie Jones - 1998
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 2000, 2001, 2003
★
Kobe Bryant - 2001, 2002
'
NBA All-Star MVP
★
George Mikan - 1953
★
Elgin Baylor - 1959
★
Jerry West - 1972
★
Magic Johnson - 1990, 1992
★
Shaquille O'Neal - 2000, 2004
★
Kobe Bryant - 2002, 2007
Miscellaneous information

Los Angeles Lakers Wordmark
★ As the Minneapolis Lakers, the team holds the record for the lowest-scoring NBA game ever played along with the
Fort Wayne Pistons. On
November 22,
1950, the Lakers were leading until the fourth quarter, when the Pistons pulled ahead to win 19 to 18. This took place in a time before efforts were made to speed up gameplay, such as the addition of the
shot clock.
★
Poker Legend
Doyle Brunson claims in his book Super/System that the (then) Minneapolis Lakers had been making offers to sign him while he was playing college Basketball, until he broke his leg hauling sheet rock.
★ Los Angeles is the only city to have two NBA teams (the other team being the
Los Angeles Clippers).
★ The Lakers and
Miami Heat have a tradition of playing each other on
Christmas Day. There has been a meeting between the Lakers and Heat on this day every year since 2004, when
center Shaquille O'Neal was traded to Miami during the summer of 2004.
★ Former owner Jack Kent Cooke liked the color purple but disliked the term ''purple''. As a result, during the era of his ownership, the colors he had chosen for his team were referred to as "Forum blue" and gold, rather than purple and gold. Even after Cooke sold the team, announcer Chick Hearn still sometimes used the description when describing the uniforms.
★ The Los Angeles Lakers were the first team to own a
NBDL team, the
Los Angeles D-Fenders.
★
Kobe Bryant's 81-point performance against the
Toronto Raptors on January 22, 2006 was the second highest point total in league history next to
Wilt Chamberlain's 100-point performance against the
New York Knicks on March 2, 1962.
★ In the videogame
NBA Ballers there is an unlockable video titled "How to Stop the Lakers" in reference to their championship runs in the early
2000s.
Radio and television
As noted above,
Chick Hearn was the team's broadcaster for 42 years until his death in
2002. After Hearn's death, the Lakers decided to continue
simulcasts of games that had begun when he was the voice.
Paul Sunderland, who had filled in for a few games while Hearn recuperated in
2001-02, was named the permanent
play-by-play announcer effective with the
season after Hearn's death.
Stu Lantz was retained as
color commentator.
In
2003, the Lakers decided to end the simulcasts. Sunderland's voice would be heard only on the telecasts, while
Joel Meyers and
Mychal Thompson, the latter a member of the 1987-88 Lakers championship team, was named as the team on radio broadcasts.
Sunderland's contract expired in the summer of
2005, and the team chose not to renew it. Meyers moved in alongside Lantz as the TV announcer, while
Spero Dedes was named to call play-by-play on radio. The current teams are Dedes and Thompson (radio) and Meyers and Lantz (TV).
As of
2006-07, Lakers radio broadcasts are heard on
KLAC in English and
KWKW in Spanish. KLAC has had the team's broadcast rights since the
1976-77 season. Telecasts are split between
KCAL (road games) and
Fox Sports Net West (home games), unless they are chosen for national broadcasts on
ABC or
TNT.
While all games are broadcast live on local radio, select road telecasts from
East Coast cities are shown on
tape delay, usually 60 to 90 minutes after the actual starting time. The explanation given is to increase
TV ratings by showing the game at a more convenient time to local fans, who live three time zones away from the site of the game. During the simulcast years, these games were also delayed on radio.
See also
★
Los Angeles Lakers all-time roster
★
Lakers-Celtics rivalry
★
Lakers-Kings rivalry
★
Spurs-Lakers rivalry
★
Laker Girls
References
1. http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/
2. http://www.basketball-reference.com/teams/LAL/
3. TOP 10 CELEBRITY LAKERS FANS
4. NBA.com Blog: Flea
5. http://www.nba.com/history/players/50greatest.html
External links
★
Los Angeles Lakers official web site