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Lakers nearly finished building around core with Austin Reaves, D'Angelo Russell deals

San Francisco, CA - MAY 02: Los Angeles Lakers guard D'Angelo Russell, center, moves the ball between Golden State Warriors forward JaMychal Green, left, and guard Jordan Poole during the second quarter at Chase Center on Tuesday May 2, 2023 in San Francisco, CA.(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

Retain the core and improve on the edges. That was the plan, the one general manager Rob Pelinka stated publicly and the one the team planned for privately.

Two years after upending their roster in a trade for Russell Westbrook, the Lakers returned to the championship fight last season, balancing their roster and their ledger, and making it to the Western Conference finals. Still, they weren’t good enough, sent home after four tight games with the eventual NBA-champion Denver Nuggets.

But in less than 24 hours of free agency, the Lakers managed to accomplish their primary goals, filling out the bulk of their roster in a sprint while leaving them ready to build on what they hastily built last spring.

What began Friday afternoon with the Lakers luring starting guard Gabe Vincent from Miami wrapped up around lunch on Saturday when Austin Reaves committed to the Lakers, the organization agreeing to deals with Taurean Prince, Rui Hachimura, Cam Reddish, Jaxson Hayes and D’Angelo Russell in between.

The team will look to add one player on a veteran’s minimum contract, people with knowledge of the plan not authorized to speak publicly told The Los Angeles Times. The Lakers' current plan is to keep their last roster spot open for flexibility.

After the team added four players on Friday, the Lakers agreed with three players on Saturday, headlined by Reaves and Russell, the team’s starting backcourt down the stretch last season.

Read more: Lakers land four on first day of free agency, including Rui Hachimura

Reaves and his representatives met with the Lakers in the first moments of free agency on Friday when the team offered him a four-year deal worth $56 million — the maximum they were allowed under the collective bargaining agreement. Reaves, a restricted free agent, saw his market elsewhere begin to narrow, starting with the Houston Rockets landing Fred VanVleet. While San Antonio had long been rumored to be interested in signing Reaves, the undrafted guard ultimately decided to stay with the Lakers rather than wait to receive a potentially more lucrative offer sheet from the Spurs.

People with knowledge of the situation insisted the Lakers would’ve matched any offer Reaves received — even a maximum offer worth more than $100 million — but they were never put to that test. Instead, Reaves agreed to a four-year deal with the Lakers that has a player option for the final season.

Before re-upping with Reaves, they agreed to a deal with Russell for two years and $36 million, sources told The Times. The deal also contains a player option in the second year.

The Lakers acquired Russell at the NBA trade deadline this spring in a deal that included Westbrook, a trade that helped turn the team’s season around.

Russell averaged 17.4 points and 6.1 assists per game after the trade, shooting 41.4% from three-point range. He had strong moments in the Lakers’ wins in the postseason against Memphis and Golden State before struggling against the Nuggets. The Lakers moved him to the bench in Game 4.

He agreed Saturday to stay with the Lakers, another chapter in Russell’s story with the organization after the team took him second in the 2015 NBA draft.

The day began with the Lakers adding Hayes, the No. 8 pick in the 2019 NBA draft. After four uneven seasons in New Orleans, he lands with the Lakers. Evaluators familiar with Hayes and his role with the Pelicans praised the pickup, citing his supreme athleticism at nearly 7 feet tall. He should give the Lakers, LeBron James and their returning guards a threat above the rim in pick-and-roll sets. 

Pelicans center Jaxson Hayes, right, raises the ball overhead as he prepares to dunk against Mavericks center JaVale McGee.

He signed a two-year deal for the minimum with a player option in the second year, sources said.

Hayes pleaded no contest to a pair of misdemeanor charges stemming from a domestic dispute in Woodland Hills in 2021 that included him being tased while another officer knelt on his neck during attempts to detain him. The Los Angeles Police Department later ruled the knee-on-the-neck maneuver to be against policy.

Hayes was sentenced to three years of probation, 450 hours of community service and a year of weekly domestic violence classes.

On Friday, the Lakers agreed to sign the two players selected directly behind him in the 2019 draft — Reddish and Hachimura.

After the team finalized its deal with Reaves on Saturday, James, who has mostly been quiet this offseason on social media about Lakers-related news, posted photos of Reaves, Hachimura, Russell, Vincent, Prince, Hayes, Reddish and Jarred Vanderbilt to his Instagram account. Considering this is the same space where he routinely highlights his tequila brand, Lobos, it’s safe to assume this was an endorsement.

The Lakers never spent time chasing the biggest names this season, their path written for them as “proof of concept” when they made it the Western Conference finals despite being a team of relative basketball strangers.

The Lakers ensured Reaves, Russell and Hachimura would all be back by Saturday. They supplemented them with a mixture of experience and potential. And the momentum they built in the back half of last season, well, it kept rolling to start July.

Broderick Turner contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.