In the glitzy landscape of the NBA, talent is often mistaken for a solution. The Los Angeles Lakers, a franchise built on the “Showtime” ethos, have spent the last several seasons collecting some of the most luminous names in basketball history. From the sustained greatness of LeBron James to the generational wizardry of Luka Doncic, the roster reads like an All-Star ballot. Yet, according to NBA champion and veteran analyst Kendrick Perkins, the Lakers are currently suffering from a terminal illness that no amount of star power can cure: a total lack of human connection.
In a recent, scathing assessment that has left the sports world reeling, Perkins delivered a five-word verdict that stripped away the Hollywood glamour: “That is not a team.” His critique goes beyond shooting percentages or tactical schemes; it targets the very soul of the organization. According to Perkins, the Lakers have devolved into a collection of individuals who are simply “clocking in and clocking out,” lacking the fundamental chemistry required to survive the fires of professional basketball.

The Night the Mask Slipped
The turning point for this narrative wasn’t a loss to a fellow contender, but an embarrassing 18-point beatdown at the hands of the Charlotte Hornets on January 16, 2026. At the time, the Hornets were 11 games under .500—a team a championship hopeful should dismantle in their sleep. Instead, LeBron James and Luka Doncic combined for 68 points, and the Lakers still lost 135 to 117.
The numbers from that night tell a horror story. The Lakers allowed LaMelo Ball to go “nuclear” with 30 points and nine threes, while Miles Bridges treated the Staples Center like a private dunk contest. There was no urgency, no resistance, and most importantly, no communication. As Perkins noted, when a team is that disconnected on defense—currently ranked a pathetic 26th out of 30 teams—it is a direct reflection of their disconnection off the floor.
No Group Chats, No Dinners, No Bond
The most shocking revelation from Perkins wasn’t about the box score, but about the team’s social fabric. In a modern era where team chemistry is often forged in the digital trenches of group messages and shared meals on the road, Perkins is willing to “bet everything” that the Lakers don’t even have a functioning group chat.
“I’m willing to bet there’s no team dinners on the road,” Perkins stated. “That’s a bunch of individuals showing up to work, doing your job, and everybody goes their own way.”
In the high-pressure environment of the NBA, these “minor” details are actually the lifeblood of success. Championship dynasties, like the 2014 Spurs or the prime Golden State Warriors, were built on sacrifice and a “jersey-first” mentality. The Spurs’ ball movement was described as “harmony,” and the Warriors’ 300-pass-per-game philosophy was a testament to their mutual trust. In contrast, the Lakers’ body language reveals a culture of finger-pointing and “fake defense” where players stand and watch their teammates get beat rather than rotating to help.
The “LeBron and Luka” Dilemma

The acquisition of Luka Doncic was supposed to be the masterstroke that secured LeBron’s final championship window. Instead, it has created a tactical and emotional logjam. Both stars are ball-dominant maestros who are used to controlling the rhythm of the game. While the front office assumed talent would figure it out, the reality has been awkward and forced.
Luka himself admitted months into the season that the team is still in the “getting to know you” phase—a terrifying admission for a team with title aspirations. Furthermore, the return of LeBron James from a sciatica injury seemed to disrupt the rhythm the role players had briefly found in his absence. Instead of a cohesive unit, the Lakers have become a “puzzle that doesn’t make sense,” where the pieces are high-quality but the edges don’t match.
The Defensive Collapse: A Symptom of Distrust
Defense in the NBA is 20% scheme and 80% trust. You have to know that if you step up to stop a drive, your teammate will rotate to cover your man. The Lakers’ defensive metrics are “season-ending bad.” They contest three-pointers at a high rate, yet opponents hit them at the highest percentage in the league. This suggests “soft pressure”—players going through the motions to look like they are playing defense without the actual physical or mental commitment to stop the ball.
Perkins, a 14-year veteran who won a title with the 2008 Celtics, knows what championship “edge” looks like. He played alongside Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce, men who demanded accountability in every huddle. Looking at the current Lakers, he sees a vacuum of leadership where individuals are protected, but the team is ignored.
A Closing Window
With LeBron James at 40 years old, the Lakers don’t have the luxury of time. Every wasted game is a withdrawal from a rapidly emptying bank account. The upcoming schedule—nine out of ten games on the road—will be the ultimate litmus test. Road trips either bond a team together or break them apart. If Perkins is right and there are no team dinners or shared connections, the isolation of the road will only amplify the existing cracks in the foundation.
Coach JJ Redick is currently in an impossible position. He can draw up elite offensive sets, but he cannot “scheme” trust. He cannot “install” chemistry during a morning shootaround. At some point, the players—specifically the superstars—must decide if they want to be a championship team or a collection of expensive highlights.
Conclusion: The Wake-Up Call

Kendrick Perkins didn’t deliver this message to be a “hater”; he delivered it as a warning. The Los Angeles Lakers are currently a “pretender” masquerading as a “contender.” They have the contracts, the fame, and the individual accolades, but they lack the one thing that has defined every champion from the 2004 Pistons to the 2024 Celtics: a shared soul.
The basketball world is watching to see if anyone in the Purple and Gold will answer the call. Will they start that group chat? Will they break bread together? Or will they continue to be individuals wearing the same colors, wondering why the trophies are being hoisted by teams that actually like each other? The clock is ticking, and in the NBA, talent without chemistry is just an expensive way to lose.
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