
The Los Angeles Lakers’ projected starting lineup for the 2026-27 season sparked a debate on race Wednesday, July 1.
The Lakers likely will have three White players in the starting lineup after acquiring center Walker Kessler from the Utah Jazz in a trade reported by ESPN.
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Kessler is White, as are the Lakers’ backcourt duo, Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves.
The lineup triggered jokes of “Snowtime,” a reference to “Showtime” when the fast-paced Lakers were led by Black stars such as Magic Johnson and Kareem Adbul-Jabbar.
But the Lakers’ new projected starting lineup also fueled strong opinions, such as the one shared by ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith, regarding the team’s makeup in a league that is more than 70% Black.
“The Los Angeles Lakers think they going with a bunch of White dudes,” he said on the Stephen A. Smith Show Wednesday, July 1. “Your three top players are White dudes? Really? This ain’t golf. This ain’t baseball. Hell, it ain’t even soccer. What y’all think this is? Basketball. …
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“You ain’t going anywhere being led by three White dudes in today’s generation of basketball.”
Kenyon Martin, a former No. 1 NBA draft pick who played in the league from 2000 to 2015, also chimed in on how the Lakers will fare with three White players in the starting lineup.
“Y’all lose in the first round (of the playoffs) either way it goes,” Martin said on the Gilbert Arenas sport talk show, Gil’s Arena. “You play four White boys, you ain’t gonna beat nobody … I want to know what team has been successful with that many on one roster.”
On July 1, the Lakers also signed power forward and center Sandro Mamukelashvili, according to ESPN. Depending on on what the Lakers do with Rui Hachimura and other free agents, Mamukelashvili could emerge as a potential fourth White player in the starting lineup.
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Two White NBA Finals MVPs in past 40 years
Debate over the role of race in NBA success has often led to tensions in a league that is drastically different than the overall U.S. population, which identifies as 57% White, according to Census estimates.
Nikola Jokic, the Denver Nuggets‘ White, Serbian center, won back-to-back NBA MVPs in 2021 and 2022 and was named NBA Finals MVP in 2023, a year when he finished second to Philadelphia 76ers Center Joel Embiid in MVP voting.
Since the turn of the century, Jokic, Steve Nash (2005, 2006) and Dirk Nowitzki (2007) are White players to be named league MVP. Larry Bird (1984-86) was the last White NBA MVP prior to Nash.
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Jokic and Nowitzki (2011) are the only White players to be named NBA Finals MVP since Bird won the award in 1984 and 1986.
For its part, the NBA has leaned into issues of social justice and cultural inclusion, a fact that Commissioner Adam Silver addressed in a 2016 interview. “I do feel a particular obligation to focus on the African-American community in that we have a league that is roughly 75 percent African-American,” Silver told Andscape. “And I feel part of the obligation comes from the history of this league that I’ve inherited.”
Talk of race, Lakers roster talk triggers backlash
On X, Smith came under attack for allegations of racism.
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Wrote one commenter, “Now, if a white journalist said the EXACT same thing about BLACK players, Stephen A Smith would accuse the journalist of racial bias. When do we stop with the identity politics?”
Another commenter wrote, “Skin color don’t win championships, skill does. Stephen A. race-baiting again. Garbage take.”
Wrote yet another, “Mr Smith, your race card is showing.”
Martin’s comments led to some pushback from Rashad McCants, a former NBA player and co-host on Arenas’ show who pointed to the Utah Jazz teams that in the 2000s had a starting lineup featuring two White players, Andrei Kirlenko and Mehmet Okur, with Matt Harping, another key contributor, coming off the bench. Those teams went to the Western Conference Finals once and a the Western Conference semifinals twice.
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But more people cited the Boston Celtics, who won the 1986 NBA title. The team’s starting lineup included three White players: Larry Bird, Danny Ainge and Kevin McHale.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Lakers’ new starting lineup sparks debate over race’s role in NBA success
