Darvin Ham is Not to Blame

The Lakers have dismissed Darvin Ham as head coach after only two seasons. Let’s discuss.

This news is not surprising, but maybe it should be. In two short seasons with the Lakers, his record as head coach was 90-74. That is pretty damn good if you think about it. He was also handpicked to be the head coach after they fired Frank Vogel. This is who the players and the front office wanted. They had eyes on some other guys, but of the available coaches, Ham was the number one option. The Lakers got their man. And he did pretty good things with this team and their ever changing roster. They had to make their way to the playoffs through the play-in both seasons he was the head guy, but they let their presence be known. They ran all the way to the West Finals last season. As the 7 seed last year they trounced my Grizzlies in six games, and it was never really in doubt. Dillon Brooks popped off too much, Ja Morant and Brandon Clarke got hurt, as did Steven Adams, and it was done. LeBron James destroyed Brooks, so much so that the Grizzlies let him walk, and the Lakers moved on to face the Warriors, whom they pretty easily displaced in round two. Then they ran into the eventual champs, the Nuggets, and got swept. I don't buy the whole "competitive sweep" nonsense either. A sweep is a sweep. There are no moral victories.

Then this season, making their way to the 7 seed again, through the play-in, they had to face the Nuggets. This time they were competitive enough to take one game from them, but this series could still be going on if they knew how to hold on to a lead. Some may blame this solely on Ham, but some of the blame needs to be given to the players as well.

At what point is it going to be put on the players to take some heat? I get that the NBA is player friendly, as all pro sports leagues should be, but players play the game. Coaches install gameplans, they have ideas that they put out there, they speak with their assistants and tell them what to do, but that is where it all stops. The players have to perform the duties of putting it out there, on the floor, which is the head coach's vision. Coaches deserve blame, don't get me wrong, but we live in an era where every inch of the blame is placed on the head coach. And no one questions it at all. Like I said at the top, Darvin Ham being dismissed was a foregone conclusion. After the Lakers exited the playoffs, every story on sports websites was about this very thing happening. We all knew this was coming. But the dude won 90 regular season games as a head coach. He was 9-12 as a head coach in the playoffs, which isn't great, but the Lakers made it to the West Finals a year ago. He had this team playing defense. While the offense was never the most imaginative thing, the Lakers still found ways to win games. He was tasked with putting guys like Austin Reaves, Jaxson Hayes, Max Christie, Rui Hachimura, D'Angelo Russell and Tauren Prince around LeBron and Anthony Davis. Those names don't pop off the screen. Those guys are not the complimentary players teams covet. This isn't like the Nuggets with players like KCP or Michael Porter Jr. This isn't the Timberwolves with guys like Rudy Gobert and Mike Conley. This isn't the Celtics with players like Derrick White and Jrue Holiday. Hell, this isn't even the Pelicans with dudes like CJ McCollum and Herb Jones. All of those players are so much better than what the Lakers and Darvin Ham had to pair up with LeBron and AD.

But Darvin Ham is the scapegoat this morning. He is the one everyone is making fun of now. He is the new punching bag as a former head coach. He wanted to be a head coach, but I have to figure these last two seasons were hell for him. Frank Vogel was ready to get out of there. In Cleveland, Mike Brown was ecstatic to be let go and coach somewhere else. And whoever the Lakers bring in next, that coach has to understand that the second it starts to go haywire, their ass is on the line. No player will own to blame. The front office will be quiet as a mouse. It will be the coaching staff, and more importantly, all the head coach's fault if it doesn't work again, which is most likely will not.

The West is a juggernaut, and it will only be tougher next year. The Lakers need to look in the mirror and realize that a new head coach will not solve the myriad of problems they have as a mediocre organization at the moment. Darvin Ham should still be their head coach. But I wouldn't be surprised if he is relieved to be out of there. Maybe he will find his love for basketball again coaching somewhere else. 

Ty

Ty is the Pop Culture editor for SeedSing, the other host of the X Millennial Man Podcast, and the greatest basketball writer on the internet.

Come and support Ty and the podcast on Patreon.

Follow Ty on instagram.