The 2014β15Los Angeles Lakers season was the franchise's 67th season, its 66th season in the
National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 55th in Los Angeles. Coming off from one of the worst seasons in franchise history and missing the playoffs, the team looked to rebound.
Mike D'Antoni resigned in late April following two miserable seasons, leaving the team without a head coach. In the offseason,
Pau Gasol and
Jodie Meeks left for
Chicago and
Detroit, respectively, leaving big holes to fill. After failing to land the biggest names in the offseason like
Carmelo Anthony and
LeBron James, the Lakers brought back numerous key role players from last season including Nick Young, Jordan Hill, and Ryan Kelly. The Lakers later acquired point guard Jeremy Lin in a trade with Houston and won the bidding rights to power forward Carlos Boozer after being amnestied by Chicago in the offseason. The Lakers also drafted Kentucky's star power forward Julius Randle and shooting guard Jordan Clarkson in the 2014 NBA Draft. The team then hired Lakers Showtime player and former Coach of the Year, Byron Scott as head coach in late July. On December 14, 2014,
Kobe Bryant scored 26 points to pass
Michael Jordan for third on the NBA's all-time scoring list in a 100β94 win over Minnesota.
The Lakers started the season a franchise-worst 1β9. Rookie Julius Randle was injured opening night and missed the remainder of the season. On January 28, 2015, Kobe Bryant underwent season-ending surgery for a
rotator cuff tear in his right shoulder.[1] On March 21, 2015, Steve Nash announced his retirement. The Lakers finished with a 21β61 record, placing them last in the Pacific division for the second straight season and fourteenth in the Western conference. This was the first 60 loss season in franchise history.
On October 28, 2014, rookie
Julius Randle broke his right tibia during the Lakers' season opener against the
Houston Rockets, and was expected to miss the remainder of the season.[3] Through the season's first 10 games, the Lakers were 1β9, the worst start in the 66-year history of the franchise.[4]
The 2014β15Los Angeles Lakers season was the franchise's 67th season, its 66th season in the
National Basketball Association (NBA), and its 55th in Los Angeles. Coming off from one of the worst seasons in franchise history and missing the playoffs, the team looked to rebound.
Mike D'Antoni resigned in late April following two miserable seasons, leaving the team without a head coach. In the offseason,
Pau Gasol and
Jodie Meeks left for
Chicago and
Detroit, respectively, leaving big holes to fill. After failing to land the biggest names in the offseason like
Carmelo Anthony and
LeBron James, the Lakers brought back numerous key role players from last season including Nick Young, Jordan Hill, and Ryan Kelly. The Lakers later acquired point guard Jeremy Lin in a trade with Houston and won the bidding rights to power forward Carlos Boozer after being amnestied by Chicago in the offseason. The Lakers also drafted Kentucky's star power forward Julius Randle and shooting guard Jordan Clarkson in the 2014 NBA Draft. The team then hired Lakers Showtime player and former Coach of the Year, Byron Scott as head coach in late July. On December 14, 2014,
Kobe Bryant scored 26 points to pass
Michael Jordan for third on the NBA's all-time scoring list in a 100β94 win over Minnesota.
The Lakers started the season a franchise-worst 1β9. Rookie Julius Randle was injured opening night and missed the remainder of the season. On January 28, 2015, Kobe Bryant underwent season-ending surgery for a
rotator cuff tear in his right shoulder.[1] On March 21, 2015, Steve Nash announced his retirement. The Lakers finished with a 21β61 record, placing them last in the Pacific division for the second straight season and fourteenth in the Western conference. This was the first 60 loss season in franchise history.
On October 28, 2014, rookie
Julius Randle broke his right tibia during the Lakers' season opener against the
Houston Rockets, and was expected to miss the remainder of the season.[3] Through the season's first 10 games, the Lakers were 1β9, the worst start in the 66-year history of the franchise.[4]