This isnât a hot streak; itâs a system stress test the league is failing. Luka DonÄiÄ has put up 40/8/7 on 64% true shooting over his last 13 games while the Lakers have gone 12â1, and the scoring log reads like a postseason heater: 51, 60, 44, 43, 42. The real story for coaches is how clean the math has becomeâL.A. is generating elite shots on demand without needing pace, volume threes, or offensive randomness.
Context
The headline numbers are gaudy even by DonÄiÄ standards: 40 points a night across 13 games, plus 8 rebounds, 7 assists, and a reported 2.5 steals, all on 64% TS. That level of efficiency at that usage is the tell. It means the defense isnât just losing possessionsâitâs losing decision trees. The Lakersâ 12â1 record in the same stretch signals more than individual brilliance: it implies their floor is high every night because DonÄiÄ is manufacturing good offense against set defenses, not living on transition variance.
The scoring sequenceâ44, 35, 31, 51, 30, 36, 40, 60, 33, 32, 43, 41, 42âshows two things opponents track: thereâs no âadjustment gameâ that knocks him down to the low 20s, and the peak outcomes (50â60) are within reach when teams overcorrect. Historically, the only players who pair this volume with this efficiency for two-week stretches are heliocentric engines in their absolute prime, the kind who force opponents to choose between giving up paint touches, corner threes, or foul trouble. For L.A., the larger context is identity: a team that can run offense through one organizer possession after possession becomes a playoff threat even before you account for defensive variance and role-player shooting swings.
The Tactical Picture
DonÄiÄâs run is a masterclass in turning two-man actions into five-man spacing. The Lakers are effectively playing âLuka ball-screen into choiceâ every trip: high pick-and-roll, angle pick-and-roll, and re-screens that keep the on-ball defender from ever settling their feet. His scoring isnât just pull-up threes; itâs the full menuâsnake dribbles into midrange, shoulder-to-hip drives to force body contact, and late-clock step-backs when the defense finally gets square. The 64% TS tells you heâs winning at the rim and at the line, not simply making tough shots.
The key tactical lever is matchup control. When opponents switch to take away the roller, DonÄiÄ hunts the weakest perimeter defender, forces a deep catch near the nail or elbow, and plays off his cadenceâhesitations into bumps, then either the lefty finish or the spray-out. When teams stay in drop or soft show, he punishes with pocket passes and lobs, and then kills the tagging defender with one-hand skip passes to the weak-side corner. Every help rotation becomes a âwho are you willing to leave?â question.
Whatâs changed for the Lakers is how the surrounding pieces can simplify. With DonÄiÄ drawing two to the ball, off-ball players donât need to create; they need to occupy help (45 cuts, dunker spot seals, corner lifts) and be on time. The offense becomes less about running sets and more about maintaining proper spacing geometry: one corner filled, one corner lifted as the drive comes, and the slot ready for the extra pass. Defensively, the steals number hints at another subtle edge: DonÄiÄ is reading outlets and skip passes like a free safety, which can ignite early offense before the opponentâs shell is setâan underrated way to pad efficiency without increasing pace dramatically.
Deepen Your Understanding
Improve your understanding of High Ball Screen and Switch Defense.
Explore structured training units that break down the tactical systems and coaching principles behind elite basketball IQ â built for players and coaches at every level.
A Coaching Lens
From a head coachâs perspective, this is a reliability problem you solve with constraints, not with âtrying harder.â Against a DonÄiÄ-led Lakers attack, the first decision is philosophical: switch and live with isolations, or play two-to-the-ball and trust your low man and closeouts. Neither is comfortable because DonÄiÄâs processing speed punishes delayed help.
If you switch, the coaching point is to deny the easy matchup hunt by pre-switching and scramming out of disadvantagesâespecially if your center is involved. That requires early communication and a second line that can stunt without over-committing. You also have to protect the weak-side corner: DonÄiÄâs best passes are to stationary shooters he can see the whole time. Expect opponents to âtop lockâ certain shooters, force them into cuts, and shrink the floor from the nail with a roaming wing.
If you trap or blitz, the adjustment is where you send the help from. The worst option is helping from the strong-side corner; it turns his reads into layups and corner threes. Better is to bring a late second defender from the wing and rotate behind itâessentially daring the short roll playmaker to beat you 4-on-3. That puts pressure on the Lakersâ supporting cast decision-making: can the roller catch, pivot, and hit the corner on time?
For the Lakersâ staff and front office, the implication is equally direct: surround DonÄiÄ with (1) a vertical spacer who finishes above the rim and (2) two legitimate movement shooters so opponents canât load up. Lineups should prioritize quick-trigger shooting and a second attacker who can punish closeouts, because the counter to DonÄiÄ is forcing the ball out and betting the next decision is slower.
What This Means Strategically
Strategically, this stretch accelerates a league trend: the return of the single-initiator offense as a postseason weapon, provided the spacing and screening ecosystem is playoff-proof. The Lakers winning 12 of 13 while leaning on DonÄiÄâs creation suggests their shot quality travelsâless dependent on transition and more dependent on repeatable half-court advantages.
The next thing to watch is how opponents change the terms of engagement. In the regular season, teams often accept switches and live with âcontested Luka twos.â In a series, theyâll start mixing coverages possession-to-possessionâswitch, then show-and-recover, then a surprise blitz after a dead ballâto disrupt his cadence and force the Lakers into secondary play calls. The counter for L.A. will be building automatic answers: early slips, empty-corner pick-and-roll to remove the low man, and more off-ball screening to punish ball-watching.
If DonÄiÄ sustains anything close to this efficiency, the leagueâs scouting focus shifts from âhow do we stop him?â to âhow do we keep our offense from fueling him?â Thatâs the quiet power of a 40-point engine: it turns every opponentâs missed shot into a strategic mistake.
Turn tactical knowledge into real on-court results.
Understanding High Ball Screen and Switch Defense is only the first step. The Bench View Basketball has structured training units and full development plans to help you apply every concept you read directly on the court â from breakdown drills to full-system sessions.
Training Units
Focused drills and skill sessions built around specific tactical concepts.
Explore units
Training Plans
Structured multi-week programs that build basketball IQ progressively.
View plans
Developed by coaches · Organized by concept · Free to explore
Teams in Focus
Deepen Your Basketball IQ
Ask Coach Bench any tactical question â get structured coaching answers with cited concepts, drills, and plays.
Ask Coach Bench AI