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Can the Lakers be the new Warriors with a twist: a LeBron-led dynasty?

Lakers forward LeBron James looks past Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams.
Lakers forward LeBron James, right, looks past Chicago Bulls forward Patrick Williams during a game on Jan. 8.
(Ashley Landis / Associated Press)
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Less than 400 miles south of Oakland, the site of the NBA’s last dynasty, the Lakers are building a new palace of power.

After injuries and free-agency defections unceremoniously ended their reign, the Golden State Warriors visit what could turn into the league’s latest seat of power Monday. The Lakers (11-3) are the defending champions and title favorites this year, they own the best record in the NBA, and with their stars locked up in multiyear contracts, they could make a run at the kid of dominance the Warriors displayed when they won three titles in four years from 2015 to 2018.

The Warriors were one win from a fourth title in 2016 before LeBron James rallied the Cleveland Cavaliers from a 3-1 deficit to a historic comeback and championship.

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Injuries toppled the Warriors’ run of five straight Western Conference titles last year as Kevin Durant fled to the Eastern Conference and Golden State finished last. The west was “wide open” as a result, Lakers coach Frank Vogel said Sunday during a videoconference. The Lakers took advantage to grab the mantle.

“It’s just the cycle of life in the NBA from just a team perspective,” said guard Kyle Kuzma, the longest-tenured Laker who watched the Warriors win the West in his first two seasons before the Lakers won last year. “It’s very hard to be a San Antonio Spur and go to the playoffs 20-plus years.”

The Lakers’ 2020 NBA championship rings may have cost more than $20,000 each and feature nods to Kobe Bryant and the unique challenges the season presented.

After ending their six-year playoff drought with a championship, the Lakers locked in the foundation of their franchise: James and Anthony Davis, the first set of teammates to be named first-team All-NBA since 2007. James, 36, signed a two-year contract extension worth $85 million in December while the 27-year-old Davis agreed to a five-year, $190-million deal that signaled his commitment to be the franchise’s cornerstone after the James era ends.

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Despite the shortest offseason in NBA history, the Lakers’ central pillars are as strong as any duo, with James averaging 24.1 points, 8.1 rebounds and 7.7 assists in his 18th year in the NBA and Davis adding 21.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and 1.8 blocks.

Their success means the Lakers are the new standard bearers for the NBA, Davis said, as the defending champions acquire a target on their backs. Davis said keeping that distinction will be a “year-by-year” endeavor for him and James.

“Once you start looking too far into the future, you start getting blinded by what’s in front of you,” Davis said. “We talk about this year and how good of a team we have and trying to repeat. That’s our only thing this year and then next year we’ll worry about next year and the following year and then I think he’ll be done with his contract.”

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LeBron James celebrates with teammates after receiving a championship ring.
LeBron James celebrates with teammates after the Lakers received their NBA championship rings during a ceremony at Staples Center in December.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Many of the Lakers’ key contributors also are under contract beyond this season, including Kuzma and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, who are signed through 2022-23 and Montrezl Harrell, who signed a two-year deal before this season.

“We have such a small time in the NBA and even smaller of a window, when we talk about dynasties, to make it really happen,” Kuzma said. “So gotta get there first. That starts with trying to win championship No. 2.”

MLK Day ‘an honor’

After league-wide efforts to promote social justice in the last year, the NBA’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day slate Monday could turn into another moment for players to advocate for racial equality, Davis said.

Playing on the holiday is “always an honor,” Davis said. Before the NBA started the season in December, Martin Luther King Jr. Day was considered a possible starting day for the COVID-19-shortened season.

“For everything that MLK did for us, did for this world, any time you get a chance to play on MLK Day, and represent what he wanted all along, you couldn’t be more happier to do so,” Davis said. “At least I will definitely be happy to play.”

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UP NEXT

VS. GOLDEN STATE

When: 7 p.m., Monday

On the air: TV: TNT; Radio: 710, 1330

Update: The Warriors (6-6), still missing Klay Thompson in another season lost to injury, are competing for a playoff spot behind the brilliance of Stephen Curry, who had a 62-point game Jan. 3 against Portland. Rookie James Wiseman, the No. 2 pick in the draft, is averaging 11.3 points and a team-high 6.3 rebounds while starting at center.

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