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Stan Van Gundy questions the fit of Giannis Antetokounmpo alongside Luka Doncic if the Lakers pursue a trade. He emphasizes that star power doesn't guarantee a beneficial partnership on the court.
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Stan Van Gundy has questioned whether Giannis Antetokounmpo would be the right fit beside Luka Doncic if the Los Angeles Lakers chase another superstar this offseason.
The debate is not really about whether Giannis is great. That part is obvious.
The better question is whether he would make life easier for Luka. Van Gundy is right to separate star power from fit.
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Van Gundy made the key point when he said: “Luka Doncic, you’ve got to put shooting around him.”
That sentence should sit at the centre of every Lakers roster decision now. Doncic is not a normal star. He bends the game with the ball in his hands, creates help, manipulates matchups and punishes late rotations.
That only works at its highest level when the floor is clean. Luka needs lanes to attack and shooters who make defenders pay for leaving the corners.
Giannis would give the Lakers another elite force. He would not automatically give them a cleaner Luka offence.
Van Gundy was careful not to dismiss Antetokounmpo’s talent. He called him one of the top five players in the league.
But that is exactly why the point matters. This is not about ranking and Giannis. It is about what Doncic needs around him.
Van Gundy suggests that while Giannis is a great player, the focus should be on whether his style complements Luka's game.
Trading for Giannis could disrupt the current dynamics of the Lakers and potentially hinder Luka Doncic's performance.
Van Gundy highlights that having star players does not automatically result in a successful team dynamic; fit is crucial.
The discussion raises questions about the Lakers' approach to acquiring superstars and the importance of team chemistry.

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The strongest part of Van Gundy’s argument was not just about shooting. It was about role acceptance.
He said: “LeBron has been in your system with those guys and shown you he can play as a third option.”
That matters because the Lakers are no longer building around LeBron as the first option. They are building around Luka.
LeBron has already shown he can adjust his place in the offence. He can handle, pass, cut, attack mismatches and still give the Lakers enough shooting gravity to keep the floor workable.
Giannis is different. Van Gundy said Giannis excels with the ball in his hands, and that is the concern.
A Doncic and Giannis partnership would have enormous talent. It would also force the Lakers to answer one basic question: who is spacing for whom?
If Luka has the ball, Giannis is less valuable away from it than a high level shooter. If Giannis has the ball, Luka is no longer the full-time engine of the team.
That does not make the idea impossible. It does make it more complicated than the name value suggests.
The Lakers have to be ruthless about this. Doncic’s presence changes the job description for everyone else.
The best Luka teams need shooting, defensive range, vertical pressure and players who can survive without dominating the ball. That is why Van Gundy also pointed to Austin Reaves as a major issue for Los Angeles.
Reaves is not Giannis. He is not LeBron. But he fits a cleaner version of what Luka needs because he can shoot, pass, attack closeouts and play as a secondary creator.
That is the type of balance the Lakers must protect. They cannot chase a louder roster at the cost of a smarter one.
There is a version of a Giannis move that could work if the rest of the roster is built perfectly. But that is a difficult and expensive path.
The simpler basketball point is the one Van Gundy made. Luka needs shooting around him, and LeBron has already shown he can scale down in this Lakers setup.
Giannis would be a huge swing. He would also be a risk if the Lakers are trying to maximise Doncic rather than simply collect another superstar.
Van Gundy’s warning is the right one. The Lakers should not confuse the biggest headline with the best Luka Doncic fit.
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