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Home » DeAndre Ayton’s big night against T-Wolves shows why the Lakers need him for playoffs
DeAndre Ayton’s big night against T-Wolves shows why the Lakers need him for playoffs
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DeAndre Ayton’s big night against T-Wolves shows why the Lakers need him for playoffs

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 11, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

The noise around DeAndre Ayton had been building for weeks.

You could feel it in the murmurs from fans, in the exasperated sighs on sports talk radio, and in the quiet frustration that follows a player whose talent and effort often seem to arrive on different flights. 

“They’re trying to make me Clint Capela,” a frustrated Ayton said in the Lakers locker room after their last-second loss to the Orlando Magic on February 24, according to ESPN. “I’m not no Clint Capela!”

He scored just two points the following night in the Lakers’ 113–110 loss to the shorthanded Phoenix Suns and was benched down the stretch in the team’s next three games before leaving with an injury last Thursday in Denver. 

The noise only got louder after that. “Soft.” “Inconsistent.” “Disengaged.”

“He’s been getting a lot of backlash for his effort and his play. He understands it,” said Lakers’ guard Marcus Smart of Ayton at the time. “He wants to do good, and he wants to help this team, and I think that’s what’s more frustrating for him, because he’s trying.”

Fair or not, those labels and the backlash have followed the Los Angeles Lakers center this season like shadows stretching across a sunset. And on too many nights, Ayton hasn’t done much to make them disappear.

But on Tuesday night against the Minnesota Timberwolves, they vanished.

It wasn’t flashy. It wasn’t a 30-point explosion or a viral highlight reel. What it was, though, might have been more important; it was necessary.

Ayton finished with a 14-point, 12-rebound double-double in the Lakers’ 120–106 victory, a stat line that doesn’t scream dominance on paper but carried enormous weight in the rhythm of the game. When the Lakers were sputtering early — shooting bricks, watching Luka Dončić start 2-for-10 from the field, and managing just 16 points in the first quarter — Ayton stepped into the vacuum.

For one quarter, he looked like the player the Lakers believed they were getting when they signed him.

Ayton scored 12 points in the second quarter alone. He crashed the offensive glass like it owed him money. Five offensive rebounds turned into second chances, which turned into oxygen for a team that looked like it was suffocating offensively.

“He was a monster tonight,” Austin Reaves said of Ayton’s performance against Minnesota. “I think he had like 12 and 10 in the first half. He was the only person scoring for us efficiently. That’s what we need him to do. When he plays like that, we are a different team.”

By halftime, the Lakers had clawed back to 45–45.

“He was very locked in today,” Dončić said afterward. “When he plays like that, he helps us win.”

That sentence may be the simplest truth surrounding this Lakers roster.

When Ayton plays like that, everything works.

And when he doesn’t? The Lakers start to look alarmingly familiar to the team that got pushed around by Minnesota last April.

That playoff series still hangs over this team like unfinished business.

Without a true center, the Lakers were bullied in the paint. Outmuscled on the glass. Outmatched by the sheer size of Rudy Gobert, Julius Randle and Naz Reid. Jaxon Hayes, the Lakers’ backup center, was the only real center available after the Mark Williams trade was rescinded by the Lakers after the deadline, and by Game 5 the situation had turned into basketball survival. 

Hayes was benched and Gobert ended the Lakers season with a brutal exclamation point: 27 points, 24 rebounds, two blocks.

And that’s why Ayton is here now. 

The Lakers didn’t bring him in because he’s perfect. They brought him in because in a Western Conference filled with giants — Gobert in Minnesota, Nikola Jokić in Denver, Alperen Sengun in Houston — survival requires size, strength, and a center capable of fighting in the mud.

On Tuesday night, Ayton looked like that center. The self-proclaimed “DominAyton.”

He neutralized Gobert, holding the four-time Defensive Player of the Year to just three points. Gobert, who averages nearly two blocks a game, didn’t record a single one. The Lakers also dominated the boards in key stretches — something that felt nearly impossible during last year’s playoff collapse.

And the result?

A season sweep of the Timberwolves.

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More importantly, a reminder.

In three games against Minnesota this season, Ayton has totaled 46 points and 30 rebounds. His presence changes the geometry of the court. When Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves run pick-and-roll actions, Ayton forces defenses into impossible decisions: Surrender the corner three or allow a 7-footer to live under the rim.

“I just had to feed off them,” Ayton said Tuesday. “They found the areas where I was open and putting pressure on the rim.”

The Lakers victory moved them into fourth place in the crowded Western Conference. If the postseason started today, the Lakers would see Minnesota again in the first round. If it’s not Minnesota again next month, then there’s a strong possibility it’s Jokić and the Nuggets or Sengun and the Rockets. 

Either way, the Lakers will need Ayton desperately and he can’t just be a sometimes player.

He has to be a playoff player.

You need a center willing to rebound in traffic, absorb contact, defend the rim, and score efficiently when the offense stalls.

You need “DominAyton.”

Not the version of Ayton that drifts through games like a tourist.

The version that showed up Tuesday night.

“It was big for DA [Deandre Ayton] to have a game like that against a really good team, one of the best teams in basketball,” said Lakers’ head coach JJ Redick of Ayton. “During this stretch there’s been some ups and downs, but he was great tonight.”

The Lakers are now 10–2 this season without LeBron James, who has been sidelined the last three games with arthritis in his foot. That statistic says a lot about the growth of Dončić and Reaves as offensive engines.

But if the Lakers are serious about escaping the first round — about surviving Minnesota’s size or Jokić’s brilliance — the conversation eventually circles back to the same place.

Ayton.

The Lakers don’t just want “DominAyton.”

They need him.

Because when the playoffs arrive and the Western Conference giants start swinging, the Lakers’ championship hopes will depend on whether their center decides to swing back.


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