LOS ANGELES, CA. — The Los Angeles Lakers have not only faced criticism for their roster moves. Their front office has come under the same fire. For years, insiders have argued the team has been managed less like a global brand and more like a family-run shop. That perception has persisted despite the Lakers housing at least two generational talents on the team for five seasons.Nepotism remains the loudest charge. Kurt Rambis, once a scrappy Showtime role player, became the team’s senior basketball advisor despite little executive experience. His wife, Linda Rambis, was given the vague title of “executive director of special projects.”
Seismic Shift In Leadership Of Lakers Set To Happen Soon
Who Holds the Power
Apr 8, 2022; Los Angeles, California, USA; Former players Kurt Rambis, athletic trainer Gary Vitti, players Byron Scott, Bill Walton, Michael Cooper, Jamal Wilkes and AC Green, along with siinger Paula Abdul, Laker girl Aurora Elaine and Herbie Hancock were on hand to celebrate Los Angeles Lakers Hall of Famers Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 75th birthday during halftime during the game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports
NBA reporter Ethan Strauss laid out the hierarchy back in May. “Based on conversations with those in the know, a ranking of the most powerful Laker decision-making officials would be: executive director/special projects Linda Rambis, director of basketball affairs Kurt Rambis, president of business operations Tim Harris (who dated Jeanie Buss long ago) and general manager Rob Pelinka,” he wrote.
That ranking stunned many. Strauss added: “That’s the order as I understand it, and that’s without the confounding variables of LeBron James, Rich Paul, and their Klutch Sports Group.” He went further, noting that LeBron James and Klutch “have been controlling Laker basketball decisions, but it’s not clear how long that dynamic will last.”
We have already seen the LeBron-Lakers dynamic change drastically this offseason.
A Sale Brings Change
Now comes a new reality. Mark Walter, CEO of Guggenheim Partners and majority owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, is set to purchase a controlling stake in the Lakers. The valuation: a staggering $10 billion.
Jeanie Buss, the longtime governor, is expected to retain her title. But history suggests otherwise. Mark Cuban once vowed to stay central in Dallas after selling majority control. He quickly faded. The same fate met Wyc Grousbeck in Boston earlier this month.
What Comes Next
Walter’s track record is clear. When he took over the Dodgers, he installed top-level executives and changed the club’s direction. As a minority owner at Chelsea FC, the team pushed for sweeping leadership changes as well. The implication for Los Angeles? A likely reset.
That reset could mean a leadership shift Lakers fans have anticipated for years. Critics point to sentimental hires and outdated influence. Walter’s billions suggest he will want elite decision-makers running basketball operations, not legacy connections.
Sweeping Changes to the Lakers Top Decision Makers?
The sale signals more than a financial exchange. It foreshadows a seismic leadership shift Lakers insiders say is overdue. Nepotism and old loyalties may give way to corporate efficiency and professional expertise.
The only real question left: how quickly Walter decides to move. Because if history is any guide, the Lakers’ front office will not look the same when the sale is completed.
Credit:© Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images