Charles Barkley rips Lakers with team on verge of elimination, has more words for his future home of ESPN
The Los Angeles Lakers are on the brink of elimination, and Charles Barkley is already preparing his nails for the coffin.
The longtime TNT broadcaster, and soon-to-be ESPN broadcaster, had plenty to say about the Lakers on Wednesday during an appearance on "The Dan Patrick Show," two days after they fell behind 3-1 against the Minnesota Timberwolves in the first round of the NBA playoffs.
To put it simply, Barkley wasn't surprised. He also had some words for how his future employers at ESPN treat the team:
"The Lakers, I told you two months ago, six weeks ago, the Lakers aren't a good team. They got two really, really good players, but not a good team. ESPN just swings on them like everything tastes like chicken, but the Lakers are not a good team. They're going to lose either this round or next round, but more likely this round. They're not very good."
Asked to expand on the Lakers' future with Luka Dončić and LeBron James, Barkley didn't sound optimistic about the team's current roster, which was assembled somewhat haphazardly via the trade that brought Dončić to Los Angeles.
Barkley took issue in particular with building around a player at James' age, and with head coach JJ Redick's decision to play the same five players for the entire second half in Game 4 on Sunday:
"The Lakers are not going to be a contender with the team they have now. Your best player can't be 40. That makes no sense whatsoever. Your best player can't be 40. And JJ was wrong the other night to play those guys the entire second half because, No. 1, it's probably going to affect them tonight. It definitely affected them down the stretch the other night. Both of those guys missed lay-ups and they made some mental mistakes with the ball.
'This is not the Lakers' year. And people think I hate on the Lakers. I told you. I said, 'The Lakers aren't a good team.' But ESPN was just swinging on them like they were damn King Kong.'
The Lakers are certainly in an interesting spot despite benefiting from perhaps the most shocking trade in NBA history. Getting a 25-year-old All-NBA player like Dončić is a gift, but as the Dallas Mavericks showed, his presence alone doesn't get the job done.
It's worth remembering Los Angeles also tried to pair Dončić with a big man who fit his talents with the Mark Williams trade, but then the team spiked the deal after seeing the Charlotte Hornets center's medicals. Jaxson Hayes, the team's current starting center, played four minutes in Game 4, while Alex Len, the only other traditional big man on the roster, was a DNP.
As for the ESPN stuff, this isn't the first time Barkley has hammered the network despite being set to join them for next season as part of an "Inside the NBA" licensing deal. Just last month, he was calling them "idiots" and "fools at the other network," and this time he went out of his way to blast his future business partner.
Just as Patrick was preparing to change the subject, Barkley interjected with an additional point about how ESPN has covered Giannis Antetokounmpo's future with the Milwaukee Bucks and contrasted it to the environment during his playing days:
'Dan, you know, the clowns at ESPN, they always make me laugh,' he told Patrick. 'Dan, you know, I'm going to be a straight shooter. It's interesting how they were discussing Giannis [Antetokounmpo] this week, like, 'Should Giannis want to leave?' I clearly don't remember when I played, I don't remember saying, 'We need to get Charles Barkley some help in Philadelphia, or Phoenix, or Karl Malone in Utah. Patrick Ewing some help in New York.' I remember the guys in the media kissing my ass and Karl's ass, and Patrick's ass. 'Well, Giannis should want to leave Milwaukee now, because he can't win the championship.' I wonder where all the guys were when I played, asking me to get some help.
'I mean, they were kissing. They were like loving the Lakers, loving the Celtics, loving Michael [Jordan], loving the Pistons. But I don't remember all these kiss-asses back in the day, saying, 'You know, we need to get Charles Barkley some help, because he can't win a championship in Philly or Phoenix.' It makes me laugh. They're like, 'Giannis gotta leave Milwaukee.' You know, that already started. Like, wow. Y'all more concerned about us other great players back in our day, but y'all of a sudden now y'all like, 'Giannis has got to leave Milwaukee now. Is his championship window closed?' I'm like, 'Man, thanks for helping me out when I went out there with nobody.'
You have to figure ESPN knew this going in, but you can never expect Charles Barkley to speak with a filter.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
19 minutes ago
- USA Today
Sixers' Quentin Grimes has important message for NBA about the Finals
Sixers' Quentin Grimes has important message for NBA about the Finals The NBA Finals got underway on Thursday night as the Indiana Pacers and the Oklahoma City Thunder began a battle to decide the 2025 NBA champions. The stage was set as both teams look to win their franchise's first ever championship and the court with YouTube TV ads. There was not much NBA Finals signage other than an imprint of the Larry O'Brien trophy being on the basket stanchion, but that was all. No special Finals script on the court. No specialty added to the Paycom Center to signal that this game means more. This is for the championship and the court appeared to look like it was a random Tuesday night game in January. Philadelphia 76ers guard Quentin Grimes, as well as the rest of the NBA watching world, took to Twitter to send a message to the league about the lack of finals signage on the court. Grimes is 100% right. The league has to do something to make the Finals feel as special as it ought to. There needs to be more signage and a change to the court or something in order to take it all to another level as it had been in the past. As for Grimes' current free agency status, the Sixers will look to bring back the restricted free agent after he performed well in 28 games for Philadelphia. He averaged 21.9 points after the Sixers acquired him from the Dallas Mavericks at the February trade deadline.


USA Today
27 minutes ago
- USA Today
Shane Battier on preparing to try to guard Kobe Bryant
Shane Battier on preparing to try to guard Kobe Bryant One of the reasons the late great Kobe Bryant was one of the greatest players in NBA history was his immense and seemingly limitless skills on offense. Perhaps there was no greater one-on-one player in the history of the sport, and he had an incredible array of moves, shots and fakes, not to mention incredible footwork, that he used to reduce defenders to rubble. One player who had some success guarding him was forward Shane Battier. But like just about anyone else, Battier often got handled by Bryant. He made an appearance on "Pable Torre Finds Out" on Thursday and talked about trying to guard the "Black Mamba," something he called "scary." 'I played against the greatest players of my generation, and I miss that anxiety. Guarding Kobe Bryant is [expletive] scary. I never will forget the feeling of getting on the bus at the Marina Del Rey Ritz—it's a 45 minute ride to the Staples Center—and I'm just thinking to myself, '[expletive], this guy is trying to embarrass me. ... He wants to score 80 points on me tonight.' 'That anxiety was real. I call it productive paranoia. Instead of being paralyzing, I used that to be like, man, I better know everything about Kobe that there is to know about him. I tried to learn, I threw myself into data analytics and just learned Kobe better than Kobe knew himself. It allowed me to stay in the game. I understood, okay, I'm not going to stop these guys, but I can be a human yellow light, and slow them down a little bit. That was my only goal — just be the human yellow light.' Battier got his chance to guard Bryant for an extended amount of time during the 2009 Western Conference semifinals when his Houston Rockets took on the Los Angeles Lakers. He didn't exactly do badly -- Bryant shot above 45% in just three of the seven games of the series, and he twice shot under 40%. Battier tried to put a hand in Bryant's face so that the latter couldn't see the basket. It seemed to work at times, but it didn't work well enough, as the Lakers prevailed in seven games and went on to win their fourth NBA championship of the Bryant era. The legendary guard simply wouldn't let anyone give him the yellow or red light — at least not for an extended amount of time.


Fox News
32 minutes ago
- Fox News
Trump Vs. Musk! Plus, Pacers NBA Chaos And The Sports Time Machine (ft. Ricky Cobb)
On this edition of The Will Cain Show's Friday sports episode, Will opens the show by breaking down the story everyone is talking about: the world's richest man versus the world's most powerful man as the relationship between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump implodes. Will is then joined by Ricky Cobb, Host of OutKick's 'The Ricky Cobb Show,' to discuss the Indiana Pacers flipping the script on the NBA Finals favorite Oklahoma City Thunder, and Texas Tech's push to win a championship in women's softball by paying a star player $1 million a year in NIL money coming out of the transfer portal. The two also debate if players and teams from decades ago could survive and thrive in modern day professional sports, And what sporting events would Will or Ricky go back in time to witness firsthand? Tell Will what you thought about this podcast by emailing WillCainShow@ Subscribe to The Will Cain Show on YouTube here: Watch The Will Cain Show! Follow Will on X: @WillCain Learn more about your ad choices. Visit