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1981–82 Los Angeles Lakers season


1981–82 Los Angeles Lakers season


The 1981–82 NBA season saw the Lakers win their third NBA Championship in Los Angeles, and their eighth overall in franchise history.

Draft picks

Roster

Regular season

On November 18, 1981, at halftime while on the road at Utah, Magic Johnson and coach Paul Westhead had a verbal altercation in the locker room. It was stated by teammate Kareem Abdul-Jabbar that Johnson had offered input on the game, which resulted in Westhead twice telling him to "Shut up." Johnson then told reporters after this game that he would like to be traded anywhere, resulting in a barrage of media coverage. One day after these events, Lakers owner Jerry Buss held a press conference at The Forum, where he announced the firing of Westhead, with his replacement being Pat Riley as "coach" and general manager Jerry West as "offensive coach". West came to the podium and clarified to media that Riley was indeed the head coach and that West himself would simply provide him support on the bench, which lasted for a period of 12 games. Although Johnson denied responsibility for Westhead's firing, he was booed across the league, even by Lakers' fans. However, Buss was also unhappy with the Lakers offense and had intended on firing Westhead days before the Westhead–Johnson altercation, but assistant GM West and GM Bill Sharman had convinced Buss to delay his decision.

Season standings

c - clinched homecourt advantage
y - clinched division title
x - clinched playoff spot

Record vs. opponents

Game log

Regular season

Playoffs

Player statistics

Season

Playoffs

Giuseppe Zanotti Luxury Sneakers

Awards and records

Awards

  • Magic Johnson, NBA Finals Most Valuable Player Award
  • Magic Johnson, All-NBA Second Team
  • Michael Cooper, NBA All-Defensive First Team

Records

Transactions

Trades

Free agents

References

External links

  • "Something To Prove" – Documentary on the 1981–82 Los Angeles Lakers on YouTube

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: 1981–82 Los Angeles Lakers season by Wikipedia (Historical)