In today’s FOX Sports Insider with Martin Rogers: One of the primary talking points heading into the 2020-21 NBA season is about how the Los Angeles Lakers are loaded with guys who are past their prime ... we take a look at the new shade of blue that sits atop the preseason AP Top 25 poll ... and we are treated to a must-see catch from Julio Jones. Carmelo Anthony laughs every time he sees a new reminder – and there are plenty of them – that the Los Angeles Lakers, by typical NBA standards, are really, really old. LeBron James didn’t always find it funny, the jokes and the memes and the mocked-up photos of gray beards and walking sticks, but he does now. He’s giggling too, or so he says. As the NBA campaign tips off and one of the primary talking points is about how the Lakers are stacked with guys who are, ahem, no longer in youth’s first flush, the squad’s blueprint is coming into firm focus. They’re going to hear all the humor, listen to all the reasons why a squad with an average age above 31 is both rare and remarkable, and laugh off all the suggestions that having five of the league’s 12 oldest players, nine guys over 30 and 28-year-old Anthony Davis as the roster’s second-youngest healthy member is going to torpedo their chances. “I kind of laugh at it,” James told reporters. “I actually do really laugh. I’m not just saying that.” | The reason the Lakers seem like they have an old roster is because they do. James is 37, so is Anthony. Trevor Ariza and Dwight Howard are 36, Rajon Rondo is 35, while comparatively-spritely 33-year-olds Russell Westbrook and DeAndre Jordan wouldn’t even crack the starting lineup if it was arranged purely by seniority. The methodology for entirely rebuilding a roster after Los Angeles left itself with only James, Davis and Talen Horton-Tucker from last season’s crew has been simple. Adding Westbrook cost a fortune, so the remainder of the group had to be padded out with players who would accept a lower salary in exchange for a shot at a title and the L.A. lifestyle. One by one they rolled in, each seemingly older than the last, to the point where it is entirely feasible that this version of the Lakers could end up being the oldest team in NBA history, depending on how you measure such things. | According to The Ringer, only eight NBA teams over the past 70 years have had an average age of 31-or-over. With minutes played taken into account, the oldest ever was the 1997-98 Houston Rockets at 32.0, with the trio of Hakeem Olajuwon, Charles Barkley and Clyde Drexler forming the backbone of the group. If Ariza sees meaningful minutes when he returns from injury, and contributors like Howard, Rondo and Wayne Ellington can prove to be productive, the odd, old record could be in jeopardy. Anthony, however, doesn’t see it as a negative., figuring that in NBA circles anyway, it’s not rude to ask about someone’s age. “I like when people talk about the age,” he said. “I think it gives a better story. You got to have that experience. I think that’s what we bring at this point in time. Our talent, our skill, but also our experience.” | The Lakers begin their campaign against the Golden State Warriors on Tuesday and are in the mix as title contenders. FOX Bet lists the Lakers at +400 odds, the second best odds to win it all, behind the Brooklyn Nets but ahead of the defending champion Milwaukee Bucks. The Western Conference threatens to be a minefield, with the Warriors back to something approaching full strength, the Phoenix Suns remaining young and hungry, the Utah Jazz and Denver Nuggets hoping to make a splash and the Los Angeles Clippers wishing to finally live up to their potential. In the East, the biggest storyline has been about someone who is not going to play, at least for now, with Kyrie Irving sidelined by the Nets over his refusal to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. As always, the Lakers are going to be the most talked-about team in the league, and James the most talked-about player, because that’s just how things are. This time around, operating with a batch of players thrown together and no one any wiser as to whether Westbrook’s signing was a masterstroke or a recipe for disaster, it is a telenovela that shouldn’t be missed. “They're the greatest chemistry experiment we’ve seen in recent NBA history,” FS1’s Chris Broussard said on “First Things First.” “I know I said similar things about the Nets last year, but the Nets look like a simple tic-tac-toe design compared to what the Lakers are going to be.” | The Lakers were horrible in the preseason, going 0-6, but that doesn’t mean much of anything. Last year’s finalists, the Bucks and the Suns, both came up empty in warmup games. More relevant is that James and company have 12 of their first 15 games at home, and how they fare in the initial running will be closely scrutinized. The Lakers core has been around long enough to know the critics will be circling if things fall awry and the easiest dagger of all will be the question, in times of struggle, if they’re just too darn old. The answer to that remains to be seen, but for now the Lakers have a plan to combat it. Chuckle along, do their thing - and get the last laugh. | Here’s what others have said ... Melissa Rohlin, FOX Sports: “The Lakers believe it will come together. The pieces are all there. It's just a question of when.” Shannon Sharpe, Undisputed: “It's going to take longer than I thought for them to come together and be a fined oiled machine. Franky V's got his work cut out to find the perfect mix.” Joy Taylor, FOX Sports: “As long as LeBron is on the Lakers, I’m going to say they are contenders.” Brain Health Sponsored Content Everyone wants to get dialed into the zone and be more productive, but being all hopped up on caffeine from guzzling coffee isn't the right answer. Alpha BRAIN, a daily nootropic from Onnit, promotes focus and concentration with zero caffeine, so you don't have to worry about jitters or crashing hard later. Without getting too technical about it, that "flow state," where things feel effortless, occurs mostly when your brain waves are in the alpha frequency range. Alpha BRAIN's special blend of amino acids and plant compounds is engineered for that exact purpose. Try it for free, and see what it can do for your cognitive function and memory. | | | | We pride ourselves on showing more than just highlight plays in this section of the newsletter, but when a catch like this occurs in an NFL Game, well … we have to feature it, right? Check out this incredible highlight-reel catch from Julio Jones in Monday night’s Titans-Bills game. The pass hits Buffalo’s Micah Hyde in the head, bounces off his helmet and then Jones tracks it down and somehow manages to catch it while keeping both feet in bounds. We could watch this play over and over again. Well done, Julio! | | Atlanta Braves at Los Angeles Dodgers (TBS, 5 p.m. ET) Walker Buehler takes the mound for the Los Angeles Dodgers, who take on Charlie Morton and the Atlanta Braves in Game 3 of this NLCS matchup. Houston Astros at Boston Red Sox (FS1, 8 p.m. ET) Jose Altuve and the Houston Astros go up against Xander Bogaerts and the Boston Red Sox in Game 4 of the ALCS. | | Odds provided by FOX Bet 2022 NBA Championship Winner Brooklyn Nets: +230 Los Angeles Lakers: +400 Milwaukee Bucks: +800 Golden State Warriors: +1000 Pumpkin-spiced lattes wafting through the cool air, sidewalks covered in rust-colored leaves and street lights turning on before 6:30 p.m. all remind us that the season has officially changed. But nothing screams October louder than basketballs hitting the hardwood after the NBA tips off. Welcome back, basketball. The Brooklyn Nets and their healthy Big 3 (presently, their Big 2) are listed as the favorites to win it all next summer at +230, and that's in spite of the uncertainty surrounding Kyrie Irving's future with the team. The - ahem - mature Los Angeles Lakers, led by soon-to-be 37-year-old LeBron James and Anthony Davis, sit at +400 to hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy. The Purple and Gold threw it back to yesteryear by bringing back Rajon Rondo and Dwight Howard, and, for scoring, they brought in Mr. Triple Double himself, Russell Westbrook. But as one of the Association's oldest teams, how will those old legs hold up deep into the season? Then there is Giannis Antetokounmpo's Milwaukee Bucks sitting at +800 to repeat. Sure, they're the defending champs, but was luck the biggest factor in their recent title run? If Kyrie Irving didn't get hurt, James Harden wasn't hobbled, or Kevin Durant's foot wasn't so big, would Milwaukee have still won? The wild Western Conference's Golden State Warriors have the next best odds at +1000. The past two seasons, the four-time NBA champions have been without All-Star Klay Thompson due to a torn left ACL and then a torn right Achilles. Thompson's presence in the lineup again - who was shooting 46.7% from the field and 40.2% from three before the injuries - alongside Steph "The Chef" Curry is a recipe for the Warriors' return to offensive dominance. | | “Always have fun but stay hungry.” — Metta World Peace | | | Download FOX Sports App: | | | | Also available on these devices: | | | | | | Trademark & Copyright Notice: ™ and © 2021 Fox Media LLC and FOX Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Please do not reply to this message. If you do not wish to receive emails like this in the future, please unsubscribe. FOX Sports respects your privacy. Click here to view our Privacy Policy. Fox.com Business & Legal Affairs - Manager Digital Media P.O. Box 900 Beverly Hills, California 90213-0900 | | | | | | |