Dwight Howard, Pau Gasol, Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash

Dwight Howard, left, has cost the Lakers games with his poor free-throw shooting; Pau Gasol has hurt knees and hurt feelings; Kobe Bryant has become the team's unofficial point guard in the absence of the injured Steve Nash. (Robert Gauthier, Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

Jackson would have clawed, kicked and punched whomever necessary (a funny image) to make sure the Lakers did not trade Gasol and his weighty contract — $19 million this season, $19.3 million next season.


But Gasol isn't faking his injury. He started dropping hints about it a few weeks before telling the Lakers he wanted to sit out some games.


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Maybe he'll come back stronger after the rest, but this still isn't his type of offense.

How would you grade Howard's season so far?

He recently gave his overall experience with the Lakers a 12 on a scale of one to 10.

I'd give him an 8.5 for his play.

It can't be any higher because of his free-throw shooting. It has cost the Lakers games. It happens almost every time the score is close in the fourth quarter -- which is all the time because the Lakers can't get separation from anybody.

He can't be any lower than 8.5 because some things aren't his fault. The last few weeks, he has been a distant second to Bryant in the Lakers' scheme. He's simply not getting the ball enough. (Note to Bryant — reread the last two sentences.)

Howard is at only 85%-90% strength/health since undergoing back surgery but until he makes his free throws, he's just not a perfect 10.

Bryant is playing huge minutes, again. Will this catch up with him in the playoffs?

Almost surely. The Lakers' unofficial point guard recently said he'd never worked this much in his career (see: big-boy pants, Gasol, stop whining).

He's up to 37.1 minutes a game, which isn't as bad as last season's 38.5 but not as smooth as the 33.9 he had the previous year. Aren't players supposed to play fewer minutes as they grow older?

Bryant has the ball 99.3339% (unofficially) of the time for the Lakers. The extra effort is hurting him defensively and his shooting percentage has dropped after a hot start.

Seemingly everyone else around him has been injured. The less he's on the court, the less chance he'll join that group.

How long until we see the best this team can offer? Late January? April?

I'd like to revise something.

When the Lakers signed Howard, I said they'd win at least 60 games. Oops. After watching them go 0-8 in exhibition play, I revised it to 57 or 58 games. Double oops.

Can I take it all back? Please? Make it 47 victories. And that's counting on a healthy Nash. Throw in Gasol's sore knees, Steve Blake's recent abdominal surgery and you have an injury trifecta.

Check back on these guys in February. Late. Not early.

Is the Lakers' bench better than a year ago?

What's the smallest unit of measure on Earth? A micrometer? Nanometer? An Angstrom?

That's how much better their bench is this season. It's easy to like what Antawn Jamison is doing lately, but can he keep it up at age 36? Jodie Meeks had his most aggressive game Friday against Oklahoma City. He needs that every night.

Jordan Hill and Devin Ebanks have been non-entities since Mike D'Antoni took over, and the fun-loving Robert Sacre has disappeared since exhibition season.

You'd think anything would be an upgrade over a bench featuring Matt Barnes, last season's top Lakers reserve (7.8 points a game).

Barely true, apparently.

What has to go right for the Lakers to win the championship in June?

Let's see: Nash has to come back quickly and stay healthy healthily the rest of the season, Howard has to make free throws, Gasol has to figure out his place in the offense, Bryant has to play better defense and pass the ball more often, and the bench needs to be more consistent.

Other than that, they're a lock to win it all!

mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

twitter.com/Mike_Bresnahan