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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Tania Ganguli

Walton trying to avoid going with Warrior mentality

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. _ While Luke Walton's pedigree includes being part of the Golden State Warriors' incredible success during the past two seasons, he doesn't like for those memories to crowd his coaching.

When he addresses his Los Angeles Lakers team, he doesn't tell many stories about the Warriors.

"I don't like doing that," Walton said Wednesday after the Lakers practiced in Santa Barbara. "This is our team. This is who we are."

There are times when a nod to the Warriors can prove useful, however. Walton was an assistant on coach Steve Kerr's staff as they won the NBA championship in his first year and won a record 73 regular-season games before falling in the NBA Finals last season.

That coaching staff entered a situation vastly different from what Walton's staff faces with the Lakers.

"We inherited a really good (Warriors) team that had a lot of veteran players, had already been to the playoffs and they were on the path up," Walton said. "Our first year of training camp we had completely different goals than what we have right now as a staff and a team."

With his mostly young Lakers group, Walton wants each player to take ownership of the team. He wants them to bond with each other, which is part of the goal of a road training camp, and he wants to create a "brotherhood type of environment."

There is some carryover from his previous job. The musical accompaniment for practices is a tradition Walton brought south from the Bay Area. He'll also use specific players as examples when doing one-on-one work with various Lakers.

"If I'm talking to Julius (Randle) about how I want him to push the ball ... then I'll bring up the way Draymond (Green, Warriors forward) pushes the ball and play-makes out of that power forward spot," Walton said. "I'll show him clips of that. Or Brandon (Ingram), if I'm talking one-on-one defensively, I'll show him clips of Andre (Iguodala) and the way Andre uses his length to give people problems.

"But when we're doing stuff as a team, I don't like to use examples from other teams. I like to keep it in house and talk about our guys and what we can do."

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