The Los Angeles Lakers are still standing, but only just. They narrowly escaped the first round against the Houston Rockets, a series that should have been far more comfortable but turned into a grind instead.
For most of it, they were without Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves, forcing them to improvise, stretch roles, and rely on unexpected contributions simply to get through. Reaves returned in Game 5 and helped stabilize parts of the offense, but Dončić remains out, and that absence continues to define what comes next.
The Thunder series is a long shot for the Lakers without Doncic
Now comes Oklahoma City, and the reality is difficult to ignore. The Thunder are deeper, younger, and far more stable, while the Lakers enter the series not only undermanned but also worn down from a first round that demanded far more than expected.
Without Dončić, the offensive ceiling drops significantly, and the margin for error becomes almost nonexistent, especially against a team that rarely beats itself. That is the baseline.
And yet, everything shifts the moment Dončić returns. His presence alone changes how defenses behave, how spacing opens, and how pressure is distributed across the floor. With him, the Lakers have a pathway. Without him, they are surviving from possession to possession. However, there is growing skepticism that Luka might return soon.
Even a miracle comes with a cost in the NBA
If the Lakers find a way past Oklahoma City, it will not be clean. They will have had to extend themselves across multiple high-intensity games, compensate for missing pieces, and out-execute a roster that is simply more complete.
That kind of series does not just test a team. It drains it, physically and mentally, leaving very little margin for recovery. And that is where the path becomes even more brutal when you consider what comes next.
Because the reward for surviving OKC is not relief. It is an escalation, and it carries extraterrestrial vibes we do not know on planet Earth.
The Alien is awaiting the Lakers in the West Finals
Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs represent a different level of challenge.
Wembanyama is not just a matchup problem. He is a system-altering presence, someone who reshapes both ends of the floor in ways that still feel unfamiliar to the league.
His size, mobility, and defensive reach force opponents to rethink every possession, while his offensive versatility stretches defenses beyond their comfort zone.
Facing him in the West Finals is not just another series. It is a different game entirely. And for a Lakers team that would likely arrive already worn down, it could become overwhelming.
The Lakers barely survived the first round. They barely stand a chance against Oklahoma City without Dončić. And even if they overcome that, they could walk straight into a Spurs team built around the most unique player in basketball. This is not a normal playoff path.
It is a sequence of increasingly unlikely steps, where each round demands more than the last and where even success only leads to a greater challenge waiting ahead. If the Lakers make it through, it will not just be impressive. It will be something close to a miracle.