LOS ANGELES, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- The Los Angeles Lakers will begin their
training camp with recently signed guard Sun Yue sidelined indefinitely because
of mononucleosis, the team said on Tuesday.
A doctor's appointment planned for Monday was rescheduled for Tuesday
because of a high fever, according to John Black, the team's executive vice
president of public relations.
The Lakers drafted the 6-foot-9 Sun, a member of China's national team, in
the second round of the 2007 NBA Draft and signed him to a two-year contract on
Aug. 25.
The Lakers will practice twice daily through Sunday and once on Monday,
then begin exhibition play Tuesday against the Utah Jazz at Anaheim's Honda
Center in Los Angeles. They will play their two exhibition games at Staples
Center in downtown Los Angeles Oct. 18-19.
They will open the regular season Oct. 28 against the Portland Trail
Blazers at Staples Center.
"We're the favorites for a reason," Kobe Bryant, the NBA's Most Valuable
Player Award winner for the 2007-2008, said.
"That's one of the things I tell the guys... We've got all the tools here,
we've got all the pieces to the puzzle, now it's on us to do the work. If we do
that work, we should win it."
Jackson's designation stems in large measure from the team's reconstituted
front line.
Andrew Bynum will return as the starting center after missing the final 46
games of the 2007-2008 regular season and all of the playoffs because of a knee
injury that eventually required surgery.
Pau Gasol, the starting center after Bynum's injury, will move to power
forward, and Lamar Odom will shift from power forward to small forward.
Gasol, acquired in a trade after Bynum's injury, has never played with
Bynum.
Gasol will spend some time at center when Bynum is on the bench and Odom
will also play some at power forward.
"We have to figure some things out before we'll know we're going to go in
the regular season," Jackson said. "We need some answers. We probably won't have
them all until the first couple weeks of the season."
In an interview Monday, Bynum pronounced himself "100 percent" recovered
from the knee surgery. However, Jackson said Bynum needs to regain the necessary
stamina.
"(He) has lost the edge of how to play continual basketball from A to Z,"
Jackson said. "He's still just in the playground stage here. We'll see if he can
get to that level where you compete every moment you're on the court."
The Lakers "were probably a year ahead of schedule" in reaching last
season's NBA Finals, where they lost to the Boston Celtics, four games to two,
but "we jelled well at the end of the season and played up to a potential that
was higher than I expected," Jackson said.
A goal for this season is "not to be complacent and come back and have that
same desire," Jackson said.
The 2008-2009 Lakers will "be deeper, a little bit quicker, we're going to
be bigger as a basketball team," Jackson said. "There's a lot of things that's
going to give us that tensile strength that we lacked in the sixth game where
they took the game away from us right from the start," referring to a 131-92
loss in the final game.