Los Angeles Lakers accomplishments and records

This page details the all-time statistics, records, and other achievements pertaining to the Los Angeles Lakers. The Los Angeles Lakers are an American professional basketball team currently playing in the National Basketball Association.
Championships
[edit]League championships
[edit]- Basketball Association of America (1): 1949
- National Basketball Association (17): 1949, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1972, 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1988, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2009, 2010, 2020
- National Basketball League (1): 1948
- Note: The NBA counts championships won in the BAA along with its own.
Tournament championships
[edit]- McDonald's Championship (1): 1991[1]
- NBA Cup (1): 2023
- World Professional Basketball Tournament (1): 1948[2]
Laker individual accomplishments
[edit]BAA/NBA
[edit]- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1976, 1977, 1980
- Magic Johnson – 1987, 1989, 1990
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2000
- Kobe Bryant – 2008
- Jerry West – 1969
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1972
- Magic Johnson – 1980, 1982, 1987
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1985
- James Worthy – 1988
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2000, 2001, 2002
- Kobe Bryant – 2009, 2010
- LeBron James – 2020
- LeBron James – 2023
NBA Defensive Player of the Year
- Michael Cooper – 1987
- Bill Sharman – 1972
- Pat Riley – 1990
- Del Harris – 1995
- Lamar Odom – 2011
- Jerry West – 1995
- Elgin Baylor – 1959
- Bill Hewitt – 1969
- Dick Garrett – 1970
- Jim Price – 1973
- Brian Winters – 1975
- Norm Nixon – 1978
- Magic Johnson – 1980
- James Worthy – 1983
- Byron Scott – 1984
- Vlade Divac – 1990
- Eddie Jones – 1995
- Jordan Clarkson – 2015
- Kyle Kuzma – 2018
- Nick Van Exel – 1994
- Kobe Bryant – 1997
- Travis Knight – 1997
- D'Angelo Russell – 2016
- Brandon Ingram – 2017
- Lonzo Ball – 2018
J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award
- Michael Cooper – 1986
- Magic Johnson – 1992
- Ron Artest – 2011
- Pau Gasol – 2012
- Pau Gasol – 2012
- George Mikan – 1949–1951
- Jerry West – 1970
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2000
- Kobe Bryant – 2006, 2007
- Jerry West – 1972
- Magic Johnson – 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987
- LeBron James – 2020
- George Mikan – 1949–1954
- Jim Pollard – 1949, 1950
- Elgin Baylor – 1959–1965, 1967–1969
- Jerry West – 1962–1967, 1970–1973
- Gail Goodrich – 1974
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1976, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1984, 1986
- Magic Johnson – 1983–1991
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1998, 2000–2004
- Kobe Bryant – 2002–2004, 2006–2013
- Anthony Davis – 2020
- LeBron James – 2020
- Vern Mikkelsen – 1951–1953, 1955
- Jim Pollard – 1952, 1954
- Slater Martin – 1955, 1956
- Clyde Lovellette – 1956
- Dick Garmaker – 1957
- Jerry West – 1968, 1969
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1972
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1978, 1979, 1983, 1985
- Magic Johnson – 1982
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1999
- Kobe Bryant – 2000, 2001
- Pau Gasol – 2011
- Andrew Bynum – 2012
- LeBron James – 2021, 2025
- Anthony Davis – 2024
- James Worthy – 1990, 1991
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1997
- Kobe Bryant – 1999, 2005
- Pau Gasol – 2009, 2010
- Dwight Howard – 2013
- LeBron James – 2019, 2022–2024
- Jerry West – 1970–1973
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1972, 1973
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1979–1981
- Michael Cooper – 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1988
- Kobe Bryant – 2000, 2003, 2004, 2006–2011
- Anthony Davis – 2020, 2024
- Jerry West – 1969
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1976–1978, 1984
- Michael Cooper – 1981, 1983, 1986
- A.C. Green – 1989
- Eddie Jones – 1998
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2000, 2001, 2003
- Kobe Bryant – 2001, 2002, 2012
- George Mikan – 1947–1954, 1956
- George Mikan – 1947–1954, 1956
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1975–1989
- Elgin Baylor – 1958–1971
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1968–1973
- Jerry West – 1960–1974
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1975–1989
- Elgin Baylor – 1958–1971
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1968–1973
- Jerry West – 1960–1974
- George Mikan – 1947–1954, 1956
- Magic Johnson – 1979–1991, 1996
- Karl Malone – 2003–2004
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1996–2004
- James Worthy – 1982–1994
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1975–1989
- Elgin Baylor – 1958–1971
- Kobe Bryant – 1996–2016
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1968–1973
- Anthony Davis – 2019–present
- LeBron James – 2018–present
- Magic Johnson – 1979–1991, 1996
- Karl Malone – 2003–2004
- Bob McAdoo – 1981–1985
- George Mikan – 1947–1954, 1956
- Steve Nash – 2012–2015
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1996–2004
- Gary Payton – 2003–2004
- Dennis Rodman – 1999
- Jerry West – 1960–1974
- James Worthy – 1982–1994
- Russell Westbrook – 2021–2023
- Carmelo Anthony – 2021–2022
NBA All-Star Weekend
[edit]- George Mikan – 1951–1954
- Vern Mikkelsen – 1951–1953, 1955–1957
- Jim Pollard – 1951, 1952, 1954, 1955
- Slater Martin – 1953–1957
- Clyde Lovellette – 1956
- Dick Garmaker – 1957–1960
- Larry Foust – 1958, 1959
- Elgin Baylor – 1959–1965, 1967–1970
- Rod Hundley – 1960, 1961
- Jerry West – 1961–1974
- Frank Selvy – 1962
- Rudy LaRusso – 1962, 1963, 1966
- Darrall Imhoff – 1967
- Archie Clark – 1968
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1969, 1971–1973
- Gail Goodrich – 1972–1975
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1976, 1977, 1979–1989
- Magic Johnson – 1980, 1982–1992
- Jamaal Wilkes – 1981, 1983
- Norm Nixon – 1982
- James Worthy – 1986–1992
- A.C. Green – 1990
- Cedric Ceballos – 1995
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1997, 1998, 2000–2004
- Eddie Jones – 1997, 1998
- Kobe Bryant – 1998, 2000–2016
- Nick Van Exel – 1998
- Pau Gasol – 2009–2011
- Andrew Bynum – 2012
- Dwight Howard – 2013
- LeBron James – 2019–2024
- Anthony Davis – 2020, 2021, 2024
- No All-Star game in 1999, due to a lockout that shortened the season.
- George Mikan – 1953
- Elgin Baylor – 1959
- Jerry West – 1972
- Magic Johnson – 1990, 1992
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2000, 2004
- Kobe Bryant – 2002, 2007, 2009, 2011
- Kobe Bryant – 1997
All-Star Rookie/Sophomore Challenge Game
- Nick Van Exel – 1994
- Eddie Jones – 1995*
- Kobe Bryant – 1997
- Derek Fisher – 1997
- Travis Knight – 1997
- Andrew Bynum – 2007
- Jordan Farmar – 2007, 2008
- Jordan Clarkson – 2016
- D'Angelo Russell – 2016, 2017
- Brandon Ingram – 2017, 2018
- Kyle Kuzma – 2018, 2019
- Lonzo Ball – 2018, 2019
NBA All-Star Game head coaches
- John Kundla – 1951–1954
- Fred Schaus – 1962–1964, 1966–1967
- Bill Sharman – 1972–1973
- Pat Riley – 1982–1983, 1985–1990
- Phil Jackson – 2000, 2009
- Frank Vogel – 2020
NBL
[edit]- George Mikan – 1948
Other tournaments
[edit]McDonald's Open MVP
McDonald's Open All-tournament team
- Magic Johnson – 1991
- Vlade Divac – 1991
- Byron Scott – 1991
- James Worthy – 1991
World Professional Basketball Tournament MVP
World Professional Basketball Tournament All-tournament team
- George Mikan – 1948
- Jim Pollard – 1948
- Herm Schaefer – 1948
Los Angeles Lakers Basketball Hall of Famers
[edit]
|
Retired jerseys
[edit]
- 8 Kobe Bryant, G, 1996–2006
- 13 Wilt Chamberlain, C, 1968–1973
- 16 Pau Gasol, C, 2008–2014
- 21 Michael Cooper, G, 1978-1990
- 22 Elgin Baylor, F, 1958–71 (including team's last two seasons in Minneapolis)
- 24 Kobe Bryant, G, 2006–2016
- 25 Gail Goodrich, G, 1965–68 and 1970–76
- 32 Magic Johnson, G, 1979–91 and 1995–96; Head Coach 1994
- 33 Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, C, 1975–89
- 34 Shaquille O'Neal, C, 1996–2004
- 42 James Worthy, F, 1982–94
- 44 Jerry West, G, 1960–74; Head Coach, 1976–79; General Manager, 1981–2002
- 52 Jamaal Wilkes, F, 1977–85
- 99 George Mikan, C, 1947–56 (did not play in 1954–55)
- MIC Chick Hearn, Broadcaster, 1960–2002
The NBA announced on August 12, 2022, that no. 6 would be retired league-wide in honor of Bill Russell. Current players wearing no. 6, such as the Lakers' LeBron James, would be grandfathered by the rule.
Honored Minneapolis Lakers: Next to their retired numbers, the Lakers have hung a banner with the names of five Hall-of-Famers who were instrumental to the franchise's success during its days in Minneapolis:
- 17 Jim Pollard, F, 1947–55
- 19 Vern Mikkelsen, F, 1949–59
- 22 Slater Martin, G, 1949–56
- 34 Clyde Lovellette, F-C, 1953–57
- John Kundla, Coach, 1947–59
No. 22 jersey was retired for Elgin Baylor; 34 was retired for Shaquille O'Neal in April 2013; 17 was previously worn by Andrew Bynum and Rick Fox, and 19 is currently not being worn.
Olympic team selection
[edit]
|
NBA regular season records set/tied by Los Angeles Lakers
[edit]Individual records
[edit]![]() |
Minneapolis/Los Angeles Lakers Accomplishments & Records
[edit]- Most consecutive games won – 33, 1971-11-05 – 1972-01-07
- Most consecutive games won, one season – 33, 1971-11-05 – 1972-01-07
- Highest winning percentage, road games, season – .816, 1971–72 (31–7)[3]
- Most consecutive road games won – 16, 1971-11-06 – 1972-01-07
- Most consecutive overtime games, season – 3, 1991-11-01 – 1991-11-05
- shared with 15 other teams
- Fewest opponent points, first half – 19, vs. L.A. Clippers, 1999-12-14
- Fewest opponent points, second quarter – 3, vs. L.A. Clippers, 1999-12-14
- Fewest opponent points, third quarter – 2, vs. Dallas, 1997-04-06
- Fewest points, overtime period – 0, vs. Detroit, 1989-12-01
- shared with seven other teams
- Most players, 2,000-or-more points, season – 2, 1964–65 (West 2,292; Baylor 2,009)
- shared with four other teams
- Most players, 40-or-more points, game – 2, at San Francisco, 1970-02-11 (Baylor 43, West 43)
- shared with eight other teams
- Highest field goal percentage, season – .545, 1984–85 (3,952/7,254)
- Lowest opponent field goal percentage, game – .229, vs. Milwaukee Hawks (at Buffalo, New York), 1954-11-06 (22/96)
- Lowest field goal percentage, both teams, game – .246, Milwaukee Hawks vs. Minneapolis (at Buffalo, New York), 1954-11-06 (48/195)
- Most field goals, both teams, one quarter – 40, Boston (23) vs. Minneapolis (17), 1959-02-27 (4th qtr.)
- Most field goal attempts, both teams, game – 291, Phil. Warriors (153) vs. L.A. Lakers (138), 1961-12-08 (3 OT)
- Most field goal attempts, both teams, one half – 153, Boston (80) vs. Minneapolis (73), 1959-02-27 (2nd half)
- Lowest three-point field goal percentage, season – .104, 1982–83 (10/96)
- Fewest three-point field goals per game, season – 0.12, 1982–83 (10/82)
- Most free throws made, both teams, one quarter – 41, Milwaukee (22) vs. L.A. Lakers (19), 2001-03-21
- Fewest free throw attempts, both teams, game – 12, L.A. Lakers (3) vs. San Diego Clippers (9), 1980-03-28
- Most rebounds, both teams, game – 188, Phil. Warriors (98) vs. L.A. Lakers (90), 1961-12-08 (3 OT)
- Fewest opponent defensive rebounds, game – 10, vs. Utah, 1990-04-01
- Fewest defensive rebounds, both teams, game – 31, Utah (10) at L.A. Lakers (21), 1990-04-01
- Most defensive rebounds, one half – 36, vs. Seattle, 1973-10-19
- Most assists per game, season – 31.4, 1984–85 (2,575/82)
- Fewest opponent assists, game – 3, vs. Boston (at Louisville, Kentucky), 1956-11-28
- shared with three other teams
- Fewest assists, both teams, game – 10, Boston vs. Minneapolis (at Louisville, Kentucky), 1956-11-28
- Fewest disqualifications per game, season – 0.02, 1988–89 (2/82)
- Most steals, both teams, game – 40, Golden State (24) vs. L.A. Lakers (16), 1975-01-21
- shared with two other pairs of teams
- Fewest steals, both teams, game – 2, L.A. Lakers (1) vs. Miami (1), 2006-01-16
- shared with three other pairs of teams
- Most steals, one quarter – 11, vs. Chicago, 1982-03-12; at Dallas, 1994-12-13
- shared with six other teams
- Fewest blocked shots, both teams, game – 0, L.A. Lakers vs. Houston, 1978-01-22
- shared with 11 other pairs of teams
NBA playoff records set by the Los Angeles Lakers
[edit]![]() |
- Most NBA Finals appearances – 32 times
- Best postseason record – 15–1 (2001)
- Most Playoff Games Won – 421
Franchise records for regular season
[edit]![]() |
Unless otherwise stated, statistics/records are accurate as at the end of the 2016–17 season.
Most consecutive games played
- A.C. Green – 567
Most minutes played in a game
- Norm Nixon – 64
Highest minutes per game
- Wilt Chamberlain – 43.7
Highest minutes per game in a season
- Wilt Chamberlain – 45.3
Most points scored in a game
- Kobe Bryant – 81
- Elgin Baylor – 71
- Wilt Chamberlain – 66
- Kobe Bryant – 65
- Elgin Baylor – 64
Highest career points per game
- Elgin Baylor – 27.4
Highest points per game in a season
- Elgin Baylor – 38.3 (48 games)
- Kobe Bryant – 35.4
- Elgin Baylor – 34.8
- Elgin Baylor – 34.0
- Kobe Bryant – 31.6
Most defensive rebounds (since 1973–74)
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 7785
- Kobe Bryant – 5548
- Magic Johnson – 4958
- Shaquille O'Neal – 4133
- Lamar Odom – 3757
Most offensive rebounds (since 1973–74)
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 2494
- A.C. Green – 2089
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1957
- Magic Johnson – 1601
- James Worthy – 1561
Most total rebounds
- Elgin Baylor – 11463
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 10279
- Kobe Bryant – 7047
- Magic Johnson – 6559
- Wilt Chamberlain – 6524
Most rebounds in a game
- Wilt Chamberlain – 42
Highest rebounds per game
- Wilt Chamberlain – 19.2
Highest rebounds per game in a season
- Wilt Chamberlain – 21.1
Most assists in a game
- Magic Johnson – 24
Highest career assists per game
- Magic Johnson – 11.2
Highest assists per game in a season
- Magic Johnson – 13.1
Most blocks in a game
- Elmore Smith – 17
Highest career blocks per game
- Elmore Smith – 3.93
Highest blocks per game in a season
- Elmore Smith – 4.85
Most steals in a game
- Jerry West – 10
Highest career steals per game
- Eddie Jones – 2.05
Highest steals per game in a season
- Magic Johnson – 3.43
Most field goals made in a game
- Wilt Chamberlain – 29 -Feb. 9, 1969
Highest field goal percentage in a game
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1.000 on 14 attempts
Most three-point field goals in a game
- Kobe Bryant – 12 (January 7, 2003 vs Seattle SuperSonics)
- Kobe Bryant – 9 (March 28, 2003 vs Washington Wizards)
- Kobe Bryant – 9 (March 22, 2005 vs Utah Jazz)
- Kobe Bryant – 9 (March 28, 2008 vs Memphis Grizzlies)
- LeBron James – 9 (January 24, 2023 vs Los Angeles Clippers)
- D'Angelo Russell – 9 (March 8, 2024 vs Milwaukee Bucks)
- LeBron James – 9 (March 31, 2024 vs Brooklyn Nets)
- Dalton Knecht – 9 (November 19, 2024 vs Utah Jazz)
- Austin Reaves – 9 (April 3, 2025 vs Golden State Warriors)
Most free throws made in a game
- Anthony Davis – 26 (October 29, 2019 vs Memphis Grizzlies)
- Dwight Howard – 25 (March 12, 2013 vs Orlando Magic)
- Kobe Bryant – 23 (January 31, 2006 vs New York Knicks)
- Kobe Bryant – 23 (January 30, 2001 vs Cleveland Cavaliers)
Lowest turnovers per game
- Mark Madsen – 0.4 (minimum 100 games played)
Lowest turnovers per game in a season
- Stanislav Medvedenko – 0.3 (2004–05 season; minimum 41 games played)
Highest assist-to-turnover ratio
- Sedale Threatt – 3.34
Highest assist-to-turnover ratio in a season
- Nick Van Exel – 4.25 (1997–98 season)
Most double doubles, career
- Magic Johnson – 463
- Shaquille O'Neal – 365
- Pau Gasol – 215
Most triple doubles, career
- Magic Johnson – 138
- LeBron James – 49
- Elgin Baylor – 24
- Kobe Bryant – 21
- Jerry West – 16
- Russell Westbrook — 14
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 13
- Wilt Chamberlain – 8
- Elmore Smith – 6
- Pau Gasol – 5
- Julius Randle – 5
- Lamar Odom – 4
- Vlade Divac — 4
- Lonzo Ball – 3
- Austin Reaves — 3
- Luka Dončić – 2
- Karl Malone – 1
- Steve Blake – 1
- Gary Payton – 1
- Jamaal Wilkes – 1
- Sam Perkins — 1
- Connie Hawkins – 1
- Jim Price – 1
- Hot Rod Hundley – 1
- Slater Martin – 1
- Rajon Rondo — 1
Career leaders
[edit]Category | Name | Years with Lakers | Total |
---|---|---|---|
SP | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 20 |
GP | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 1,346 |
MP | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 48,637 |
MPG | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–1973 | 43.7 |
PTS | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 33,643 |
PPG | Elgin Baylor | 1958–1971 | 27.4 |
REB | Elgin Baylor | 1958–1971 | 11,463 |
RPG | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–1973 | 19.2 |
OREB | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 1975–1989 | 2,494 |
DREB | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 1975–1989 | 7,785 |
AST | Magic Johnson | 1979–1991, 1996 | 10,141 |
APG | Magic Johnson | 1979–1991, 1996 | 11.2 |
TO | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 4,010 |
PF | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 3,353 |
STL | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 1,944 |
SPG | Eddie Jones | 1994–1999 | 2.1 |
BLK | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 1975–1989 | 2,694 |
BPG | Elmore Smith | 1973–1975 | 3.9 |
FG | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 11,719 |
FGA | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 26,200 |
FG% | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–1973 | .605 |
2PFG | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 1975–1989 | 9934 |
2PFGA | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 20,654 |
2P% | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–1973 | .605 |
3PFG | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 1,827 |
3PFGA | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 5,546 |
3P% | Steve Nash | 2012–2015 | .422 |
FGM | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 14,481 |
FT | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 8,378 |
FTA | Kobe Bryant | 1996–2016 | 10,011 |
FT% | Cazzie Russell | 1974–1977 | .877 |
Single-season leaders
[edit]Category | Name | NBA season | Total |
---|---|---|---|
MP | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–69 | 3,669 |
MPG | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–69 | 45.3 |
PTS | Kobe Bryant | 2005–06 | 2,832 |
PPG | Kobe Bryant | 2005–06 | 35.4 |
REB | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–69 | 1,712 |
RPG | Wilt Chamberlain | 1968–69 | 21.1 |
OREB | Shaquille O'Neal | 1999–2000 | 336 |
DREB | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 1975–76 | 1,111 |
AST | Magic Johnson | 1990–91 | 989 |
APG | Magic Johnson | 1983–84 | 13.1 |
TO | Magic Johnson | 1990–91 | 314 |
PF | Jim Chones | 1980–81 | 324 |
STL | Magic Johnson | 1981–82 | 208 |
SPG | Magic Johnson | 1980–81 | 3.4 |
BLK | Elmore Smith | 1973–74 | 393 |
BPG | Elmore Smith | 1973–74 | 4.9 |
FG | Elgin Baylor | 1962–63 | 1,029 |
FGA | Elgin Baylor | 1962–63 | 2,273 |
FG% | Wilt Chamberlain | 1972–73 | .727 |
2PFG | Elgin Baylor | 1962–63 | 1,029 |
2PFGA | Elgin Baylor | 1962–63 | 2,273 |
2P% | Wilt Chamberlain | 1972–73 | .727 |
3PFG | D'Angelo Russell | 2023–24 | 224 |
3PFGA | D'Angelo Russell | 2023–24 | 545 |
3P% | Vladimir Radmanovic | 2008–09 | .441 |
FGM | Elgin Baylor | 1962–63 | 1,244 |
FT | Jerry West | 1965–66 | 840 |
FTA | Jerry West | 1965–66 | 977 |
FT% | Magic Johnson | 1988–89 | .911 |
Franchise records for playoffs
[edit]Bold denotes still active with team.
Italic denotes still active but not with team.
Points scored (regular season) (as of the 2024–25 NBA season)
Most games played, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 220
- Derek Fisher – 193
- Magic Johnson – 190
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 180
- Michael Cooper – 168
- Jerry West – 153
- Byron Scott – 150
- James Worthy – 143
- Elgin Baylor – 134
- A.C. Green – 126
Most minutes played, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 8,641
- Magic Johnson – 7,538
- Jerry West – 6,321
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 6,295
- Elgin Baylor – 5,510
- Derek Fisher – 5,405
- James Worthy – 5,297
- Shaquille O'Neal – 4,992
- Byron Scott – 4,828
- Michael Cooper – 4,744
Most points, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 5,640
- Jerry West – 4,457
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 4,070
- Magic Johnson – 3,701
- Elgin Baylor – 3,623
- Shaquille O'Neal – 3,383
- James Worthy – 3,022
- Byron Scott – 2,223
- Derek Fisher – 1,700
- George Mikan – 1,680
Most field goals made, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 2,014
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1,643
- Jerry West – 1,622
- Elgin Baylor – 1,388
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1,309
- Magic Johnson – 1,291
- James Worthy – 1,267
- Byron Scott – 864
- Pau Gasol – 600
- Derek Fisher – 582
- Michael Cooper – 582
Most field goals attempted, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 4,499
- Jerry West – 3,460
- Elgin Baylor – 3,151
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 3,024
- Magic Johnson – 2,552
- Shaquille O'Neal – 2,352
- James Worthy – 2,329
- Byron Scott – 1,747
- George Mikan – 1,394
- Derek Fisher – 1,358
Most three-point field goals made, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 292
- Derek Fisher – 219
- Michael Cooper – 124
- Byron Scott – 116
- LeBron James – 110
- Robert Horry – 83
- Rick Fox – 82
- Sasha Vujacic – 63
- Austin Reaves – 61
- Nick Van Exel – 60
Most three-point field goals attempted, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 882
- Derek Fisher – 543
- LeBron James – 327
- Michael Cooper – 316
- Byron Scott – 286
- Robert Horry – 263
- Rick Fox – 230
- Magic Johnson – 212
- Nick Van Exel – 196
- Metta World Peace – 195
Most free throws made, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 1,320
- Jerry West – 1,213
- Magic Johnson – 1,068
- Elgin Baylor – 847
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 784
- Shaquille O'Neal – 765
- George Mikan – 554
- James Worthy – 474
- Byron Scott – 379
- Pau Gasol – 358
Most free throws attempted, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 1,617
- Jerry West – 1,506
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1,472
- Magic Johnson – 1,274
- Elgin Baylor – 1,098
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1,037
- George Mikan – 705
- Wilt Chamberlain – 667
- James Worthy – 652
- Pau Gasol – 487
Most rebounds, playoffs
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1,783
- Elgin Baylor – 1,724
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1,630
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1,525
- Magic Johnson – 1,465
- Kobe Bryant – 1,119
- Pau Gasol – 937
- A.C. Green – 858
- Jerry West – 855
- Lamar Odom – 824
Most offensive rebounds (since 1973–74), playoffs
- Shaquille O'Neal – 561
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 438
- Magic Johnson – 349
- A.C. Green – 316
- Pau Gasol – 292
- James Worthy – 257
- Kobe Bryant – 230
- Lamar Odom – 219
- Kurt Rambis – 189
- Robert Horry – 183
Most defensive rebounds (since 1973–74), playoffs
- Magic Johnson – 1,116
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 1,087
- Shaquille O'Neal – 1,069
- Kobe Bryant – 889
- Pau Gasol – 645
- Lamar Odom – 605
- A.C. Green – 542
- James Worthy – 490
- Kurt Rambis – 438
- LeBron James – 430
Most assists, playoffs
- Magic Johnson – 2,346
- Kobe Bryant – 1,040
- Jerry West – 970
- Michael Cooper – 703
- Elgin Baylor – 541
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 540
- Derek Fisher – 507
- Norm Nixon – 465
- James Worthy – 463
- LeBron James – 408
Most steals, playoffs
- Magic Johnson – 358
- Kobe Bryant – 310
- Derek Fisher – 219
- Byron Scott – 204
- Michael Cooper – 203
- James Worthy – 177
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 169
- Robert Horry – 120
- Norm Nixon – 89
- Jamaal Wilkes – 83
Most blocks, playoffs
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 437
- Shaquille O'Neal – 310
- Pau Gasol – 178
- Kobe Bryant – 144
- Andrew Bynum – 110
- Lamar Odom – 97
- Michael Cooper – 96
- Anthony Davis – 96
- James Worthy – 96
- Elden Campbell – 90
- Robert Horry – 90
Most personal fouls, playoffs
- Kobe Bryant – 660
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar – 625
- Magic Johnson – 524
- Derek Fisher – 497
- Michael Cooper – 474
- Jerry West – 451
- Elgin Baylor – 435
- Shaquille O'Neal – 415
- Vern Mikkelsen – 397
- Byron Scott – 393
Most triple doubles, playoffs
- Magic Johnson – 30
- LeBron James – 5
- Elgin Baylor – 4
- Pau Gasol – 1
- Andrew Bynum – 1
- James Worthy – 1
- Wilt Chamberlain – 1
- Jerry West – 1
Other franchise records
[edit]![]() |
In a game
[edit]Team (regular season)
[edit]- Largest margin of victory in a home game – 63 (Score: 162 – 99) March 19, 1972 vs. Golden State
- Largest margin of victory in a road game – 47 (Score: 138 – 91) November 12, 1966 @ Detroit
- Largest margin of defeat in a home game – 48 (Score: 142 – 94) March 6, 2014 vs. LA Clippers
- Largest margin of defeat in a road game – 49 (Score: 122 – 73) January 22, 2017 @ Dallas Mavericks
- Fewest points given up in a home game (post shot clock) – 57 (score: 112–57) January 11, 2011 vs. Cleveland
- Most points scored in a game – 162
- Most points scored in a first half – 89
- Most points scored in a second half – 91
- Most points scored in a quarter – 51
- Most points scored by starters in a game - 120 vs the Portland Trail Blazers on April 7, 1985
- Most points allowed – 173 (Score: 173–139) February 27, 1959 @ Boston Celtics
- Most assists – 51
- Most rebounds – 107
- Most blocks – 21
- Most steals – 23
- Most field goals made – 69
- Most field goals attempted – 153
- Most three-point field goals made – 22
- Most three-point field goals attempted – 45
- Most free throws made – 52
- Most free throws attempted – 69
- Most turnovers – 43
- Largest comeback - 30 points vs the Dallas Mavericks on December 6, 2002
Team (playoffs)
[edit]- Most points scored – 153
- Most points allowed – 148
- Most assists – 44
- Most rebounds – 81
- Most blocks – 15
- Most steals – 19
- Most field goals made – 67
- Most field goals attempted – 116
- Most three-point field goals made – 19
- Most three-point field goals attempted – 31
- Most free throws made – 49
- Most free throws attempted – 68
- Most turnovers – 28
- Largest comeback - 29 points vs the Seattle SuperSonics on May 4, 1989
See also
[edit]References
[edit]General
- 2007–08 Los Angeles Lakers Media Guide. NBA Properties, Inc.
- 2007–08 Official NBA Guide. NBA Properties, Inc. September 2006. ISBN 0-89204-854-9.
Specific
- ^ a b Mark Heisler (20 October 1991). "Lakers Get the Better of a Close Call, 116-114 : Pro basketball: The NBA remains unbeaten in McDonald's Open, but it gets by with a little help from its friends". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 23 February 2025.
- ^ Bill Carlson (12 April 1948). "Lakers 'World Champions' now". The Minneapolis Star. p. 23. Retrieved 15 March 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "1971–72 Los Angeles Lakers". Archived from the original on 2013-08-03. Retrieved 2008-03-04.
External links
[edit]