Basketball · Franchise Statistics
Lakers Franchise Leaders
An information argument examining Los Angeles Lakers players with 5+ years of franchise tenure. By analyzing total points, rebounds, and assists, this study identifies the statistically strongest Laker across all eras.
This analysis applies a 5+ year tenure filter to the Lakers franchise leaders dataset. Players who only passed through Los Angeles briefly are excluded, leaving only those who made a sustained contribution. The resulting 15 players are evaluated across three statistics — Total Points (PTS), Total Rebounds (TRB), and Total Assists (AST) — with rankings assigned to identify who consistently appears at the top of multiple categories. The central argument: a player who ranks in the top 3 across multiple statistical dimensions is more valuable than one who dominates only one.
| Rank (PTS) | Player | Years | Total Points | Rank (TRB) | Total Rebounds | Rank (AST) | Total Assists |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | Kobe Bryant | 20 | 33,643 | #3 | 7,047 | #2 | 6,306 |
| #2 | Jerry West | 14 | 25,192 | — | 5,366 | #3 | 6,238 |
| #3 | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | 14 | 24,176 | #1 | 10,279 | — | 3,652 |
| 4 | Elgin Baylor | 14 | 23,149 | #2 | 11,463 | — | 3,650 |
| 5 | Magic Johnson | 13 | 17,707 | — | 6,559 | #1 | 10,141 |
| 6 | James Worthy | 12 | 16,320 | — | 4,708 | — | 2,791 |
| 7 | Shaquille O'Neal | 8 | 13,895 | — | 6,090 | — | 1,593 |
| 8 | Gail Goodrich | 9 | 13,044 | — | 2,081 | — | 2,863 |
| 9 | Byron Scott | 11 | 12,780 | — | 2,534 | — | 2,365 |
| 10 | LeBron James | 6 | 11,825 | — | 3,495 | — | 3,581 |
| 11 | Vern Mikkelsen | 10 | 10,063 | — | 5,940 | — | 1,515 |
| 12 | Michael Cooper | 12 | 9,330 | — | 2,028 | — | 3,666 |
| 13 | A.C. Green | 9 | 8,933 | — | 6,033 | — | 746 |
| 14 | Derek Fisher | 13 | 6,487 | — | 1,458 | — | 2,333 |
| 15 | Jim Pollard | 7 | 5,762 | — | 2,487 | — | 1,422 |
| Franchise Totals (filtered) | — | 236,266 | — | 83,167 | — | 53,832 | |
Top 3 + Honorable Mention
Evaluating players who appear in the top 3 across PTS, TRB, and AST:
| Player | Years | PTS | TRB | AST |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kobe Bryant | 20 | #1 | #3 | #2 |
| Magic Johnson | 13 | — | — | #1 |
| Jerry West | 14 | #2 | — | #3 |
Honorable mention: LeBron James (6 yrs, 11,825 PTS, 3,495 TRB, 3,581 AST). Shortest tenure of any player evaluated, yet still ranks within the top half of the dataset across all three categories.
Why Jerry West Is the Best Laker Statistically
Among the 15 filtered Lakers, Jerry West is the only player who appears in the top three of both total points and total assists: he ranks #2 in franchise points (25,192) and #3 in total assists (6,238).
Kobe Bryant ranks #1 in points and #2 in assists — but not top 3 in rebounds. Magic Johnson owns the assists record (#1), but does not crack the top 3 in points. No other player in the dataset appears in the top three of both scoring and playmaking simultaneously.
That dual top-three presence — scoring and facilitating — makes West the statistically strongest all-around Laker across the three primary measurements used in this analysis.
#1 PTS · #2 AST · #3 TRB
#1 AST
#2 PTS · #3 AST
Honorable Mention · 6 Seasons
- PTS — Total Points
- Total points scored by a player for the franchise across their entire Lakers tenure. The primary measure of scoring output and offensive production.
- TRB — Total Rebounds
- Total rebounds (offensive + defensive) recorded during a player's tenure. Indicates impact on possessions, floor space, and second-chance opportunities.
- AST — Total Assists
- Passes that directly lead to a made basket. Measures playmaking ability, court vision, and willingness to involve teammates.
- FG% — Field Goal Percentage
- Percentage of field goal attempts made (excluding free throws). A key efficiency metric indicating shot selection quality and finishing ability.
- GP — Games Played
- Number of games a player appeared in. Used alongside totals to assess durability, availability, and the sustained opportunity that allows statistical accumulation.
- Tenure Filter (5+ Years)
- Only players who spent 5 or more seasons with the Lakers franchise are included. This eliminates short-term contributors and focuses the analysis on players who made a lasting organizational impact.