Some of the best moments in sports have been born out of witnessing history. So, it’s not shocking that HBO chronicled the 1980s “Showtime” era Los Angeles Lakers, who won five championships, turning their prolific run into Winning Time.
Based on a book by Jeff Pearlman, the series debuted in 2021 and was renewed for a second season a month after its debut. The star-studded cast included names like Jason Segel, Adrien Brody, Sally Field, John C. Reilly, and newcomers Solomon Hughes and Quincy Isaiah.
Dedicated fans were in on the wild storylines, but the series battled lower-than-expected viewership numbers. Like many other shows, it has also been impacted by ongoing writers’ strikes.
Last month, Pearlman expressed his concerns over the canceled show, telling fans it needed more support.
And, to be blunt, I'm worried there won't be a season three. And it's not about me. I'm fine. It's about a cast of amazing young actors who live this. So, seriously, tell your friends to support "Winning Time" and show @hbo you want it to continue. Peace. #winningtimehttps://t.co/1KD2uKOY16
Unfortunately, the series was canceled after two seasons, leaving fans with a less-than-pleasant ending to Sunday’s finale: a Boston Celtics championship. Ending a storyline on a bitter rival’s success did not sit well with fans.
Understandably, they are furious and saddened.
Winning Time ending with Boston winning it all is wild
HBO’s Winning Time reminded us Magic Johnson wanted to leave the Lakers during his third season in the league.
Editor’s note: All interviews for this story were completed prior to the SAG-AFTRA strike.
Magic Johnson played for the Lakers during the entirety of his NBA career. But all of that nearly ended when he demanded a trade in 1981.
Such frustration seemed unlikely when Johnson was named NBA Finals MVP as a rookie in 1980. Fans saw the joys of victory during the first season of HBO’s Winning Time when Paul Westhead (brilliantly portrayed by Jason Segel) improbably led the Lakers to win an NBA championship during his first year as interim head coach.
“Season 1 is about a guy stepping into his adulthood and it’s a series of unlikely circumstances that leads to an unlikely victory,” Jason Segel told For The Win. “It’s really a story of underdog triumph.”
But after he became the permanent head coach of the team the following season, his new offensive game plan “did not endear him” to Johnson or his similarly skeptical teammates.
Stubbornly, he stuck to his intuition and may have lost the locker room in the process.
“[Season 2] is the story of somebody who probably didn’t belong to be in this position in the first place trying to hold the ring of power and just not being able to do it,” Segel said. “He can’t see his way out of pride.”
Los Angeles began the 1981-82 season with a 2-4 record and the chemistry on the team was awful. According to sportswriter Jeff Pearlman, the author of the Winning Time source material, Johnson refused to board the team bus after the Lakers lost to the Spurs during the sixth game of the season.
Winning Time is elite television they got Magic Johnson cooking Utah Jazz fans 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/IzT5CUMQfy
— Ahmed/The Ears/IG: BigBizTheGod 🇸🇴 (@big_business_) August 28, 2023
A few games later, Johnson and Westhead reached a breaking point during a game against the Jazz at the Salt Palace in Utah (via Los Angeles Times):
After receiving a postgame lecture from Westhead, Magic … said: “I can’t play here anymore. I want to leave. I want to be traded. I can’t deal with it no more. I’ve got to go in and ask [Buss] to trade me.”
HoopsHype recently ranked Johnson’s trade request as the second-most important in league history. The reason is that, despite riding a five-game win streak, Westhead was fired the next day.
Westhead was eventually replaced by longtime Lakers head coach Pat Riley, who is portrayed in the show by Adrien Brody. The two coaches, who were once friends, saw their relationship dissolve largely over differing opinions about how to coach Johnson.
“In order to save himself and Magic and help everyone live up to their potential, it causes a rift in his friendship with Paul,” Brody explained. “There’s really a lot of humanity going on in the game and their lives.”
Segel recalls a pivotal moment in the timeline of the two coaches that happens on screen.
“Pat Riley has been protecting me from myself for most of the season,” Segel said. “There is a moment where I go to go after Magic and Pat stops me and I turn on Pat and I say, ‘What, Pat?’ really aggressively and you see on Adrien’s face and he makes the decision to just say nothing. He lets me end it.”
Riley admirably stepped up with Westhead no longer in the picture.
Led by Riley after Westhead was ousted, the Lakers were 50-21 (.704) to end the season and Los Angeles went on to win another championship. That may not have happened if Johnson hadn’t publicly requested his trade, which then effectively forced Westhead out of his position.
Jason Segel is putting on a masterclass as Paul Westhead in Winning Time
According to Rodney Barnes, who is an executive producer and writer on the show, Segel was able to perfectly capture Westhead’s many flaws during this season of Winning Time.
“Everybody is not cut out for [the job],” Barnes said. “To have the pressure of a [personality like] Pat Riley sitting next to you the whole time and what that does to you emotionally and psychologically … Jason Segel is fantastic.”
The casting for Magic Johnson was PERFECT. Who else did they get?
If you like basketball, there is a decent chance you’re excited about the second season of HBO’s Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.
The drama is a dark comedy that provides an inside look at the rise of the Lakers dynasty in the early 1980s. It is a fantastic period piece about Los Angeles, too.
Of course, any show about Hollywood is going to have a star-studded cast as well. This one features the likes of John C. Reilly, Adrien Brody, Jason Segel, Jason Clark and Michael Chiklis. Several other actors, including former University of California basketball player Solomon Hughes, made their television debuts with this show.
The second season debuts on Sunday, August 6 at 9:00 p.m. ET on HBO and will be available to stream on Max.
Take a look at the cast of the show and then compare the actors to their real-life counterparts.
HBO’s Winning Time contrasts on two basketball philosophies. Did the cast prefer structure like Paul Westhead or improv like Pat Riley?
Editor’s note: All interviews for this story were completed prior to the SAG-AFTRA strike.
Despite winning a championship during Magic Johnson’s rookie year, Los Angeles Lakers assistant coach Pat Riley was so stressed he wore a neck brace for six weeks during the 1981 postseason.
Riley’s tension is evident during the second season of Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty, which premieres Sunday on HBO. The Lakers had clashing basketball ideologies: then-head coach Paul Westhead’s rigid and deliberate offense named The System versus Riley’s fast-paced and more improvised style.
When Westhead’s system failed, the Lakers fired him after just 11 games in 1981. Riley moved in as the replacement, instituting his run-and-gun style that became known as Showtime basketball. It was a literal change of pace for the Lakers, who began playing much faster on their way to a 1982 championship.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar reflected on these contrasting philosophies, writing last year that he felt Westhead’s “methodical, tactical approach” actively stifled Johnson’s spontaneity. He added that the best moments with Johnson “were less choreographed and more like jazz” while on the court.
#WinningTime explores contrasting basketball philosophies: One rigid (The System), the other improvisational (Showtime).
John C. Reilly, Adrien Brody, Jason Segel and the cast spoke about where they feel better while on set.
The pressure points between The System and Showtime, two dramatically different approaches, are a central theme in the second season of Winning Time. Decades later, the cast and crew of Winning Time worked to find the right balance with their own craft while on the set of the show as well.
They found themselves in a fairly similar position and the actors on the show are aligned with Johnson and the 1980s Lakers: They, too, prefer creativity over rigidity. But most are seeking at least some sense of balance. Max Borenstein, the showrunner for Winning Time, said that is all intentional and deliberate.
“There is a quality to the show as the whole team executes it that feels fun, and sometimes has an improvisatory vibe,” Borenstein explained to For The Win. “Sometimes it is improvised, and sometimes it just feels that way.”
Jason Segel portrays the rules-oriented Westhead, but his origins as an actor working with director Judd Apatow on the television series Freaks and Geeks were more improvisational by nature. He predominantly found himself in those types of playful comedic roles until he was cast as the author David Foster Wallace in a 2015 drama.
“I kind of cut my teeth in improv comedy, which is the run-and-gun Showtime-era approach,” Segel said. “Then I did a movie called The End of the Tour, which was all prep. I was scared. The only way I was going to accomplish it was if I prepared really, really hard.”
Segel has come to learn that there is a perfect middle ground in these two worlds.
“It is a combination of those two things. It is intense prep so that by the time you are shooting, you have complete freedom,” he added. “You’re not thinking about your lines because you know them perfectly. If something else happens, it happens. But it’s all built on the intense prep you did before.”
Brody, who plays Riley, stressed the importance of malleability. But he noted that the filmmakers ultimately have the final say in helping these ideas come to life on the screen, deferring to the de facto “coaches” of the production.
“Sometimes too much freedom doesn’t give you enough boundaries, and you can go way off. That’s why you need a great director,” Brody said. “That’s why we rely upon directors and filmmakers to have a vision and an overall vision and to make sure that what you think you’re bringing fits within it.”
Playing the exuberant Johnson, Quincy Isaiah said it’s not unlike listening to a coach.
“You got to lean on your leaders and trust that they will lead you to the promised land,” Isaiah said.
John C. Reilly, playing longtime Lakers owner Dr. Jerry Buss, has perhaps the strongest improvisational background of any actor on the show. Many of his most famous and iconic roles, including his appearances on The Tim and Eric Awesome Show, were largely improvised.
“I personally think actors are the best when they feel like they can do anything,” Reilly said. “It doesn’t matter. When the camera rolls, do whatever you feel. Whatever seems genuine. But I think a great director will always say, ‘You give me one just as written, and I’ll give you one where you do whatever comes out of your mouth.’”
Some of his approach comes with years of first-hand experience working alongside Winning Time executive producer Adam McKay, including in leading roles for Talladega Nights (2006) and Step Brothers (2008).
Reilly said that especially in the moment while filming, it is impossible to tell which take was actually the best one for the project.
“They’re going to pick one moment that’s best and those editors don’t give a [expletive] whether it came from the script or whether you made it up in the moment,” Reilly explained. “They just want the best moment.”
Michael Chiklis — who plays Celtics executive Red Auerbach and previously appeared in the McKay film Don’t Look Up (2021) — explained that as much as he loves to improvise with his colleagues, it is important to have structure to balance it out.
“That’s the Adam McKay school,” Chiklis said. “It says honor the script, let’s get it written as solid, and then let’s do a few where you guys can bring some improv and some jazz to it.”
Sean Patrick Small took advantage of that playbook when he was on the set of Winning Time. Sometimes, Small, portraying Larry Bird, would even ask specifically if he could do a take aimed to fail.
“Maybe you’ll get a reaction out of the other actor or maybe you’ll get somewhere by the end that you would have never thought to go and that could end up in the cut,” Small said.
That sort of approach lends itself to a fun and creative atmosphere when filming as well, according to Solomon Hughes, who plays Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
“Especially working with this incredible cast of actors, there’s always going to be something new. Nobody is robotic,” Hughes said. “Everybody is bringing something special and unique to every take.”
This sort of environment allowed actress Hadley Robinson, who plays Lakers owner Jeanie Buss, to get out of her comfort zone.
“I came from structure, and so The System is probably something I would feel more comfortable with,” Robinson said. “I bet I would thrive in The System. But I feel like this show has allowed me to sort of do the Riley way a little bit more.”
When looking at what didn’t work about The System and what did work about Showtime, it isn’t too different when creating a show like Winning Time. Both the show and the offense require structure and extraordinary attention to detail, but it all comes to life on the screen with some unexpected and unscripted moments as well.
“The balance of Showtime between something that has a structure at its core and the ability to improvise and have fun around that feels like a really nice metaphor for what we try to achieve in the show,” Borenstein concluded.
Now that we have more details about HBO’s upcoming Untitled Lakers Project, we are officially excited. Flat out, this show looks awesome.
LakeNow that we have more details about HBO’s upcoming Untitled Lakers Project, we are officially excited. Flat out, this show looks awesome.
Here is what you need to know: The show will be produced by Academy Award winner Adam McKay, who has directed comedies like Anchorman (2004) and dramas The Big Short (2015). He has also produced HBO shows Succession and Eastbound & Down. McKay, a former head writer for SNL, has range.
His collaborator Max Borenstein has already written all of the scripts for the first season and he says it will be structurally similar to Netflix’s The Crown. It is based on sportswriter Jeff Pearlman’s book Showtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley, and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980s.
Exclusive: HBO's Lakers series will be a love letter to basketball that resembles 'The Crown' in terms of its structure, writer @MaxBorenstein says in his first comments about the untitled show. https://t.co/nhYTlMUIGE
I’m a sucker for sports shows and period pieces, especially those set in my hometown of Los Angeles, so I’m already on board. But the most exciting element is the cast.
Many of the players on the Lakers will be depicted by first-time screen actors and we’re incredibly excited to see this new chapter of their careers.
Some of the emerging stars are former pro basketball player Solomon Hughes (who even played for the Harlem Globetrotters) as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michigan-native Quincy Isaiah as Magic Johnson and stage actor Delante Desouza as Michael Cooper.
The cast also includes recognizable some more recognizable names such as Zero Dark Thirty (2012) star Jason Clarke, Gaby Hoffman (Transparent), Tamera Tomakili (Fruitvale Station) and Michael Chiklis (The Shield).
Below are some of the other notable casting choices slated to star in the upcoming project about the Lakers.