EL SEGUNDO, Calif. -- Luke Walton is still installing and implementing his playbook. But the Los Angeles Lakers coach knows who he will be drawing up the majority of plays for at the end of games.

For the first time since Kobe Bryant retired in 2016, the Lakers have a superstar to throw the ball to during close games in LeBron James.

"When you get to the end of a game, that is what max players make max money for, that is what they do," Walton said after the Lakers' second day of practice with James. "I can comfortably say that LeBron will be our first option at the end of ballgames if it's close."

Since Bryant's retirement, the Lakers have exactly one game-winning buzzer-beater, courtesy of D'Angelo Russell against the Minnesota Timberwolves on April 9, 2017, according to ESPN Stats and Information research.

Last season, the Lakers wanted to give opportunities to close out a tight game to the likes of Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma, Lonzo Ball and Julius Randle. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Isaiah Thomas also were options, at times.

The Lakers, who finished with 35 wins last season, went 3-for-20 on game-tying or go-ahead shot attempts in the final 24 seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime, according to ESPN Stats and Information data. They were 2-for-14 in the final five seconds of the fourth quarter or overtime with a chance to tie or take the lead.

Ingram was the only Laker to make multiple shots in those 24-second and five-second situations, making a total of 4 of 9 shots in those scenarios.

Walton wanted to develop young prospects such as Ingram, Kuzma, Ball and Josh Hart, and the coach gave them opportunities in the clutch to experience end-of-game situations.

There's still the possibility that Walton will put the ball in James' hands at the end of games and the team-first star could get creative and find one of his young teammates and put that player in a game-winning opportunity to see how he responds.

But at least Walton knows he has James when the Lakers absolutely need a basket. The Lakers star came up big twice last postseason alone.

The forward hit a running, buzzer-beating bank shot from the left side of the basket in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference semifinals to deflate the Raptors, before his Cleveland Cavaliers eventually swept Toronto. And in Game 5 against the Indiana Pacers in the first round, James buried a 3-pointer at the buzzer while fading to his left near the top of the key.

Over his career, James is 44-for-144 (30.6 percent) in go-ahead/game-tying shot situations in the final 24 seconds of a fourth quarter or overtime in the regular season and the playoffs. With five seconds or less in such circumstances, he is 18-for-86 (20.9 percent), with a career-high three buzzer-beaters coming last season and postseason.

"It will be very nice to have LeBron at the end of ballgames," Walton said. "But it is good for Brandon and these guys to get these opportunities the past couple of years and taking big shots and making or missing.

"It is the old famous [Michael] Jordan question, right? All the shots he missed is what has made him so great and made him work harder. Now, we have one of the best closers in the game, but we also have guys who have been in that situation over the last couple of years."

Meanwhile, James will be using camp to learn the tendencies of his new teammates and where they like to receive the ball when he will be passing to them.

"That's my job to, I know how guys like the ball," James said. "I watch a lot of film and know if guys like seams or no seams. They like low passes or high passes. They like the numbers or the forehead. It's my job to get it to them. I think our coaching staff and Luke will put them in positions where they need to be on the floor. It's my job to get it to them."