T he Lakers teamed up with Tissot, the Official Watch Sponsor of the NBA, to honor Coach Andrew Reyna for giving his time to the Boys & Girls Club of Whittier over the past six years.
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1:02 Warriors top Lakers for 11th straight win Despite a combined 51 points from Laker rookies Lonzo Ball and Kyle Kuzma, the Warriors win 113-106 behind 33 points from Kevin Durant.
OAKLAND, Calif. -- As the Los Angeles Lakers lost yet another hard-fought game to the Golden State Warriors to end the toughest four-game stretch the NBA has seen in three seasons, Lonzo Ball found himself sharing another moment with one of the game's best players.
While Kevin Durant didn't pull a LeBron James and cover his mouth with his jersey, the Warriors star told Ball afterward that it looks as if the rookie is getting more comfortable.
And then Durant told a national-television audience just what he thinks of the Lakers' other standout rookie, Kyle Kuzma.
"Kuz is a problem," Durant said. "I like him."
After giving the Warriors a scare and erasing a 23-point third-quarter deficit, the young Lakers lost yet another tough fight with the defending champs, as Golden State won its 11th straight game with a 113-106 win at Oracle Arena on Friday night.
While the Lakers (11-19) lost for the fourth time in five games, Kuzma and Ball are starting to play their best basketball of the season. And some of the biggest stars in the game from James to Durant are noticing.
Ball is beginning to hit his perimeter shots with confidence, knocking down his first four 3-pointers before finishing with one of his best scoring performances of the season: 24 points on 9-of-16 shooting, including 5-of-6 from beyond the arc. He also had five rebounds and five assists.
Don't look now, but Ball is averaging 17.2 points, 7.2 rebounds and 6.4 assists while shooting 31-for-66 (46.9 percent) overall and 16-for-34 (47 percent) from 3-point range over his past five games.
0:34 Lonzo starts three-for-three from deep Lonzo Ball drills three 3-pointers from the same spot in the first quarter vs. the Warriors.
"He likes to shoot against us," Warriors coach Steve Kerr cracked. "Apparently he can't shoot against anybody else, but he shoots against us."
ESPN Stats & Info
Kuzma followed up his career-high 38-point game against James Harden on Wednesday with 27 points and 14 rebounds. Kuzma is averaging 27.5 points in his past four games and he has buried 14-of-22 3-pointers in his past three. In scoring 25 or more points in three straight games, Kuzma joined Lakers legends Elgin Baylor and Jerry West as the only rookies in franchise history to do so.
"Just getting more and more confident," Kuzma said. "I feel like every shot I take, I can make. That is just my mentality. I like playing big games. The past three games have been pretty big."
Kyle Kuzma lit it up yet again, but his Los Angeles Lakers couldn't force overtime against Kevin Durant's Golden State Warriors. Kyle Terada/USA TODAY
The Lakers lost at Cleveland last week, lost to Golden State in overtime on Monday and stopped the Rockets' 14-game winning streak in Houston on Wednesday before falling at Golden State. The combined .787 winning percentage of those opponents entering Friday made this the toughest four-game stretch for any NBA team since the Spurs played four straight against teams with a winning percentage of at least .700 in 2014-15, according to ESPN Stats & Information.
But the Lakers have relished playing the elite teams, especially on a national stage. Three times this season, they've made the Warriors (26-6) work much harder than they should, taking the champs to overtime the first two times before making them sweat again at home.
Each time, the Warriors needed a superstar effort in the clutch to fend off the Lakers and got it. For the second time this week alone, Durant did that. After scoring 36 points and hitting the game-winner in overtime to spoil Kobe Bryant's jersey night Monday, Durant had 33 points, 7 assists, 7 rebounds and 4 blocks Friday.
0:17 Durant gets lucky roll on floater Kevin Durant pulls off a brilliant spin move to get around a defender, puts up a floater and gets a lucky roll as the ball goes through the net.
This game was supposed to be over with 8:21 left in the third quarter when Golden State led 71-48 and looked as if it would cruise. The Warriors were without Stephen Curry, but got Draymond Green (13 points, 11 rebounds and 7 assists) back from a four-game absence because of a shoulder injury.
But the Lakers did what they've done for most of this season and fought and competed. The Lakers used a surprising 41-17 run to erase the lead and take an 89-88 lead with 7:43 left after Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Julius Randle hit consecutive 3s. After playing a total of eight minutes against Houston on Wednesday, Randle played angry and was a force with 21 points and 10 rebounds.
"We were down by like 20 in the third, [Kuzma] told me I am about to start going," Ball said. "And I said, 'I got you.' "
0:29 Kuzma drives for acrobatic layup Kyle Kuzma drives to the basket, has to adjust his shot midair and hits a layup off the glass.
The Lakers got a glimpse of what their future could be when Kuzma and Ball play well together at the same time. Kuzma hit 6-of-8 shots and scored 19 of his points while Ball made 5-of-7 shots and had 12 points in the second half. The Lakers' highly-touted rookies forced the Warriors to have to play if they didn't want to suffer the same fate Houston did against Los Angeles.
The Lakers snapped the Rockets' 14-game winning streak in Houston and was looking to halt Golden State's double-digit streak and become only the third team in history to snap double-digit win streaks in consecutive games, done only by Orlando in 2010-11 and the Lakers in 1996-97.
But the 6-foot-9 Durant stood in the way.
While he scored only seven points in the fourth, he just kept making winning plays. Three of his blocks came in the final seven minutes when the game was on the line, including two in the past 55 seconds.
Durant came up with a terrific help block on Brandon Ingram at the rim, knocked down two free throws, and he and Jordan Bell (20 points and 10 rebounds) blocked Randle twice inside to preserve the Warriors' winning streak.
For the Lakers, it was yet another gut-wrenching loss after clawing their way back to the final minutes only to watch a team with a veteran superstar make the right plays. But each defeat to an elite team like Golden State only continues to build the Lakers' confidence up.
"We want to model ourselves after Golden State," Kuzma said. "It is no secret. Luke [Walton] coming from there, our personnel, our versatility, we want to be like them. It is going in the right direction for sure."
The Feb. 8 NBA trade deadline is fast approaching and with their eyes on two max free agents next summer, the Los Angeles Lakers are expected to be one of the more active teams at the deadline.
Among players expected to be dealt before the deadline is Julius Randle, who has struggled to find consistent playing time under head coach Luke Walton in his fourth season despite playing the best basketball of his career.
Randle could see his time in Los Angeles cut short sooner rather than later, according to the latest report by ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski. During ESPN’s Full Court Press, airing alongside the Lakers vs. Warriors game on Friday, Wojnarowski said the Lakers spoke to the Dallas Mavericks about a potential Julius Randle for Nerlens Noel swap.
Woj says the Lakers and Mavs had some 'initial talks' about a trade involving Julius Randle and Nerlens Noel but nothing came of it. pic.twitter.com/NITf4PTTQs — Rob Lopez (@r0bato) December 23, 2017
Wojnarowski said that talks fell apart after Noel underwent surgery to repair a torn ligament in his left thumb, but if the two wanted to re-visit that trade, Noel would have to green light it.
Like Randle, Noel has had a hard time staying on the floor this season, and it’s not because of his recent injury. Prior to undergoing surgery, Noel had six healthy DNPs and six games where he played less than 10 minutes.
If the Lakers were truly interested in Noel, they could wait until next summer, when he hits unrestricted free agency. Because of his poor play this season and the lack of cap space around the league, Noel could be a bargain in free agency come next summer.
More than that, it’s hard to imagine the Lakers couldn’t get more for Randle. While his contract also expires at the end this season, he will enter restricted free agency, where the team that trades for him will be able to match any offer in free agency.
While Randle, a Dallas native, would be a fine addition to the Mavericks’ young core, which already features athletic young points guard Dennis Smith Jr., a straight Randle-for-Noel swap would be selling low on Randle.
David Zalubowski/Associated Press
The Los Angeles Lakers believe they can trade guard Jordan Clarkson to help free up salary-cap space, ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski reported (h/t Lakers Nation's Harrison Faigen).
According to Wojnarowski, the Lakers are content to wait until after the season to deal Clarkson, since he gives them their best chance of winning this year.
Los Angeles' first-round pick in 2018 will go to either the Philadelphia 76ers or Boston Celtics, so the Lakers have little incentive to tank in 2017-18.
The Lakers' preference to wait on a Clarkson trade makes sense. The strategy would allow general manager Rob Pelinka even more time to gauge the market for Clarkson's value. He should also have a better idea as to whether the Lakers can realistically land a marquee free agent such as Paul George or LeBron James.
Teams may be more willing to take on Clarkson's contract in the offseason since he's set to make nearly $26 million over the next two seasons. Were another team to acquire the 25-year-old before the Feb. 8 deadline, it would have to pick up whatever's left of his $11.5 million salary this year as well.
By putting off a Clarkson trade, however, the Lakers run the risk of watching his value erode over the remainder of the 2017-18 season.
He's averaging a career-best 22.5 points per 36 minutes and shooting 33.7 percent from three-point range, according to Basketball Reference. In the Lakers' nine games this month, though, Clarkson is shooting 27.0 from beyond the arc. If that trend continues through to the end of the year, teams may be less willing to give up anything of value to take on Clarkson's contract.
Regardless of when he gets dealt, Clarkson's days in Los Angeles appear to be numbered as the Lakers prepare for a big offseason next summer.