Philippine Daily Inquirer

LAKERS: BIGGEST LOSS IN FRANCHISE HISTORY

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DALLAS— The Los Angeles Lakers crashed to the heaviest defeat in the iconic NBA franchise’s history on Sunday, slumping to a humiliatin­g 122-73 loss on the road against the Dallas Mavericks.

The Lakers, who are in the midst of a rebuilding phase this season after two disastrous seasons, hit rock bottom in Dallas after a nightmaris­h first half that saw them trailing by 34 points at the break.

Lakers coach Luke Walton offered no excuses after a loss he described as “embarrassi­ng.”

“We didn’t show up to play, honestly, which is frustratin­g,” Walton told a press conference.

“And honestly it’s embarrassi­ng—for us as a team, for us as an organizati­on, for our Lakers fans that are so good to us.”

Walton however declined to be drawn on how he planned to respond to the rout.

“We have teaching points, but what I say to them behind those doors, that is between us,” Walton said. “I think they understand and would agree and would feel inside the same way that I feel.”

At one stage Dallas’ lead jumped up to 53 points as the Lakers collapsed.

Totally dominated

“They were just picking us apart,” Lakers guard Nick Young said. “We didn’t fight back.”

Lakers youngster Julius Randle was even more blunt: “They kicked our butts today.”

The Mavericks, who are 15-29, snapped a two-game losing streak with the win as the Lakers fell to 16-32.

The Lakers’ problems were laid bare in ugly statistics—making just 13 of 37 from the floor in the first half, with nine turnovers.

“You’ve got to point to our defense. In that second quarter, I thought we did a great job defensivel­y, setting the tone and setting the tempo,” said Mavs guard Deron Williams, who finished with 13 points.

“It created a lot of offense off the turnovers, and then just getting out and running. They only had 11 points in that quarter, so our defense got us going.”

The Lakers are one of the most successful franchises in NBA history with 16 championsh­ips but their fortunes have dipped in recent years.

The last of their NBA Finals triumphs came in 2010 while last season they finished with a 17-65 record—the worst in franchise history.

Warriors’ 7th straight

Meanwhile, the Golden State Warriors shrugged off an early start to pummel the Orlando Magic 118-98 and seal their seventh consecutiv­e victory.

Stephen Curry led the Warriors’ scoring with 27 points, draining seven of 13 three-point attempts as the Dubs improved to 38-6.

The victory leaves the Warriors on pace to become the first team in history to win 65 games or more for three NBA seasons in a row.

Curry poured on 16 points of his final tally during a third quarter surge that saw Golden State race into an 18-point lead. —AFP

OTHER RESULTS: Minnesota 111, Denver 108; Phoenix 115, Toronto 103

 ?? —AFP ?? Brandon Ingram of the LA Lakers takes aim against Deron Williams of the Dallas Mavericks.
—AFP Brandon Ingram of the LA Lakers takes aim against Deron Williams of the Dallas Mavericks.

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