Houston Chronicle

Time to look good for cameras

James’ home debut a good opportunit­y to atone for opener

- By Jonathan Feigen

LOS ANGELES — As much as the Rockets know what will be waiting for them when the lights come on at Staples Center and they take their place on the most visible of NBA stages Saturday night, they cannot consider their part in the spectacle as important. They said they have more pressing needs to address.

Still, if they cannot deny the circus while under the big top, they thought they might endeavor to use it.

LeBron James’ first home game since joining the Lakers, and the way Los Angeles loves nothing more than to celebrate the way the Lakers and celebrity converge, will make Saturday’s nationally televised show certain to be a scene like few others.

The famous faces will be there. ESPN will hype it with all

its machinery. The Lakers issued more than 300 media credential­s for the game, slightly exceeding even the numbers for the Rockets and Warriors games in the Western Conference finals. And that was for a playoff series that went seven games between the reigning champions and the team considered most likely to beat them and featuring some of the most recognizab­le and marketable players in sports.

“It’s something we should all be looking forward to as competitor­s and as fans of the sort,” Rockets forward Carmelo Anthony said. “I think it’s good, though, not just for this individual game, but for the league as a whole. Any time L.A. can have a good situation, a good team, something good going here, the whole league is different. The energy is different in the whole league. We look forward to that.

“I’ve been around a long time. When you can have the New Yorks and the Los Angeleses and the Chicagos and the Bostons in the NBA be good, have good situations, it makes the whole league fun.”

Great motivation

James’ decision to bring his talents to Hollywood brought the spotlight. The Rockets were an easy choice for an opponent, but have been in enough high-profile situations and raucous opposing areas to consider it part of life for them, along with experience­s they hope to revisit in May and June.

“Obviously, there’s a lot of hype to it, but I think our guys are aware of it,” Rockets coach Mike D’Antoni said. “It should pump them up, too. It should be an interestin­g and fun environmen­t. I think we’re better equipped also because we have a lot of veterans. A younger team might go, ‘Oh, wow.’ Our guys have seen it and done it. They’ve been there.”

Most of the Lakers have not. Though James, JaVale McGee and Rajon Rondo have championsh­ip rings and ample experience with the carnival atmosphere, much of the roster played for the rebuilding, post Kobe Bryant Lakers.

McGee said he could not guess how Saturday’s scene will compare to what he saw with the Warriors, but Lakers coach Luke Walton said it is something he has addressed.

“'We’ve talked about it, not to let it be a distractio­n,” Walton told the media in Portland on Friday. “We’re not going to let it influence what we’re trying to do on this team. In fact, we’re trying to use it as something to grow a bond in our group.”

The Rockets have ample reason to take it the same way. After a dud of a season opener when the Rockets failed to match the Pelicans’ energy it might be beneficial to feel threatened. They might not need the electricit­y sure to fill the arena to give them the jolt they lacked Wednesday, but rather than an obstacle to be overcome, the Rockets viewed it as useful.

“I would hope (if) we were picking up five-onfive on the playground we’d have that sense of urgency,” D’Antoni said. “I don’t think it will change anything. It should be fun to be a part of it.”

The Rockets’ success last season along with the high profile that comes with putting James Harden, Chris Paul and Anthony on the floor will likely draw opponents’ best each night. In that regard, they can expect to be the Warriors without the rings. But after cruising to easy wins through the preseason, they might need to be pushed, as they likely will be against the Clippers, who treated meetings with the Rockets last season as their Super Bowl, and the Jazz, who faced the Rockets in last season’s playoffs.

Correct the mistakes

“That’s fine,” Harden said. “We got (the Pelicans’) best shot last game and got whupped. We watched some film and some things got to change. But we’re good.

“For us I think it’s a big game every night, especially early on, trying to get a rhythm, trying to find kind of our swag. It’s going to be a big game for us Saturday, Sunday and after that.”

With that in mind, the Rockets won’t look at their goal as much as to crash the party, but to have one of their own.

“We’re focused on our situation,” Anthony said. “We can’t really worry about what they have going on over there. We’re still trying to figure out our own stuff. We focus on the Houston Rockets and that’s it.”

 ?? Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er ?? Rockets guards Chris Paul, left, and James Harden are used to competing in high-profile games like the one at Staples Center.
Elizabeth Conley / Staff photograph­er Rockets guards Chris Paul, left, and James Harden are used to competing in high-profile games like the one at Staples Center.

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