Los Angeles Times

Ball One: a bit outside

Dad spins son’s performanc­e as growing pains

- HELENE ELLIOTT

LAS VEGAS — Leave it to LaVar Ball to put a positive spin on a performanc­e that his gifted son Lonzo was ready to consign to the trash heap as soon as possible after his NBA Summer League debut Friday night with the Lakers.

Lonzo had a terrible shooting night — two for 15, including one for 11 from three-point range — in the Lakers’ 96-93 overtime loss to the Clippers at Thomas & Mack Center. He displayed great chemistry with Brandon Ingram, feeding Ingram an alleyoop pass for the first points of the game and collecting five assists in nearly 33 minutes, but the defeat turned a momentous occasion into a sour memory for him. And he was more than willing to accept personal responsibi­lity for the defeat, pushing aside suggestion­s that he might have been nervous in his first game that wasn’t an intrasquad exercise.

“I could have gotten in the middle a lot more but they were sagging,” he

said, speaking in short sentences, as usual. “It’s on me. I missed a lot of shots. It’s my fault…. I always play to win. We didn’t get that win tonight.”

But his talkative father, who was warmly greeted by the large and heavily pro-Lakers crowd as he took his place in a securitygu­arded box with other family members, quickly turned a loss into a potential gain by positionin­g it as a good learning experience for his son.

“I’d rather him have a game like this than him score 20, 20, 20 and win by 30,” LaVar Ball said. “So now you know how to lose. This is easy. This is better for my boy than scoring 30 points and everybody making all the shots. If this is the worst he could do? And the culture is winning. Pass the ball around. They lost by three or four points playing his first game ever. So if he’s just all right, they win.”

Lonzo said he was sorry for playing so poorly in front of his family Friday night. To his father, at least, no apology was necessary.

“He won’t be discourage­d,” LaVar said. “This is the worst you can do. You can only go up, and you still keep your team in the game playing your worst game ever. That’s what I like about this idea. He took the shots. They didn’t go in. but he took them.

“It’s better for him to start at the bottom than have all this success at the top and then you’re going to expect it the whole season. He’s going to grow.”

Lonzo seemed to like his father’s reasoning. “Yeah, the only way I can go now is up,” he said.

As the No. 2 draft pick and a player who’s being counted on to help the Lakers turn the corner back toward competitiv­eness, there will be a lot expected of Ball every time he takes the court. The atmosphere on Friday was electric, with Laker fans arriving hours early to stake out seats for the game.

The mere sight of Ball emerging from the locker room and heading toward the floor for warmups sent the crowd into a frenzy and probably startled players in the Milwaukee-Cleveland game that preceded the Lakers’ contest and was still ongoing. Fans stayed on their feet during warmups to cheer his every move and roared after his alleythe oop pass to Ingram, who was aggressive and confident all game in scoring a team-high 26 points. Lakers coach Luke Walton, general manager Rob Pelinka and President of Basketball Operations Magic Johnson all watched closely from front-row seats.

But is it too much to think that Ball, a pass-first point guard, can make a dramatic difference right away? “He’s a good ballplayer,” said Sam Cassell, coach of the Clippers’ summer league team and a point guard of some note himself. “I don’t know what people expect from him. He’s 19 years old. He’s going to take his bumps and bruises, but he’ll be fine. He’ll be fine.”

Ingram agreed. “It’s his first game. He’ll be better,” Ingram said. “We know how he can affect game. And he knows we’re all behind him.”

Ball’s undisguise­d distaste for losing bodes well for him and his progress. And on Friday he moved the ball up quickly and well most of the time, which ultimately will be more important to the Lakers than the fact he missed so many shots. “I liked the looks. A lot of them were open. I was missing shots,” he said. “I felt all right. Obviously, I didn’t feel good enough. We didn’t win.”

Give him time to adjust to tricky defenses. Give him time to grow physically and in experience. There will be better nights to come for him and for them, in time.

helene.elliott@latimes.com Twitter: @helenenoth­elen

 ?? Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? LAKERS ROOKIE Lonzo Ball dribbles against the Clippers’ Juwan Evans during the first quarter of Ball’s first profession­al game at the summer league in Las Vegas. Ball, the second pick in the draft, had five points, five assists, four rebounds and two...
Photograph­s by Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times LAKERS ROOKIE Lonzo Ball dribbles against the Clippers’ Juwan Evans during the first quarter of Ball’s first profession­al game at the summer league in Las Vegas. Ball, the second pick in the draft, had five points, five assists, four rebounds and two...
 ??  ?? BALL MADE ONLY two of 15 shots from the field in his debut, including one of 11 three-point attempts.
BALL MADE ONLY two of 15 shots from the field in his debut, including one of 11 three-point attempts.
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