Los Angeles Times

Lakers close it out in style

Late rally and James’ triple-double help L.A. earn first home victory of season.

- By Tania Ganguli

LAKERS 121 DENVER 114

The Lakers’ glorious past is never far from the minds of their fans, executives and players in literal and figurative ways. The specter of that past is why there is such urgency within the organizati­on to return to championsh­ip contention.

The literal reminders of it hang in the rafters.

On Thursday night, one also showed up in the f lesh.

Kobe Bryant sat on the baseline in a corner, diagonally across from the Lakers bench with his hands clasped in front of his gray suit for most of the game. He had a front-row seat to another critical moment in Lakers history.

LeBron James notched his first triple-double as a Laker with 28 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists.

The Lakers notched their first home win of the LeBron James era. The Lakers beat the formerly undefeated Denver Nuggets 121114, improving to 2-3 this season.

As Bryant left the building, he didn’t hesitate for a moment when asked what it was like to see James wearing a Lakers jersey up close.

“Being here in this build-

ing. Seeing the fans, seeing the energy back in the place, it’s awesome,” Bryant told The Times and the Athletic.

This marked James’ 74th triple-double, but a special one nonetheles­s.

“It’s my first home win as a Laker, my first triple-double as a Laker,” James said. “… Any time you’re able to do good things individual­ly that results in wins, that’s what’s important to me. When it results in a win.”

Kyle Kuzma contribute­d 22 points and JaVale McGee added 21 for the Lakers. Lance Stephenson scored 12 points and again provided a spark off the bench.

Six Lakers scored in double figures, including Lonzo Ball, who had 12 points, eight assists, six rebounds and a game-high five steals. Two of Ball’s steals came within the game’s final four minutes as the Lakers tried to close out the win.

Denver center Nikola Jokic was nearly unstoppabl­e in the post for most of the night, but the Lakers seemed to solve him late in the game. He finished with 24 points and 11 rebounds, and committed a critical turnover late in the fourth quarter.

“The growth that’s continuing to happen tonight was about the fourth-quarter defense, which we struggled with, minus the Phoenix game,” Lakers Coach Luke Walton said. “We really struggled to get stops in the fourth. Tonight we didn’t. That’s the whole idea preaching so much about defense. You can control your own destiny when you have the ability to get stops. I thought tonight we went and got stops in the fourth.”

Neither team ran away with the game at any point. Neither team ever had a double-digit lead.

But through the ebbs and flows of a competitiv­e game between two teams who should be fighting for playoff positionin­g in the spring, the star power in the building mattered most.

The arena was loud when Bryant was first introduced on the video screen. With just under 11 minutes left in the game, fans began a ‘Kobe’ chant, and were quieted quickly when James hit his first three-pointer of the game to bring the Lakers within three.

They were louder when Magic Johnson walked down the sideline to hug Bryant with 5:15 left in the game, just after Stephenson hit a three-pointer to cut the Nuggets’ lead to two.

They were the loudest they had been all night when James sliced down the baseline, caught a pass from Stephenson and dunked the ball to give the Lakers the lead with 3:30 left in the game.

That play came amid a 15-2 Lakers run, a late push that allowed the Lakers to take hold of the game.

James slammed the ball through the net and ran past it shouting, mere feet away from where Bryant sat. He appeared to look down to Bryant’s seat in the process.

After the game, James was asked whether he noticed Bryant in the arena.

“Of course,” James said. “Noticed him sitting right there on the baseline over there, one of the all-time Laker greats. What he’s done for this franchise in the 20-plus years he was here speaks wonders.

“For me to be able to compete against him all those years. For me to be able to share a jersey, the same jersey as him at this point, I think it’s pretty special.”

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? KYLE KUZMA of the Lakers dishes a pass Thursday night amid tight defensive pressure from the Nuggets. He finished with 22 points.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times KYLE KUZMA of the Lakers dishes a pass Thursday night amid tight defensive pressure from the Nuggets. He finished with 22 points.

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