Los Angeles Times

Little comes easily for Lakers in their loss

L. A. is outplayed late and off the bench as it finishes its season- opening homestand with a 2- 2 mark.

- PORTLAND 115, LAKERS 107 BY DAN WOIKE

LeBron James doubled CJ McCollum and poked the ball loose, no one between him and the basket in front of the Portland bench.

James gathered his footing and slowed down as if he were waiting for the photograph­ers on the baseline to get everything focused. And then like a Tesla, James zipped into top speed, uncorking a ferocious one- handed slam.

That was easy. Everything else Monday night against the Trail Blazers was not.

Portland outscrappe­d, outshot and, eventually, outlasted the Lakers, beating them 115- 107 as the Lakers’ season- opening, four- game homestand ended with a loss, just like it began.

“We just weren’t able to sustain the energy,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said.

Anthony Davis, returning after a one- game absence from a calf injury, f loated his way through the f irst half and couldn’t put any real impact on the game. Marc Gasol, whose passing cut apart the Minnesota Timberwolv­es’ defense the previous night, couldn’t deal out a single assist.

And the Lakers’ bench, which had played so well in their last two games, got overwhelme­d by Portland backups Gary Trent Jr. and Enes Kanter. Trent scored 28 points and hit seven three- pointers. Kanter had 12 points and 14 rebounds.

Davis scored 13 points and grabbed 10 rebounds, but it was all a struggle. Being guarded by the much smaller Robert Covington, Davis only started to become a factor in the second half.

“Just one of those nights,” Vogel said. “We were just kind of stuck in mud a little bit.”

Kyle Kuzma followed up a great game Sunday by shooting two for nine Monday ( including two for eight from deep), and Montrezl Harrell scored nine points in 27 fairly quiet minutes.

The Portland bench scored 45 points ( nearly twice as many as the Lakers’ 23), turning the game early and helping set the stage for Damian Lillard ( 31 points) and McCollum ( 20 points) late.

With Kuzma on the court, Portland outscored the Lakers by 23. With Harrell on the f loor, the Trail Blazers were 20 points better.

Early Monday night, it was kind of like that breakaway, the Lakers setting the terms, doing what they wanted. But the team’s 13- point lead quickly disappeare­d, Portland pressuring every non- traditiona­l ballhandle­r as soon they crossed midcourt.

The game quickly devolved, with the Lakers playing their f irst back- to- back of the new season. They missed post- ups off the side of the backboard and threw the ball through people’s hands and out of bounds.

The frustratio­n was hard to mask, Davis with his shoulders slumped and head down and Vogel getting called for a technical foul late. Portland tied the score on the subsequent free throw.

The contrast between Sunday and Monday was obvious, the difference in opponent quality a large factor. Minnesota’s defense allowed for the Lakers to cut easily to the basket, setting up unconteste­d layups and dunks or wide- open jumpers off ball movement.

There were glimpses of that early, with Kentavious CaldwellPo­pe shaking loose and hitting three three- pointers in the f irst quarter. Portland closed that loophole, though, and Caldwell- Pope scored only f ive more points the rest of the game.

The Trail Blazers also clogged the cutting and passing lanes as well as anyone the Lakers have played this season, forcing the Lakers to play more one- on- one than Vogel, James or Davis would like.

After consecutiv­e games with more than 30 assists, the Lakers had only 20 on Monday.

Dennis Schroder’s ability to create for himself paid off, as he scored 24 points and kept the Lakers in the game until the final minute.

“We just weren’t moving the ball that well,” Vogel said.

The team now heads out onto the road for its first trip of the season, two games in San Antonio and two in Memphis — four reminders that this season might not be as easy as it might sometimes look.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? THE LAKERS’ Dennis Schroder is called for a foul while defending Portland’s Damian Lillard.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times THE LAKERS’ Dennis Schroder is called for a foul while defending Portland’s Damian Lillard.

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