Los Angeles Times

Lakers want their halves to add up better

- By Dan Woike

As the Lakers were rolling through the final third of the NBA season, their identity complete with Rui Hachimura in the starting lineup and their offense humming, a trend was quietly developing.

The Lakers, over those 32 games with Hachimura cemented as a starter, were the second-best offense in the NBA in the first half, scoring 121.8 points per 100 possession­s.

In those second halves of those game? The rating dropped to 114.9 points per 100 possession­s — sixth best.

Still good — but not as good as in the first half.

Through two games in the playoffs, the difference­s are even more stark.

In the first halves of Game 1 and 2, the Lakers have been right at their regular-season efficiency — 121.4 points per 100 possession­s. But after Denver has made its second-half adjustment­s, the numbers have cratered.

In 48 second-half minutes in this series, the Lakers have scored only 92.2 points per 100 possession­s while allowing Denver’s offense to be the most efficient in the postseason, scoring 129.5 per 100.

It’s the difference between the Lakers having an edge in the series and the 2-0 hole they’re facing ahead of Game 3 on Thursday.

Coach Darvin Ham said the team’s film session Wednesday illuminate­d the side of the court where the Lakers have struggled — on offense — when he’s seen his team inexplicab­ly hit the brakes.

“We talk about maintainin­g our pace. And not just running up and down fast, throwing up quick shots,” Ham said. “It’s just doing things with a sense of urgency, whether it’s full court and being discipline­d with our running habits or in the half court, creating an advantage with our separation, running into a pickand-roll situation, actually getting a hit. And whoever is handling the ball, really putting pressure on the paint to score or make the pass.”

The Nuggets, who had the eighth-ranked defense in the regular season, flipped their coverages in the second half Monday in Game 2, moving Nikola Jokic off of Anthony Davis and using Aaron Gordon on him. Davis scored just two points after the switch — one made basket in the final 22 minutes of action.

Ham said it’s a fine line between making sweeping in-game adjustment­s and sticking with the game plan that helped work so well in those first halves.

“You have to be careful. You have to understand why you failed at something,” Ham said. “It’s not just, ‘we failed, let’s scrap the whole plan and go this way.’ No. You have to understand why things went the way they went.

“That’s the great thing about film. it reveals, once you settle down and get the emotions out, postgame emotions and you’re able to make an intelligen­t decision on whether to stay the course or change things completely. It’s never totally one or the other. It’s a little bit of both.”

After the game, Davis said there were times Monday when the Lakers “have stretches where we just don’t know what we’re doing on both ends of the floor.”

Ham said he thought those comments were born out of frustratio­n.

“I just think sometimes when plays don’t turn out the way you think they should, then the frustratio­n sets in a little bit. But I don’t think it’s [from] us not being organized,” Ham said. “I think I have incredibly talented coaches all along my staff. We pride ourselves, whether it’s a practice, a shoot-around, a film session, a game or whatever, we pride ourselves on being highly efficient and organized.

“I just chalk that up to being frustrated. It’s an emotional game, the way it ended and all of that. But I’ll agree to disagree on that one.”

LeBron James, who did have a good offensive finish to Game 2, said the Lakers have workshoppe­d more than just a Plan A, that ingame adjustment­s have to be planned beforehand.

“I mean, it’s all part of the game. You got to be able to make adjustment­s on the fly but you also got to go in with a game plan,” James said. “You don’t go into a war with no game plan saying, ‘Oh, we’re going to make adjustment­s on the fly.’ And then now everybody’s ambushed.”

The Lakers have a plan, James said. “We know some of the things that we can do better. But you … there’s only so much we can talk about. We got to go out and be about it too.”

The good news, the Lakers said, is that they feel as if they’ve committed a lot of correctabl­e mistakes in their first two losses to Denver.

“Any time you lose, it’s tough, but at the end of the day, they held serve on their home floor and we’ve got to try to do the same,” Ham said.

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