Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

`Pain-free' Davis sits out of caution

- By Kyle Goon kgoon@scng.com

OKLAHOMA CITY » Amid a cutthroat playoff chase, in a winnable game against a team jockeying alongside them in the Western Conference standings, the Lakers decided to sit star big man Anthony Davis for precaution­ary reasons.

It was a potentiall­y highstakes decision that went squarely against what coach Darvin Ham said less than a week before: “Barring any type of injury, I don't see anybody being out of the lineup.” But now with All-Star LeBron James set to miss several weeks with a foot injury, the Lakers are proceeding with caution — even if it costs them in their chase for a playoff berth.

Ham's tone Wednesday night before tip-off against the Oklahoma City Thunder was dramatical­ly different from the all-in-towin tack the Lakers had adopted since the trade deadline. He said the decision was made in a meeting with the coaching staff and medical staff, referencin­g a strategy crafted when Davis was first hurt.

Several team members said they learned about it when the team tweeted out Davis' availabili­ty on Wednesday morning, and if Davis had his druthers, a person familiar with his thinking told SCNG, he would have played through.

“We're trying to win all of these games,” Ham said before the Lakers earned a 123-117 win. “But as I mentioned the other night in regards to LeBron, due to the circumstan­ce we don't want the circumstan­ces of winning or losing games to dictate how we handle our players' health.”

The decision was made on Wednesday, when the Lakers were hovering in 12th place, just a half-game ahead of the Thunder, who beat them in February, spoiling a record-breaking night from James. As of Wednesday morning, the Lakers were three games out of a guaranteed playoff position (top six), and a game out of the 10th seed

— the last of the four playin spots. The Lakers were also without D'Angelo Russell, who missed his third straight game with a right ankle sprain.

Davis played 35 minutes in Tuesday night's loss in Memphis, scoring a teambest 28 points with 19 rebounds and five blocked shots. While the 29-yearold hit the deck several times in the game, he gave reporters no indication afterward that his injury had flared up, or that there had been any other setback.

Davis missed 20 consecutiv­e games earlier this season with a right foot stress reaction, an injury that Davis acknowledg­ed in December will likely need further evaluation and possibly surgery this offseason. He missed a Jan. 30 game in Brooklyn during his ramp-up back from injury for precaution­ary reasons, playing the second night of the back-to-back against the Knicks. Davis has played in 38 of 63 possible games this season, and 114 of 217 possible games over the last three seasons because of various injuries.

“That's just what it is: being mindful,” Ham said. “With any type of stress reaction, the wear-and-tear, you constantly have to monitor that. We talked about all of that. We discussed it. And that's where it's at.”

But on the other hand, Ham described Davis as playing “pain-free,” which sets up a vexing contradict­ion. Despite Ham's recent sentiment that his players would play back-to-backs as long as they are healthy, he said Wednesday that the plan for Davis was discussed “weeks ago” by the Lakers' staff.

The biggest change since is James' availabili­ty: The 38-year-old left the road trip early after suffering a right foot injury on Sunday that is expected to keep him out for weeks. James returned to L.A. for further medical evaluation. At least one report from The Athletic indicated that James had chosen to play through discomfort before the injury.

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