Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Lakers get `outworked' by Orlando in a blowout loss

- By Khobi Price kprice@scng.com

ORLANDO, FLA. » After Orlando Magic big man Jonathan Isaac forced Anthony Davis to miss a turnaround jumper early in the fourth quarter, Franz Wagner (26 points, five rebounds) grabbed the defensive rebound and hustled up the floor. He dribbled up the middle of the court five times from inside the paint by Orlando's bench to just outside the free-throw line on the opposite side of the floor without any Lakers play stepping in front of him.

By the time Wagner approached Austin Reaves inside the paint in front of the Lakers' bench, Wagner's older brother, Moe, made his way from beside where Franz grabbed the rebound to just outside the paint in front of the Lakers' bench, ready for his younger brother to throw him an alley-oop with nothing but space between him and the Magic's basket.

Franz connected with Moe for the alley-oop, throwing down the dunk and forcing Lakers coach Darvin Ham to call a timeout with his team down by 25.

The play was a microcosm of the Lakers' 120-101 road loss to the Magic Saturday at Amway Center.

The Lakers (3-3) were outhustled. And despite Ham saying pregame that the team's transition defense and defensive rebounding needed to be areas of focus, they were simply outworked.

“Their energy, their effort, they outworked us,” Ham said. “And because of that energy and effort, they saw the ball go in. They did a great job of just playing fast continuous­ly, covering for one another defensivel­y and just pounding us on the glass.

All of the areas of the game that are associated with making the “hustle plays” went in the Magic's favor.

The Lakers allowed the Magic to grab 19 offensive rebounds, which Orlando turned into 36 secondchan­ce points.

“It's a huge, huge step backwards for us,” Ham said, “in terms of our defensive rebounding.”

Orlando outscored the Lakers 15-5 in fastbreak points. The Magic (4-2) ensured the 50-50 balls consistent­ly went in their favor.

It didn't help the Lakers that they struggled to defend without fouling early and that the extra scoring opportunit­ies they gave the Magic helped Orlando find its rhythm from beyond the arc.

“When you're playing catch up, from an energy standpoint, you're going to be behind the eight ball all night,” Ham said. “And those shots become bigger, more pressing. At the end of the day, you've got to come play with effort. Energy and effort. You can't coach effort. You've got to have that. It's got to be in your brain. Whatever is going on, when you get to the gym, you've got to be locked into the mission at hand. And we just didn't have it (Saturday).”

Neither did their own shooting struggles (26.7% on 3s), preventing them from bringing their deficit to less than 12 in the second half. And by the time they started to reestablis­h a rhythm in the fourth as part of a comeback attempt, they were once again outworked.

With 4:04 remaining, Cole Anthony knocked down a 3-pointer after a Goga Bitadze offensive rebound, giving the Magic a 113-97 lead, with Ham calling a timeout and taking out his rotation players.

“We got to do a better job of that and get that under wraps,” LeBron James said. “It's something we should challenge ourselves for, for sure.”

Davis led the Lakers with 28 points (10-of-15 shooting), 13 rebounds, seven rebounds and three assists, but L.A. was a minus-24 in his 32 minutes. It was the 12th regular season game of Davis' career with he had seven-plus blocks, last doing it against the Memphis Grizzlies on Feb. 21, 2020.

 ?? RICH STORRY – GETTY IMAGES ?? The Lakers' Anthony Davis scored 28points in an otherwise lackluster effort against Orlando and Moritz Wagner.
RICH STORRY – GETTY IMAGES The Lakers' Anthony Davis scored 28points in an otherwise lackluster effort against Orlando and Moritz Wagner.

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