The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Lakers can’t close it out, lose their fifth in a row

- By Kyle Goon kgoon@scng.com @kylegoon on Twitter

LOS ANGELES >> It was only two nights ago that Darvin Ham compared having Lebron James in the lineup to having a world-class closer coming out of the bullpen.

He’s played with Chauncey Billups. He’s coached Kobe Bryant and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo. James is one of the players who makes him feel like the wind is at his back when trying to eke out a game.

“Just guys that you know if you compete and you do what you need to do as a group, if the game is hanging in the balance, that you know you can ride them,” he said Wednesday night. “They can carry the team.”

There’s a lot of things missing from this Lakers team, but on Friday night, a closer was one of them.

The Sacramento Kings were able to edge the Lakers (2-10) in a 120-114 game that had that air of inevitabil­ity — but for the visitors. De’aaron Fox made back-to-back shots in the final 1:06 of the game, finishing with a game-best 32 points while the Lakers, without James in the lineup, couldn’t find an answer.

Anthony Davis finished with 24 points, but went just 2 for 7 in the second half. Russell Westbrook had 21 points and 11 assists and made the home crowd surge with a 3-pointer with 2:13 remaining, putting the Lakers up by two points. But he fouled Harrison Barnes to put the tying points at the line, then he and Patrick Beverley each missed shots in the final 1:30, leaving the stage open for Fox to steal the show.

THE SCORE KINGS 120, LAKERS 114 Up next: Nets at Lakers, Sunday, 6:30 p.m., Specsn

Austin Reaves and Lonnie Walker IV each had 19 points in supporting roles. But sometimes you just need a crunchtime guy — and while James’ track record has hardly been perfect this season in that respect, his absence was deeply felt all the same.

The Lakers knew they’d be without James from the outset, replaced in the starting lineup by Wenyen Gabriel. It was the 37-year-old’s second missed game of the season, his first since straining his left adductor against the Clippers on Wednesday night.

It was only shortly before the game that both Davis and Walker were still up in the air for the Lakers, but both made an impact in the starting lineup early. Taking a handoff from Davis, Walker drove into the lane on the first possession of the game for an easy jam — his first basket back from a two-game layoff for NON-COVID illness.

Davis looked a little heavy on his feet after missing shootaroun­d to recover on Friday morning, but scrapped all the same tearing for loose balls and rebounds. By the second quarter, he found some of that missing burst by driving past Domantas Sabonis on the baseline and finishing with a reverse dunk.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
MARK J. TERRILL – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States