The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Russell's play in preseason opener among bright spots

- By Khobi Price kprice@scng.com

When it comes to making observatio­ns from preseason play — especially the first game — prudence is important to practice.

It’s the first basketball game teams have played in four-to-six months.

Rhythm needs to be reestablis­hed. Rotations and lineups need to be sorted out. And oftentimes, teams’ best players either play limited minutes or don’t play at all. Both were the case for the Lakers in Saturday’s 125-108 loss to the Golden State Warriors. Lebron James and Austin Reaves were healthy scratches, while Anthony Davis and D’angelo Russell didn’t play in the second half.

But that doesn’t make the games meaningles­s.

They offer the first insights into how a team is gelling after the offseason and training camp. Strengths, areas of improvemen­t and players ready for breakout seasons can show themselves.

“Obviously, it’s the preseason, so kinda wanted to let guys get their beak wet a little bit,” coach Darvin Ham said. “But overall, there’s definitely some things we need to clean up. That’s usually the case after a first preseason game. It was good to play against some foreign competitio­n, and a lot of guys get up and down in a game setting.

“Overall, I’m pleased. We definitely have some things we need to clean up a little bit. But I like the makeup of our group.”

Here are three takeaways from the Lakers’ preseason opener; the Lakers played their second such game Monday night against Brooklyn at T-mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

UP NEXT

Wednesday: Lakers vs. Kings, at Honda Center, preseason, 7 p.m., SPSN

Russell's playmaking

If there were any doubts about what Russell could provide after his struggles in last season’s Western Conference finals, Saturday was a quick reminder of how he can help the Lakers — especially on the offensive end.

He finished with 15 points (6 of 10 shooting, 2 for 3 from 3-point range) and five assists in 15 first-half minutes.

But more impressive than Russell’s stat line was the way he toggled between setting up scoring opportunit­ies for his teammates and creating his own looks as a ball handler.

“D-LO did a great job of being methodical in our middle pick-and-roll,” Ham said.

Entering his ninth NBA season, Russell’s seen pretty much every defensive coverage and can operate in a

myriad of ways — off and on the ball.

But Saturday was a reminder of the playmaking he can bring, especially when James and Reaves aren’t on the floor.

Christie shines

Second-year guard Max Christie’s play during summer league made it clear he might be ready for a larger role with this team.

His play in the preseason opener only backed that up.

Christie (15 points on 6 of 10 shooting in 25 minutes) found his rhythm in the third quarter once Russell and Davis were no longer playing.

The muscle he’s added to his frame is evident and it’s helped him become more comfortabl­e attacking off the dribble, either going to his pull-up in the midrange or getting all the way to the rim.

“His ability to score, toughness, defend — he does it all,” Davis said. “Ultimate confidence. There’s a lot of things you can say about Max. He’s putting it

together. He knows where to pick his spots on the floor, where he’s going to score, where to make the right plays. And just being aggressive. We’re going to need that from him at some point this season.

A.D. from 3

Davis’ jump shot has come into focus since his 3-point accuracy and attempts have regressed over the past few seasons.

Consider Saturday a step in the right direction.

Davis (15 points on 6 of 11 shooting to go with five rebounds in 13 minutes) knocked down two of his three shots from behind the arc. But the accuracy wasn’t the only encouragin­g part.

There wasn’t any hesitation in letting it fly from long range when the Warriors sagged off of him defensivel­y.

“It’s no different (from last season),” Davis said. “The way our spacing is, new plays that we implemente­d, and I was open. That’s really it.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lakers guard D’angelo Russell, bringing the ball upcourt during a preseason opener Saturday at Golden State, had 15points and five assists in 15first-half minutes.
JEFF CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lakers guard D’angelo Russell, bringing the ball upcourt during a preseason opener Saturday at Golden State, had 15points and five assists in 15first-half minutes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States