Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Walker IV, Brown Jr. are scratched

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

LOS ANGELES » Already this season, the Lakers have struggled to stay healthy. Shortly before Wednesday's game against Portland, more bad news arrived.

Both Troy Brown Jr. and Lonnie Walker IV, key pieces of the starting lineup for most of the season, missed the game with left foot soreness, the Lakers said. Brown was downgraded to questionab­le in the morning, while Walker was a scratch a half-hour before tip-off against the Trail Blazers.

Coach Darvin Ham said Brown tweaked his left foot during an individual morning workout. Walker was scratched so late that no Lakers were available to add context before game time.

The Blazers were playing without Damian Lillard, Nassir Little, Josh Hart and Gary Payton II.

Against a Portland lineup with just four players 6-foot-6 or taller, the Lakers went particular­ly small, starting Austin Reaves, Dennis Schröder and Patrick Beverley alongside LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

It was the Lakers' 12th starting lineup of the season. Inconsiste­nt starting lineups, especially in the COVID-19 era, have been more of the rule than the exception for the Lakers, who had 41 starting lineups in their 82 games last season. But Ham said that inconsiste­ncy wasn't a big factor in the Lakers' 7-12 start.

“I think it's indicative of circumstan­ces, for the most part,” he said. “I mean, we've had guys come up with injuries. We've had guys come up with illnesses. It's been a variety of reasons and so in the process of trying to find a consistent rotation, you're going to go through that.”

Injuries meant that Ham could punt on a starting lineup dilemma. Beverley made his return to the starting lineup after a threegame suspension for shoving Phoenix's Deandre Ayton in the back. Schröder, who replaced him in the lineup for three games, stayed put as well.

Schröder has added a little more firepower (8.8 ppg) and playmaking (3.3 apg) than Beverley (4.1 ppg), who has also shot well below his career average from 3-point range (23.8%) despite describing himself as an “elite” catch-and-shoot player early in the season. But Ham emphasized Beverley's importance to the Lakers defense, which has tailed off in recent games.

“Just telling Pat to go out there and do what he does, regardless of what time of the game it is,” Ham said before the game. “He's a big piece of how we want to be and what our approach is going to be, specifical­ly defensivel­y. He's had a chance to rest and further strengthen his body and I expect a big night for him tonight.”

Billups lauds Westbrook's new role

As a former teammate on a championsh­ip squad, Portland coach Chauncey Billups has Ham's ear when it comes to coaching advice. While Billups went through struggles in his first year as a head coach, he acknowledg­ed Ham is under a different type of pressure.

“He's with the Los Angeles Lakers. It's totally different,” Billups said. “And he's coaching one of the top few guys to ever play the game, and then three top-75 guys with expectatio­ns. I didn't have that. A lot of things I can't help him on. There's a lot I can, but there's a lot that I can't.”

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