Lodi News-Sentinel

Kings beat Oklahoma City without injured Fox

- Chris Biderman THE SACRAMENTO BEE

Even without All-Star De’Aaron Fox, Kings head coach Mike Brown implored his team to take advantage of their situation on Tuesday.

“I challenged the guys before the game, I said, ‘We gotta get greedy,’” Brown said after the Kings beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 123-117 at the Paycom Center.

Getting greedy meant trying to finish the three-game road trip 3-0 and not settling for 2-1 with Fox in street clothes dealing with a sore left wrist. Brown called on Fox’s teammates to step up.

Many of them did.

Davion Mitchell started in Fox’s place and got off to a hot start, making his first three 3-pointers. He also earned the defensive player of the game chain after drawing a series of offensive fouls while recording a steal and a block. He added knockout blows in the final minute with a pair of key buckets, including a 3, giving him 15 points on the night.

Kevin Huerter scored 20 points for the first time in over a month while tying for a game-high nine assists. Harrison Barnes paced Sacramento’s scoring with 29 points. Domantas Sabonis was a game-high plus-22 in 34 minutes while loading the stat sheet with 22 points, 13 rebounds and nine assists, narrowly missing his eighth triple-double of the season.

“When you’re greedy in situations like this, that means you got a chance to be great,” Brown said. “Our guys came with a little bit of an edge tonight, and they played greedy. That’s what excites me about this team is, knowing what’s at stake and still performing the way they did, getting the win and finishing off this trip the right way.”

The Kings improved to 36-25 and are 11 games over .500 for the first time since the 2004-05 season. They continue to hold the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference and sit 3 ½ games ahead of the fourthplac­e Phoenix Suns. The Los Angeles Clippers are up next Friday at Golden 1 Center in a grudge match after the Kings handed them a 176-175 loss in an epic double-overtime affair last week at Crypto.com Arena.

Sacramento has been wanting to get Mitchell rolling offensivel­y for some time. His 15 points were the most since Jan. 15. The Kings before Tuesday had gone 1-4 without Fox and his 25.4 points per game this season. In the four losses, Mitchell scored nine, seven, three and 10 points.

Mitchell scored nine points in the first quarter on three 3s

that set the tone for the rest of the game.

“Going into the postseason, you kinda learn how to add confidence,” Mitchell said afterwards. “I think tonight, I was just being aggressive. I tried to do it at the end of the game and got some open looks.”

Mitchell put the nail in the Thunder’s coffin when a 20-foot pull-up jumper made it 121-110 with 55 seconds remaining. He added a step-back 3 at the 25.1 mark before Jalen Williams scored two meaningles­s buckets near the buzzer.

“He’s a guy that’s taken really good shots throughout most of the year,” Brown said of Mitchell. “The thing that I like about Davion, I don’t care what (percentage) he’s shooting from 3, whatever, if he’s open and that ball gets swung to him, he’s going to step and shoot it. And as much as he works on his shot, all he’s gotta do is see one go in. From there, it’s a wrap, because he is a good shooter.”

Mitchell went 3 of 7 from distance and has been below league average, making 32.6% of his 3s coming in. He’s often the Kings’ best perimeter defender, but the Kings get a substantia­l boost when he pairs scoring with his ability to pressure the ball on the other end.

“Defensivel­y, he does that every single night,” Barnes said. “But, offensivel­y, being able to make shots, especially those last two, those are big for us.”

Mitchell specialize­d in drawing offensive fouls on Tuesday, including a handful of moving screens and charges. The Kings’ defensive rating for the season is 115.5, but it’s down to 111.3 with Mitchell on the court, which would tie the Bulls for the sixth-best mark in the NBA.

“He stays ready. Every day, he’s in the gym,” Sabonis said of Mitchell. “Every time I get there, he’s there early, already sweating, so he’s working on his craft. He’s just waiting for his opportunit­y.”

The highlight of the game was an acrobatic reverse layup from Barnes that gave Sacramento separation during an important stretch in the fourth quarter. Sabonis exited the game with his fourth foul at 6:06 in the third and the Kings scored just four points over the rest of the frame.

Sacramento led by six after three quarters despite leading earlier by 17. And the Thunder tied the game at 98 with 8:50 remaining in the fourth. Barnes’ layup and 3-pointer helped the Kings stage a 10-2 run that gave them cushion before closing it out. Keegan Murray had a put-back dunk during that sequence, finishing with 13 points and 10 rebounds in another strong outing.

With Fox out, Barnes took on the onus of aggressive­ly driving to the basket, where the Thunder lacks a true rim protector. Barnes made nine of 10 free throws and went 4 of 5 from the 3-point line. His 29 points were his most since Jan. 15 against the San Antonio Spurs.

“I was just trying to stay aggressive,” Barnes said. “Obviously, we shoot a lot of 3s, so any time we can get paint outside of a post-up and I can get to the free-throw line and slow the game down for us, I think that’s big, especially when shots aren’t falling, just trying to do something different.”

Grizzlies star Ja Morant accused of assault and threatenin­g mall cop

Police investigat­ed NBA superstar Ja Morant in separate cases of threatenin­g a mall cop and assaulting a teenager last July but did not charge Morant in either case, according to a report released Wednesday.

Morant, the 23-year-old Memphis Grizzlies All-Star, was questioned by investigat­ors after both incidents, the Washington Post reported.

The fight with a 17-year-old boy at Morant’s Memphis home was first reported by TMZ in January. That report centered on a civil lawsuit filed by the teen’s mother, but the criminal investigat­ion was not public knowledge until Wednesday’s Washington Post report.

Morant told police the teen threw a basketball at his head during a pickup game, prompting him to retaliate, according to the outlet.

“I swung first,” Morant told investigat­ors. “The ball was, to me, the first hit.”

The teenager told police he was checking the ball in as part of the pickup game when it slipped through Morant’s hands and hit him in the face, the Post reported. The teen said Morant and one of Morant’s friends responded with nearly two dozen punches.

After the fight, the teen said Morant went into his house and came out with a gun. Meanwhile, Morant said the teenager left while shouting, “I’m gonna come back and light this place up like fireworks.”

Prosecutor­s reviewed the case but determined there wasn’t enough evidence to pursue charges, the Post reported.

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