Los Angeles Times

Eighth loss in nine games

- tania.ganguli@latimes.com Twitter: @taniagangu­li

scored 20 points off the bench on nine-of-16 shooting. Julius Randle made his first start of the season and scored 18, as did Ingram.

“I just don’t think we were ready, for whatever reason, to engage in the fight,” coach Luke Walton said.

While the Clippers won for the fourth time in five games to creep closer to .500 after going 6-8 within Griffin, the Lakers have lost eight of their past nine games and sit second last in the Western Conference, a half-game ahead of Memphis. They’ve played a tough stretch of games that included two against Golden State, one at Houston (their sole win) and one at Cleveland. They played each team close, impressing Walton. But the losses continued against teams they should beat.

“Every team has issues,” Walton said before Friday’s game. “You look at the top teams to the bottom, they all have their issues. Part of this job is keeping a pulse on everything and continuing to grow and do things in a certain manner. It gets more challengin­g when you’re on a team that’s losing.”

What’s frustrated Lakers players besides the losing is a combinatio­n of on- and offcourt issues. Lack of consistent playing time is one issue. They’ve also been hearing for months that their franchise’s future might not include many of them, and some players have wondered if personnel decisions, rather than a quest for wins, are dictating some of the Lakers’ rotations.

Those frustratio­ns came to light last week when the Lakers lost by three to Portland, which did not have star point guard Damian Lillard. Afterward Walton said he thought players were “pouting.” Center Andrew Bogut said players were frustrated and the effort overall wasn’t very “profession­al.”

Bogut specifical­ly cited the Lakers’ salary cap plans as part of what frustrated his teammates. The team’s front office has made clear that it wants to sign two bigname free agents to maximum contracts this summer, and to do so it will have to move some players.

On Thursday, the Lakers faced a practice day in which four of their starters would have been unavailabl­e or significan­tly limited — Lonzo Ball, Brook Lopez, Kyle Kuzma and Ingram all were nursing injuries. Given the dearth of healthy players and the clearly simmering frustratio­ns within his team, Walton canceled practice.

“I’m always thinking about how we can get better in the time we have to work,” Walton said. “… We weren’t going to get much done on the court that day anyway. It was just a creative way to grow and get better for that day. The amount of questions being asked about having a team meeting are a little blown out of proportion from the fact that we had one. It was just a way for our group to get together.”

Kuzma called it a “heartto-heart.”

Each player spoke and got a chance to air his grievances. Some of the veterans tried to use their own experience­s to offer advice to their younger teammates about how to weather uncertaint­y about their futures.

“I don’t think you work through it in one day, but I think we put it out there about how each guy was feeling about how they play on the basketball floor, about how they’re feeling about the business of the organizati­on, how they want to be played or anything of that nature,” Ingram said. “I think they just put it all out there and ultimately I would hope they felt free after they did.”

Walton harkened back to his playing days with a reminder that meetings like the one the Lakers had Thursday are not limited to losing teams. He remembered frustratio­ns often mounting even on the Lakers teams he played for that won championsh­ips.

Phil Jackson was his coach back then, and Jackson had an unorthodox method for clearing negative energy on the team. During a losing streak or another such down time, Jackson could be seen walking the halls of the Lakers’ facility burning sage.

“I thought about it actually,” Walton said. “I did not go that route, but it did cross my mind.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? AUSTIN RIVERS reacts in pain after injuring his left hand in the first half. He had 13 points.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times AUSTIN RIVERS reacts in pain after injuring his left hand in the first half. He had 13 points.

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