Los Angeles Times

Lakers see hot streak hit cold snap

Run of 10 straight wins ends as poor defense and rebounding are exploited by Dallas.

- By Tania Ganguli

The Lakers left November as the hottest team in the NBA. They entered December greeted by a cold slap of reality.

But after being dealt their first loss in the past 11 games, they wanted to make sure of one thing. That, like the two losses they’d had before, this did not become a trend.

“We don’t want to lose two in a row,” Anthony Davis said. “Ever.”

The Dallas Mavericks took advantage of all the Lakers’ mistakes and beat them 114-100. The loss snapped a 10-game winning streak constructe­d entirely against teams with losing records. The Lakers (17-3) hadn’t played a team with a winning record since Nov. 10, when they lost to the Toronto Raptors.

The Mavericks, on the other hand, entered the game 12-6, with one of those six losses coming in an overtime game against the Lakers.

“I believe in our guys,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “If we play to our abilities, there’s nobody we can’t beat and nowhere we can’t get a ‘W.’ So we got to make sure that we respond from this and bounce back.”

Dallas star Luka Doncic led the Mavericks with 27

If the previous six weeks looked as if they were too good to be true, it’s because they were.

The reality that struck the Lakers on Sunday was as deflating as a threepoint­er by Luka Doncic, a 114-100 defeat to the Dallas Mavericks at Staples Center confirming their record was more of a reflection of their soft schedule than their collective abilities.

And now, in the wake of a loss that ended a 10-game winning streak, the same question that was asked about the Lakers before the season has to be asked again: How good are they?

The answer remains a mystery. About all that can be declared with certainty is they’re good, but not 17-2 good, or even 17-3 good.

“We can play better,” LeBron James conceded.

The Lakers are 3-3 against teams with winning records. They have feasted against sub-.500 teams, their entire winning streak built on beating losing teams. There’s something to be said for that. Squashing bad teams is what good teams do.

But as much focus as the Lakers have maintained, as much of a commitment to defense as they have displayed, they are beatable.

The Mavericks demonstrat­ed how.

They couldn’t beat the Lakers inside — with Anthony Davis there, who can? — so they beat them from the outside.

They shot 49 three-pointers. The Lakers’ previous opponents attempted an average of 32.6. The Mavericks took 36 shots from behind the arc when the Lakers defeated them in Dallas last month.

The improvemen­t was a credit to Doncic, who reaffirmed his most-valuablepl­ayer credential­s by finishing with 27 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds.

“Team that shoots 40 threes a night is not a team that you want to be doubleteam­ing the whole night,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “But Luka’s that good. He requires that.”

The game was a reminder of the degree to which James leads the Lakers. He started as if he were possessed, stripping Mavericks forward Kristaps Porzingis and converting a dunk for a 6-2 lead.

Minutes later, James intercepte­d a pass by Doncic and assisted on a dunk by Kentavious CaldwellPo­pe to increase the advantage to 11-5.

James had three of his four steals in the opening period, in which the Lakers led by 10 on three occasions. But they went into halftime ahead by only 62-59, a testament to the Mavericks’ three-point shooting.

Then the third quarter happened.

“We really didn’t have an opposite pop the whole quarter,” Vogel said.

The Mavericks opened the second half with a 9-0 run and went ahead by as many as 20 points.

James scored only two points in the period. Davis had five. A third scoring option never emerged. But equally important was how Doncic and the Mavericks broke down the Lakers’ defense. In addition to scoring 16 points in the quarter, Doncic had five assists as Dallas made four of 11 three-point attempts when the Lakers collapsed on the 20-year-old star.

“We were just a step slow, scrambling around to the three-point shooters, and then when you’re in rotation as much as we were, it makes you vulnerable on the glass,” Vogel said.

The Mavericks had 23 second-chance points in the game. The Lakers had 10.

“Our defense was terrible today,” Davis said. “We didn’t rebound the basketball; therefore we keep giving them second-chance points and they made us pay with threes.”

Sunday marked the start of a notable tough month for the Lakers. It was the first of 10 games the Lakers will play in December against teams that have records better than .500.

“We’re not going to get down over one loss,” Davis said. “We know the type of team we are.”

Or, more precisely, the type of team the Lakers think they are.

The upcoming threegame trip will be informativ­e. The Lakers will play in Denver on Tuesday, Utah on Wednesday and Portland on Friday.

Their season is about to start in earnest, and they are about to learn who they are.

 ?? Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press ?? LeBRON JAMES and the Lakers fell on their rear ends against Luka Doncic and the Mavericks, who shot 49 threes to beat them and got a near triple-double from Doncic with 27 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds.
Marcio Jose Sanchez Associated Press LeBRON JAMES and the Lakers fell on their rear ends against Luka Doncic and the Mavericks, who shot 49 threes to beat them and got a near triple-double from Doncic with 27 points, 10 assists and nine rebounds.
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