Los Angeles Times

Lackluster Lakers lose

L.A. loses for sixth time in last seven games, dropping team into three-way tie with Dallas and Portland.

- By Dan Woike

Team can’t seem to muster the energy to put up a decent fight, losing 121-114 to the Toronto Raptors.

The Lakers began the final two weeks of the regular season in a fight they thought they had avoided, the prospect of a play-in tournament an increasing­ly frightenin­g possibilit­y. They had just suffered a shameful loss to the Sacramento Kings, who beat them without two of their best players and another scoring just two points.

And they had just learned that yet another of their key pieces wouldn’t be available, forcing the Lakers to lock in a little more, to play a little sharper and a little harder Sunday night as they make a real push for the postseason.

A response was required. The one issued was a surprise.

Kyle Lowry, the guard they decided not to trade for, ran up the sideline letting out a Ric Flair “Woooo” after a bucket. The Raptors bench bounded with life and energy.

And the Lakers, well, they were just kind of there, a passive participan­t in their own demise.

After leading by 12 early — maybe they were mad — the Lakers just looked bad, falling behind by as many as 21 and greeting the deficit mostly with a shrug.

That the score tightened at times was almost irrelevant. That the Lakers, a team that won a title on the backs of chemistry and effort, played for so long without either, is very much a problem.

The 121-114 loss Sunday, their sixth in their last seven games, dropped the Lakers into a threeway tie with Dallas and Portland. And LeBron James was forced back to the locker room in the fourth quarter, unable to return because of his sore right ankle.

“The last two games at halftime, after the break, it’s gotten a little sore on me, a little tight,” James said.

Maybe the problems began in mid-November when the NBA decided this whole thing would begin in a month, with players such as Anthony Davis dipping their toes back into action like it was an unheated pool.

Injuries to Davis and James made the equations even easier to solve — nothing would matter unless the two players could come back heathy.

Staying competitiv­e without their stars would be mentally and physically taxing. And if that meant so-so basketball in the meantime, so be it.

But Sunday, the fruits of that were on full display.

The Lakers were as disjointed as ever, now playing without their point guard. Just last week, Dennis Schroder told German media members that he was unsure about taking a COVID vaccine. Sunday, he landed on the league’s health and safety protocols, meaning either he or a close contact had tested positive for the virus.

The Lakers and Frank Vogel declined to update Schroder’s status beyond his place in the protocols. If the test were a false positive or inconclusi­ve, he could return after only a one-game absence. Otherwise, at a minimum, he’ll miss the bulk of the remaining regular season.

His absence certainly won’t help the Lakers solve their continuity issues. The team has yet to play a single game this season with its likely playoff rotation intact thanks to Alex Caruso missing Friday’s brutal loss to the Kings.

But it can’t be much of an excuse, not when you consider the Raptors were playing without Fred VanVleet.

“We need to be healthy ... if it’s not one thing it’s another,” James said of Schroder’s absence for COVID protocols.

In his absence, Lowry, whom the Lakers pursued but ultimately didn’t pull the trigger on at the trade deadline, was sensationa­l. He scored 37 points to go with 11 assists, burying deep threes to extinguish any embers of a comeback.

Kyle Kuzma, for his part, scored 24 and hit a key jumper in the final minute to make things sort of interestin­g.

Complicati­ng things, Davis is still inching his way back, scoring only 12 in 33 minutes. And even more problemati­c, James wasn’t there to save them, too hurt to continue in a game the Lakers were going to lose anyway.

It was another blow on a night where the Lakers didn’t look like they were up to fight back.

TONIGHT VS. DENVER

When: 7.

On the air: TV: Spectrum SportsNet, ESPN; Radio: 710, 1330. Update: The Nuggets defeated the Clippers 110-104 on Friday for their fifth consecutiv­e win. Denver now is half a game ahead of the Clippers for third place while the Lakers are in a three-way tie with Dallas and Portland in a race for the fifth through seventh seeds in the West.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? LAKERS forward LeBron James, center, tries to shoot amid a scrum of Toronto Raptors defenders, including forward Freddie Gillespie, left, and guard Malachi Flynn, second from left.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press LAKERS forward LeBron James, center, tries to shoot amid a scrum of Toronto Raptors defenders, including forward Freddie Gillespie, left, and guard Malachi Flynn, second from left.

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