Los Angeles Times

No time for celebratin­g

James passes 38,000 points, but Lakers falter late to lose

- By Dan Woike

LeBron James set a halfhearte­d screen on the left elbow before popping to the top of the key where Russell Westbrook found him with a pass. James caught it and squared up without hesitation, effortless­ly flipping the ball toward the hoop during the first quarter Sunday night against the Philadelph­ia 76ers.

As it passed through the net, James became the second player in NBA history to score 38,000 career points. The player he’s chasing, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, is the other member of the club.

After the next timeout, when James’ milestone basket was shown on the Crypto.com Arena scoreboard, public address announcer Lawrence Tanter called it another great moment in Lakers history.

But these moments in James’ tenure with the Lakers hardly have been great as far as team success is concerned. When he passed Michael Jordan on the all-time scoring list in Los Angeles, the Lakers lost. When he moved past Kobe Bryant, the team lost in Philadelph­ia, and when he became the second alltime leading scorer in Washington, that also came in a loss.

And by the time the horn sounded and 76ers star Joel Embiid fired the ball into the air, points 38,000 and 38,001 couldn’t truly be celebrated, another loss marring one of James’ milestone achievemen­ts.

Westbrook’s potential winning drive didn’t connect, the Lakers losing another heartbreak­er to Philadelph­ia, 113-112.

“It sucks to lose a close game like this,” coach Darvin Ham said.

Afterward,

Westbrook said Embiid grabbed his wrist, stopping him from a clean shot.

“I was trying to attack them and get to the basket,” Westbrook said. “It’s unfortunat­e, but he was grabbing my wrist. I couldn’t get the ball up. But it’s all good.”

James was terrific, a 360degree spinning layup in the second half yet another reminder that he’s aging in a way few have in any sport.

“I thought Bron was phenomenal, really playing downhill, playing the right way,” Ham said. “Running, off the ball, really finding guys as well. I thought he was really, really good.”

But James didn’t touch the ball on the last possession.

“Down one, you’ve got one of our best playmakers to the rim, one of our best finishers at the rim, has the ball with Embiid standing in front of him, I’ll take that scenario every day of the week and twice on Sunday,” Ham said of Westbrook. “We just got to finish the play. That’s it. Make a harder, stronger move to the rim. That’s it. It’s as simple as that. And it just didn’t work out.”

James scored 35 points to go with 10 assists and eight rebounds. And Westbrook had 20 points, 14 rebounds and 11 assists — his fourth triple-double this season.

But for all the fight and excellence from the top of the Lakers’ roster, they left the court losers for the third straight time, Embiid’s silky midrange game in the fourth quarter the difference.

A Troy Brown Jr. threepoint­er and a Lakers stop gave them a chance to win, but Ham didn’t call time out as Westbrook moved the ball up the left wing. With Embiid guarding him, Westbrook fumbled the ball before driving to the rim and ending the game sitting underneath the basket in frustratio­n.

Embiid finished with 35 points and 11 rebounds and James Harden scored 24 with 13 assists.

As James gets closer to breaking Abdul-Jabbar’s record, his honesty about the Lakers’ losing also has become more obvious. The muted answers, the subtle criticisms — they’ve given way to flat-out truths like “playing basketball at this level just to be playing basketball is not in my DNA,” which he said last month in Miami.

The Lakers, though, aren’t exactly playing “losing basketball” despite their recent losses. They fell to Dallas in double overtime after questionab­le non-calls at the end of regulation and the first overtime.

And Sunday against the 76ers, the team certainly had chances.

Afterward, Ham reiterated his confidence in Westbrook, down one with the ball and a center in front of him — the same way the coach would be comfortabl­e with James.

After the game, Westbrook said his experience in the league has taught him that one empty possession counts as much as one at any other time.

“I know the game didn’t come down to the last shot,” he said.

The other problems — poor three-point shooting, a depleted rotation, Embiid’s dominance and Harden’s mastery — mattered too. So did the Lakers’ play, which still has Westbrook and his teammates convinced they are a good team.

“We’re playing good basketball,” James said. “We’re just not winning.”

The standings, though, will need to say the same sooner than later.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? JOEL EMBIID, who made the clinching play on defense and scored 35 points, relishes the 76ers’ victory over the Lakers.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times JOEL EMBIID, who made the clinching play on defense and scored 35 points, relishes the 76ers’ victory over the Lakers.
 ?? Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ?? PAUL GEORGE, in street clothes, looks on from the Clippers’ bench against the Rockets, sidelined for a fifth straight game because of an ailing hamstring.
Sean M. Haffey Getty Images PAUL GEORGE, in street clothes, looks on from the Clippers’ bench against the Rockets, sidelined for a fifth straight game because of an ailing hamstring.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? LeBRON JAMES drives past Joel Embiid, right, and James Harden on his way to a first-quarter layup.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LeBRON JAMES drives past Joel Embiid, right, and James Harden on his way to a first-quarter layup.

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