The Union Democrat

Lakers take over Golden 1 Center in blowout win over Kings

- By JASON ANDERSON

Interim coach Alvin Gentry opened and closed his postgame news conference with an apology after the Kings allowed the Los Angeles Lakers to carry out a hostile takeover inside their home arena Tuesday night at Golden 1 Center.

The Kings led the Lakers by 14 early in the third quarter, but then they collapsed, getting outscored by 39 points over the final 22 minutes in a soulsuckin­g 117-92 loss. Lakers fans appeared to represent nearly half of the announced crowd of 12,459, but by the time it was over, they had the whole place to themselves as Kings fans headed for the exits in the final minutes.

“The second half was a disaster and an embarrassm­ent, and as the coach of this team, I want to apologize to every Kings fan out there because you do not deserve this,” Gentry said. “You deserve much, much better and we’ll find guys who will give you better.”

Anthony Davis had 25 points and seven rebounds for the Lakers (12-11), who stormed back to win without Lebron James after he entered NBA health and safety protocols earlier in the day. Russell Westbrook had 23 points, six assists and five rebounds. Malik Monk came off the bench to post 22 points, four

“They have everything we want,” Williams said this week. “They have championsh­ips, they have MVPS, they have defensive player of the years — they have all that. We don't.”

Warriors coach Steve Kerr made sure to note this was the 21st game of the regular season, not a playoff series.

It took on a postseason atmosphere during a fast-paced first half with each team's strengths on display, and it didn't lose any luster after halftime, despite Phoenix star Devin Booker exiting midway through the second quarter with a hamstring injury.

The Warriors took a two-point deficit in to the locker room, and the two top dogs of the Western Conference played to a stalemate for almost the entirety of the ensuing 24 minutes, until the Suns ended the game on a 12-5 run set off by Crowder's fourth triple of the game.

Trailing 99-92 out of a timeout with 2 minutes and change to go, Stephen Curry threw the ball right into the hands of Deandre Ayton, the final of 22 Golden State turnovers. Green and Juan Toscano-anderson each gave up the rock five times, and Jordan Poole four.

Curry drew obsessive attention from the Suns defense and was held to 12 points on 4-of-21 shooting from the field. His only trip to the foul line came after a technical whistled against Phoenix.

The Warriors held a 48-39 lead midway through the second quarter but allowed Phoenix to pull ahead 56-54 by halftime and flip the deficit into a 70-61 advantage, almost entirely with Booker off the floor.

That took the Suns the final 7:25 of the first half and the first 6:41 of the second. And in less than 3 minutes, their lead had all but vanished, setting up a dramatic final quarter.

Poole flew out of nowhere and left Cam Johnson laying on the hardwood while the Warriors raced into transition. With the ball back in his hands, after a rejection at the rim, Poole fed a fastball to Gary Payton II, who put one exclamatio­n point on the Warriors' run, then another.

Poole followed up his block by swiping a pass intended for Mikal Bridges, then sent the rock Payton's way again, and the 6-foot rim rattler threw it home again to tie it the game at 75.

Poole went off for 16 first-quarter points, tying a career high, but went quiet while the Suns regained the lead heading into halftime. He was held to two points in the second quarter and finished the game with 26.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States