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Lakers beat Pelicans, advance to face Nuggets in the playoffs

Dan Woike, Los Angeles Times on

Published in Basketball

The notion that the Lakers would somehow dodge the Nuggets by dropping the first play-in game against the Pelicans was always ridiculous, but even more so considering their early-game approach.

LeBron James led all Lakers with 23 points on a night when they had to grind, their offensive rhythm never at 100%.

The Lakers ran up and down the court with the Pelicans early, doing the thing coach Darvin Ham said he wanted to see most from his team early — meeting New Orleans’ force with force of their own.

The trouble was, though, the Lakers couldn’t force the ball through the rim. Davis bricked hooks and layups in the paint. James missed easy ones. The two made just three of their first 10 tries.

Only Russell, who scored 13 points and had four assists, found his offensive rhythm. His shot-making was just enough to keep the game from tilting too much towards the Pelicans early.

In the second, led by a strong shift from Gabe Vincent, the Lakers found their footing. For the first time since last season’s NBA Finals, Vincent made multiple 3s. James got going and got to the line. And the Lakers flipped the game.

 

They rolled out of halftime, despite Davis’ struggles, leading by as many as 18 in the third before New Orleans made their final run.

Williamson, who was so quiet on Sunday, got downhill and to the basket. James, who played with so much burst in the Lakers’ Game No. 82, looked cemented to the court on two blown layups.

And the Pelicans’ deep shooting, which had misfired in the middle two quarters, got hot late, trimming that lead all the way down to a single possession in the back half of the fourth.

The Pelicans tied it emphatically, on a Williamson lob dunk, after another in a stretch of broken possessions ended with Reaves rimming out a 35-footer with the Lakers against the shot clock.

But a big jumper from James over Herb Jones and a Russell steal that led to a Reaves-Davis lob were enough late-game offense for the Lakers to hold on.


©2024 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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