Quantcast

Sports / ArcaMax

The Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant tumbles to the court against the Toronto Raptors during first-half action at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California, on Friday, March 8, 2013. (Gary Friedman/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

Drain man: Kobe hits key threes in regulation and leads Lakers to 118-116 OT win

LOS ANGELES--If the Los Angeles Lakers ever need incentive for whatever awaits them, it will be Tom Bialaszewski's job to make it happen.

All the Lakers' video coordinator needs to do is forward to the final seconds of Friday's game against the Toronto Raptors and show everybody how Kobe Bryant went one on five.

And succeeded.

Bryant's dunk with 10.6 seconds left in overtime pushed the Lakers to an improbable 118-116 victory over the Raptors, giving their fans one final thrill in another come-from-behind victory.

Bryant had 41 points and 12 assists, the latter offset somewhat by his nine turnovers. As if he cares.

The Lakers (32-31) moved above .500 for the first time since Nov. 20 and pulled within half a game of Utah (32-30) for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference.

Utah already won the tiebreaker, and it was way too early to even discuss such a thing, but this was a game the Lakers needed to win.

They did despite trailing by 15 in the second quarter. They did despite lousy defense most of the game. They did even though starting forwards Metta World Peace and Earl Clark combined for 11 points in 61 minutes.

They can all thank Bryant.

With the score tied at 115-115, Alan Anderson was guarding Bryant up top. He was quickly joined by seven-footer Aaron Gray, the Raptors again choosing to double-team Bryant.

So Bryant burst by both of them, moved past Kyle Lowry's swat at the ball, and beat late-arriving forwards Rudy Gay and DeMar DeRozan for a dunk with 10.6 seconds to play.

It wasn't the first imprint he made on the game, even though he had only 13 points with five minutes left in the third quarter.

He started a personal three-point barrage with 1:41 left in the fourth quarter, drilling one of the few successful "pump-fake, reset and drain as the shot clock expires" attempts to bring the Lakers within 105-103.

Then he made a three-pointer from the left corner with 29.3 seconds left in regulation. The Lakers were down one.

Of greatest importance, after Steve Blake inbounded from the right side, Bryant faked Amir Johnson into the air and beat DeRozan for another three-pointer from the left side with 5.5 seconds left to tie the score at 109-109.

It was on to overtime after Gay missed an 18-footer with 0.9 seconds left.

It had been 108 days since the Lakers were above .500.

And with the Jazz losing to Chicago a few minutes before tipoff at Staples Center, the Lakers came out playing like they really wanted that playoff spot.

They gave up 37 points in the first quarter and trailed by 12.

If Bryant had access to his phone, he could have hammered out "Lame" on his Twitter account. Or other four-letter words.

It appears the Lakers no longer like playing in the first half, yielding 71 points to Oklahoma City, 67 to New Orleans and 59 to Toronto. Bad trend. Almost costly too.

Toronto forward Andrew Bargnani sustained a strained right elbow in the first quarter and did not return, taking his 13 points a game with him. It almost didn't matter.

DeRozan had 28 points and Anderson had 17 for Toronto. Gay also had 17, making only seven of 26 shots.

Dwight Howard had 24 points and 13 rebounds for the Lakers, who avoided getting swept this season by the Raptors, now a glorious 24-39.

Bryant made it happen. Again. It's a trend the Lakers aren't minding right about now.

(c)2013 Los Angeles Times

Visit the Los Angeles Times at www.latimes.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services

----


Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus