The Lakers have lost six straight contests and 19 of their past
24 as they enter Tuesday night's must-win road game against the
NBA-best Phoenix Suns (62-16).
Los Angeles (31-47) trails the 10th-place San Antonio Spurs
(33-45) by two games and the ninth-place New Orleans Pelicans
(34-44) by three games in the three-way battle for the final two
play-in spots. Both San Antonio and New Orleans own tiebreaker
edges against Los Angeles.
So to gain the edge over the Spurs, the Lakers have to win three
more games than San Antonio over the final four games of the
season. As for the Pelicans, any New Orleans win or Los Angeles
loss eliminates the chance of the Lakers catching them.
It certainly ranks as a dire situation for a club that has badly
collapsed over the past eight-plus weeks.
"We don't worry about the math," Los Angeles coach Frank Vogel
said after Sunday's 129-118 home loss to the Denver Nuggets. "We
worry about the next game. Learn the lessons from this game,
take them to the next game and hopefully get a win against
Phoenix."
More math for Vogel to consider: The Lakers are 0-3 against the
Suns this season and 1-5 over the past six regular-season
meetings. Phoenix also won a six-game, first-round playoff
series against Los Angeles last season.
The Lakers are hopeful of having forward LeBron James on the
floor Tuesday after he missed four of the past six games due to
an ankle injury. He is listed as questionable.
James is averaging 30.3 points over 56 games and needs to play
in two of Los Angeles' final four games to qualify for a shot at
the NBA scoring title. James last Friday scored 38 points in a
damaging 114-111 home loss to the Pelicans.
Big man Anthony Davis also is listed as questionable. He has
played in the last two games after missing 18 straight due to a
foot injury. Davis had 28 points, nine rebounds and eight
assists against Denver.
What bothers Davis is how the trio of himself, James and point
guard Russell Westbrook were unable to establish a rhythm due to
injury absences of James and Davis.
"We didn't expect to only have 21 games together, but that's
been all year," Davis said. "The times we were together, we
looked good. ... That being said, we still have enough (players)
to play a basketball game. We will continue to fight this way,
give ourselves a chance and see what happens."
Phoenix has lost consecutive games to the Memphis Grizzlies and
Oklahoma City Thunder. Its next victory will establish a
franchise mark for wins in a season. The 1992-93 and 2004-05
teams also won 62 games.
However, coach Monty Williams wasn't interested in discussing
possible accomplishments after his club was badly outplayed in
the second half of Sunday's 117-96 road loss against the lowly
Thunder. Phoenix was outscored 65-43 over the final 24 minutes.
"We've got to get back to playing our kind of basketball,"
Williams said. "We had a bad second half. We didn't play well,
didn't make a shot, didn't have great energy, and they did. They
played with great energy the whole night. You give them a lot of
credit. We can sit here and talk about what we didn't do, but
they did well the whole night."
Veteran point guard Chris Paul had a similar view of the shaky
performance in which the Suns were outrebounded 54-33 and shot a
season-low 18.4 percent (7 of 38) from 3-point range while the
Thunder were knocking down 17 of 41 (41.5 percent) from long
range.
"Usually, we impose our will on defense, and we didn't," Paul
said. "So you gotta give them a lot of credit. They moved the
ball, shot the ball extremely well and they beat us."
The Suns held out star guard Devin Booker and big man Deandre
Ayton for rest.
--Field Level Media
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |
|