‘We donβt have it right now.’ Takeaways from Lakers’ loss
Lakers coach JJ Redick points and direct his team during the fourth quarter of a loss to the Rockets on Thursday at Crypto.com Arena.
(Katelyn Mulcahy / Getty Images)
When the Lakers were climbing up the Western Conference standings, improbably winning games with LeBron James and Luka Doncic injured and celebrating Austin Reavesβ 51-point performance and ascent into stardom, the vibes were high. Players jumped off the bench to cheer for each other. They championed team bonding exercises such as slideshow presentations that introduced themselves to each other and a field trip to a Porsche driving experience. It all felt surprisingly easy, especially for a team that had several new additions.
βWe had it,β Redick said wistfully Thursday. βWe had it. I always say this about culture, I always say this about a good team being a functioning organism.β
Redick snapped his fingers.
βIt can change like that,β he continued. βWe donβt have it right now.β
All three of the Lakersβ most recent losses have been blowouts. With an average margin of defeat of 20.7 points, their total point differential has dropped to minus-15 on the season, which ranks 16th in the NBA.
Forward Jake LaRavia said in the locker room that there felt like a βdisconnectβ on the team, but couldnβt verbalize more about how things had turned so suddenly. The teamβs seven-game winning streak at the end of November feels like a distant memory, although it should serve as a constant reminder of how a team shouldnβt let its guard down, especially when it was just collecting wins off teams with losing records.
βThis [has] kind of been the trending thing even when we were winning,β forward Jarred Vanderbilt said. βObviously wins kinda shadow a lot of stuff. But itβs been the same pretty much all year of how we finished games, lose games: transition defense, rebounding and stuff like that. Itβs been a trend all year.β
LeBron James, who played in his 13th game this season after missing the first 14 games because of sciatica, had 18 points and five assists and declined to speak with reporters after the game, along with Marcus Smart (six points, two rebounds) and Rui Hachimura (zero points, two assists).
To further exasperate the lingering injury bug, Reaves left the game after the first half because of left calf soreness. It was the same calf that sidelined him for three games last week.