While unlikely, the possibility had entered my mind that we had maybe seen the last win of the season. Given the malaise, public vibe and overall accomplishments to date it wasn’t too much of a stretch seeing just enough break wrong for us to lose out. Instead, behind a spirited game from LeBron, the Lakers were able to forge a victory and avoid a total derailment of the season.
- Witness. We have come a long way from the first two weeks of LeBron’s season where James looked, for the first time, pretty pedestrian. 56 points on 31 shots, a rocking 6-11 from three, and 10 rebounds means we watched a very engaged and focused LeBron James. While he didn’t approach a triple double based on his 3 assists that’s more an indication of how poorly the Lakers shot overall (other than LeBron, Melo, Russ and newcomer D.J. Augustin no Laker shot above 50%). We needed everything LeBron brought and got enough from a few other sources to pull out the win.
- Russ playing in control. Not a small amount of ink has been spilled detailing in exhausting details all the ways it doesn’t work between Russ and the Lakers. Last night, and for a few games leading up to the ASB, I’ve though Russ has not been the problem. No, he’s not a three point marksmen, yes he misses a few too many layups, and sure you could ask for fewer unforced turnovers. Those are things I often ask of LeBron James, as well, albeit generally to a lesser degree and LeBron’s superior resume’ garners him extra leeway. Last night Russ attacked the basket the way we need him to, found the open man (a stellar wrap around to Monk for a late three was particularly awesome) and, yes, he turned the ball over 5 times to LeBron’s 4. The accounted for more than half our 17 miscues and that’s not out of character. Don’t see the benefit in benching Russ either to start or end games. Are we going to start Wayne Ellington or Avery Bradley or the walking corpse of Trevor Ariza? DJ? Please…
- Carmelo Anthony and the home crowd. I hope Melo retires a Laker, I really do. It’s just a gas to watch him play to the Crypto crowd, get juiced from the cheers when he walks up to the scorers table to check in. His scoring was a big key to the win last night, especially a dagger three to close the game out, but he delivered in all sorts of ways last night with some stout defense and 8 rebounds. Of all the vet minimums Melo has long been the best of the bunch.
- THT’s off game. Talen had another forgettable game and it begs the question what anyone ever saw that would make you choose him over Caruso if you want to win this season. I’m sure Horton-Tucker out in good work over the summer, his physical assets are appealing from a GM standpoint, but the overall foundational skillset has yet to materialize. He still uses his long arms to reach as opposed to bodying up and moving his feet on defense, he still looks to dribble into the paint when he first catches the ball and doesn’t trust that jumper enough (I am of the opinion that his jump shot has improved but not to the degree he trusts in it enough to let fly off the catch enough). THT is one of the reasons I’m not really in favor of bringing Russ off the bench. I don’t think moving Talen to the starting five is going to jump start his game, he needs the next few summers to work on that, it won’t happen in just a summer or two. He needs to hit Defense 101 next summer and work on that footwork, he needs to figure out a way to finish better at the rim, too. He’ll top out as a mid-grade role-player otherwise.
- Monk needs to diversify a bit. This is on a more than Malik. He’s more than a three point shooter and the Lakers need to do a better job maximizing his ability to get to the cup. Monk was 4-10 overall, 4-9 from three. That’s a much too one-dimensional use of his talents from my perspective. The coaches need to continue to encourage him to attack, his teammates need to give him the ball and clear out once in awhile. I think we can get a lot more out of Malik than we are and we can’t squander his skillset limiting him to spot up shooter, although he’s really good at that.
All in all, we got a few teams that fall into the “we should beat them” category coming up. Well, then we should go out and beat them. This team has too often fallen into the “we’re destined for something great” mode and not showing up to play hard and intensely for 48. Take it easy and we continue to flounder, still with the possibility of not making the playin very real. Compete like we did last night, even if LBJ doesn’t drop a big scoring number, and I like our chances.