Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The Lakers look old and tired; lose 79-77 to Indiana


The Lakers took the court tonight against the Indiana Pacers having come off of the most balanced scoring attack of the season and a thorough beat down of the Dallas Mavericks. Kobe Bryant was playing with flu-like symptoms; he still had his 114th career 40 point game. 

So what went wrong for these Lakers? Well, it appears, despite having changed coaches, that the same old problems haunt the Lakers night in and night out. Coming into this game, the Lakers were averaging an absolutely TURRIBLE 17 turnovers per game, all while shooting an extremely frustrating 66.8% from the charity stripe. Los Angeles chose not to break that trend by turning the ball over 19 times and hitting only 23 of 43 free throws. That’s only 53.5%, a percentage that I would expect from Dwight Howard, but not from guys like Metta World Peace, Antawn Jamison or Darius Morris. On top of continuing the dismal free throw display, Los Angeles took a whopping 28 three pointers, connecting on 6 of them (21.4%). It seems Mike D’Antoni’s offense is struggling when Bryant isn’t in a passing mood; rest assured, he was in a shoot first mode tonight, having taken 28 shots in the contest. Right now, Los Angeles desperately needs Steve Nash back so the offense doesn’t hinge on whether or not Bryant feels like passing the ball. 

And yet, despite all of the flaws in the Lakers’ game tonight, they still only lost on the final possession. The Lakers have been playing a surprising amount of defense with D’Antoni at the helm, having left the Pacers with 79 points on 36.7% shooting from the floor. I will say that the Lakers had every opportunity to win it, but they couldn’t convert on open shots from the perimeter; if Dwight Howard were hitting his free throws, this wouldn’t be a problem since you could always just spam it to Howard and have him take it to the rack. The Lakers really let this one go with their shooting woes all around and it stings even more since it was at home, and the Lakers had just come off of beating the living hell out of Dallas, however I think we should be patient until Nash is up and running again; there is no telling how good or bad this offense is going to look once Nash makes his way back to the hardwood. It appears Nash and Steve Blake will be key for the Lakers during this season, and I believe once Nash comes back, these kind of games will be far and few.