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After the ball swished through the net, Anthony Davis grabbed it and slammed it against hi...
After the ball swished through the net, Anthony Davis grabbed it and slammed it against his head in frustration.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)
The Lakers had been fighting, again without LeBron James who remained away from the team because of a sore foot. They traveled to Minnesota, a place where they had just played one of their worst offensive games in years, and it was happening again.
The ball wouldn’t fall, the Lakers couldn’t score and, to make matters worse, Davis had turned it over again — the ball simply squirting out of his hands leading to a Minnesota three.
The basketball deserved to be punished.
(Abbie Parr / Associated Press)
No matter how much the Lakers defended, no matter how often they climbed back into a game they never led, the basketball just wouldn’t do the things the Lakers wanted it to do on the offensive end.
They missed three after three, they repeatedly turned it over — and in the end — somehow they were only slightly better than they were in the same building 11 days ago.
The Lakers lost 97-87 Friday night, unable to make any real offensive improvement from an 80-point game against the Timberwolves on Dec. 2.
In that loss to Minnesota, they turned it over 21 times. Friday, they did it 22 times.
In three games against Minnesota this season, the Lakers have made just 21 of 96 three-point shots.
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Davis led the Lakers with 23 points and Austin Reaves, playing for the first time in five games, scored 18.
James didn’t go on the trip with the team to Minnesota, the 39-year-old listed as out with a left foot injury. James hasn’t been around the Lakers this week because of “personal reasons,” according to the Lakers and coach JJ Redick.
James hasn’t been around the Lakers because of “personal reasons,” according to the Lakers and coach JJ Redick.
Asked if he knew when James would return to the Lakers, Redick said, “no.”
Because the Lakers didn’t advance in the NBA Cup, the team is playing just three games over a 13-day stretch — a rare midseason break for James, in his 22nd season, to mentally and physically recover.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.