Kobe, Gasol carry Lakers past Kings
The Los Angeles Lakers have put their three-game hiccup behind them
and are closing in on their playoff form.
Kobe Bryant scored 30 points, Pau Gasol added 28 points and
11 rebounds, and the Lakers completed a sweep of their Northern
California swing with a 106-99 victory over the Sacramento Kings on
Tuesday night.
"We're playing with more of a sense of urgency," Bryant said.
"Guys understand that we can be beaten. Once you understand that,
you understand that that day can come. Guys have to remained
focused."
After committing 24 turnovers and barely holding on for a
124-121 victory at Golden State on Monday night, the Lakers were
much sharper on the back end of their trip. They committed just two
turnovers in the first half and 10 for the game, overpowering the
Kings inside to win their fourth straight following a season-high,
three-game losing streak.
Andrew Bynum added 21 points and 12 rebounds, and the Lakers
finished with 60 points in the paint to remain four games ahead of
Denver for the best record in the Western Conference. Gasol and
Bynum combined to make 21-of-28 shots.
"I think we're tightening it up and playing better
defensively," Gasol said. "We know there are only 14 games left in
the regular season. It's a good time to step it up and play at our
highest level."
After needing two overtimes to win the first meeting between
the teams in December and a buzzer-beating 3-pointer from Bryant to
complete a comeback from 20 points down to win on New Year's Day,
the Lakers had a relatively easy time in the third of four meetings
this season.
The crowd was energized in just the third sellout of the
season. But it wasn't nearly as unfriendly to the Lakers as it was
during the cowbell-clanging peak of the rivalry in the early 2000s.
There was a sizable contingent of Lakers fans who were almost as
loud as the Kings supporters at various points.
"It's a different building," Bryant said. "It's a different
building than it was years ago."
The pro-Lakers contingent took Kings newcomer Carl Landry by
surprise.
"I almost thought we were playing in the Staples Center," he
said. "I've never seen anything like that before. To see that many
Lakers fans out there was kind if disappointing, but at the same
time it was motivation for us."
The Lakers opened a 10-point lead midway through the third
quarter on consecutive 3-pointers by Bryant and Lamar Odom. Los
Angeles maintained control the rest of the third and took a 77-68
lead into the final quarter when Odom scored on a drive with a
second remaining.
The Lakers then scored the first seven points of the fourth,
capped by an emphatic dunk by Shannon Brown that made it 84-68. The
Kings were never able to make a serious dent in that deficit the
rest of the way and fell for the fifth straight time to the Lakers.
Rookie Tyreke Evans had 25 points, 11 rebounds and nine
assists for the Kings, narrowly missing his second career
triple-double.
"It would have been nice to get it, but it didn't happen,"
Evans said.
After a dazzling spin move by Evans on Ron Artest gave the
Kings an early lead, the Lakers ended the first quarter on a 17-4
run to take a 28-17 lead after one. Bryant scored 10 straight
points in one stretch, getting inside with ease against the Kings.
But Sacramento got right back into the game with a 16-3 run
early in the second quarter and tied it at 33 on a 3-pointer by
Omri Casspi. The game remained close from there, with the Lakers
taking a 49-48 lead at the half that would have been bigger except
Bryant missed three of four free throws in the final minute.
Notes: Artest played to the crowd in the arena he used to
call home. After one basket in the third quarter, he flexed, kissed
his biceps and then smiled at the crowd before heading back on
defense. ... Evans' only triple double came on March 10 against
Toronto. ... The other sellouts in Sacramento were for the home
opener against Memphis and the Lakers' first trip into town on Dec.
26. ... The Lakers are 11-6 on the second half of back-to-backs.