Kobe struggles, but Lakers cruise past Bucks
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Kobe Bryant struggled through his fourth consecutive sub-par
shooting game because of his broken right index finger. The Lakers
still led all the way and avoided their first three-game losing
streak in nearly two years.
Bryant's supporting cast came through in a 95-77 victory over
the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday night.
"We're not playing our best basketball and managed to win
some games," he said. "We know how we need to get better, and
tonight we got better. We played extremely well defensively."
Milwaukee's 77 points were the fewest the team has ever
scored against the Lakers, breaking the old mark of 82 on Feb. 25,
1973.
Andrew Bynum had 17 points and a career-high 18 rebounds,
Shannon Brown added 19 points, Jordan Farmar scored 15 of his 17 in
the second half, and Derek Fisher had 11 for the defending NBA
champions.
Bryant had 12 points on 4 of 21 shooting. He was 14 of 37 in
a loss at Portland on Friday, and 10 of 30 in a loss against the
Clippers last Wednesday. Before that, he shot 9 of 23 against
Houston.
"I played with the splint off. We put it back on in the
second half," he said. "Just trying to get a little bit more
flexibility back. The finger felt pretty good, so we tried to go
without the splint. It's just not strong enough."
Bryant was 1 of 14 with four points in the first half. He's
resorted to launching some shots left-handed in recent games. But
Bryant is insistent he won't take any time off despite swelling
that comes and goes in his shooting hand.
"I made it worse up in Sacramento. I got hit pretty good and
it swelled up," he said. "Then it got better and felt pretty good,
took the splint off, didn't work too well. Now the splint is back
on."
Playing without the splint, Bryant said, gives him more range
and movement in his index finger but he lacks strength to shoot the
ball, resulting in balls coming up short. Wearing the splint gives
his finger more strength and protection, but Bryant admits it
affects his touch.
"It is noticeable in his shooting and he knows it," coach
Phil Jackson said. "He is still tender. The second knuckle is
probably even more painful than the broken tip so there is a whole
thing going on with that index finger."
After losing to the Clippers and Portland, the Lakers were
facing the prospect of their first three-game skid since acquiring
Pau Gasol on Feb. 1, 2008. Of course, he didn't play Sunday,
sitting out his fourth straight game with a strained left
hamstring.
But they didn't need him.
Bynum continued dominating the post in Gasol's absence,
notching his third double-double in as many games. Lamar Odom had
17 rebounds and nine assists.
Milwaukee's reserves did the bulk of its scoring. Hakim
Warrick had 14 points, Jodie Meeks 12, and Brandon Jennings, Luke
Ridnour and Charlie Bell 10 each for the Bucks, who had won three
straight but dropped to 5-11 on the road.
Milwaukee starting guard Michael Redd left the game because
of a sore left knee and didn't return. He was scoreless in nearly
12 minutes. He is scheduled for a MRI on Monday in Phoenix.
"I felt a pop making a turn. It's not as swollen as it was
when I tore my ACL, which is good. But at the same time, it still
hurts," he said. "It's very frustrating."
The Lakers, an NBA-best 29-8, jumped out to a 24-8 lead in
the opening quarter, when the Bucks were 4 of 21 from the field.
They outscored Los Angeles 20-15 in the second, but the Lakers
maintained a 39-28 halftime lead.
"We just missed a lot of shots. We got some good looks, but
nothing was falling for us all night," Jennings said. "Everything
was going in and out. Then Mike Redd went down. It was a little
hard for me to adjust, because I was so used to passing to him to
get him going. So it was just a bad game."
Notes: The Lakers have led wire-to-wire in five
games this season. They did so nine times last season. ...
Milwaukee opened a season-high, six-game road trip against the
Lakers, their longest since April 2001. ... Olympic gymnastics
all-around champion Nastia Liukin watched the game, with world
figure skating champion Evan Lysacek's arm around her. Also
attending were Denzel Washington, sporting a closely cropped 'do,
singer Rick Springfield, "American Idol" host Ryan Seacrest and
"Mad Men's" Jon Hamm.
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