Archive for May, 2008

Game 4: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game

The Lakers made a furious rally in the final three minutes of the fourth quarter to send the game into overtime, but wound up running out of gas against the Jazz, suffering a 123-115 series-tying loss.

“There was definitely a great chance after coming back,” said Pau Gasol (23 points, 10 rebounds) of the Lakers’ near comeback. “We had them where wanted them, and we weren’t able to execute. We didn’t get the shots that we needed to get in overtime. They got pretty good looks, and offensive boards. That is what gave them the victory.”

“It comes down to a couple defensive stops we have to make,” said Coach Jackson after the game. “I really had to jump our second unit a little bit again tonight, because they let us down in the fourth quarter. We had to come back and play out of a double digit deficit again. It put a lot of pressure on the starters to have to play at a pace in which they were pretty exhausted going into overtime.”

Continue reading ‘Game 4: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game’

Game 4: Lakers at Jazz In-Game

Overtime

  • Fish commits his sixth foul with 28.5 left to play and is out of the game.
  • Kobe has been clutching his back and getting assistance from Gary Vitti at every timeout. It’s obviously limiting the way he attacks the hoop and the way that Kirilenko is able to hang with him.
  • There are things I love about Jerry Sloan. Him going berserk after calls is second on the list just above his press conferences and behind the fact that he drives a pickup truck with one of those giant metal tool boxes in the back and leaves the arena 18 minutes after the final buzzer sounds like he’s got a cement job that has to be done before rain hits.
  • Sasha does it again. You never know when the other team is going to do something stupid and elbow the guy, but it happens every game. The way he’s been up on Korver I’m surprised it took this long.

    4th Quarter

  • Williams goes for a 20-footer that is blocked by Fish, just finishing up a MASSIVE 10-point fourth quarter for the veteran point man. OT on the way.
  • Kobe misses the contested lay-up but Odom rips his 13th board of the day and puts it home to tie it back up with 4.6 left. Utah takes their final timeout to diagram the final play of the game and advance the ball to halfcourt.
  • Lotta chances for the Lakers between the 33 second and 8 second mark, but nothing falls. Still Lakers ball down 108-106 with 7.8 left. A triple would rip the heart out of this state. Getting nothing evens the series as we head back to LA.
  • A Lamar Odom three ties the game for the first time since the 2 minute mark in the first. I never trust Lamar’s outside shot, but god bless it when it falls.
  • The Lakers are collapsing the paint and still managing to recover enough to cover their men, but Deron Williams just made a ridiculous shot. You can’t guard it any better than that.

    Continue reading ‘Game 4: Lakers at Jazz In-Game’

  • Game 3: What Went Right/Wrong

    What Went Right:

    • Kobe continued his string of brilliant playoff performances, almost single-handedly carrying the Lakers to a comeback victory with 34 points, seven assists and six rebounds. Bryant did it on a solid 10-20 shooting from the field too.
    • Luke Walton–a huge X-factor in the Lakers’ sweep of the Nuggets in the First Round–finally awoke again in Game 3, scoring 11 points to lead all Lakers reserves.
    • The Lakers had eight steals, many of which came during the team’s final push in the last few minutes of the fourth quarter. Derek Fisher led the team with three steals, followed by two from Pau Gasol.
    • The Lakers continued to get to the free throw line, making 30-37 attempts against 20-28 from Utah. Once again, Kobe led the way at the charity stripe, sinking 14 of 17.

    Continue reading ‘Game 3: What Went Right/Wrong’

    Game 3: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game

    The Lakers trailed for much of the game, but rallied to within four of the Jazz at before a critical turnover gave Utah their first win of the series 104-99 and the Lakers, their first loss of the 2007-08 post-season. Carlos Boozer led the way for the Jazz with 27 points an a playoff career high-tying 20 rebounds as his team won for the fortieth time in 45 tries this year at Energy Solutions Arena.

    “(Kobe) fumbled the ball that’s what’s wrong,” said Coach Jackson about the team’s critical turnover in the waning moments of the fourth quarter. “I don’t know if he was trying to get it out of his hands too soon or what happened but it looked like he had it, and he just didn’t wrap it up.”

    “We turned the ball over quite a bit,” said Bryant after the game, drawing parallels to his final mishap and the team’s sloppy play throughout the night. “Down the stretch in a critical situation we put them on the line four or five straight possessions and gave them easy opportunities. We clawed back, but with that said we can’t turn the ball over 18 times. We had a lot of open looks that just didn’t go for us. You can sustain a night like that, when shots don’t fall. We’ve really got to keep our turnovers down and not allow them to get out in transition and get some easy points.”

    Continue reading ‘Game 3: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game’

    Ariza’s 2nd Opinion

    Lakers Forward Trevor Ariza used this trip to Utah to get a second opinion on the injured right foot that has kept him off the floor since January 20th.

    The prognosis: conflicting.

    “There’s a fault line there, I’ll use that term, there’s a small line in that break. There’s been some suggestion that perhaps this is as good as it’s going to heal,” said Phil Jackson. “Perhaps he doesn’t have to be as cautious as was suggested before.”

    Jackson went on to stress Ariza’s long term importance to the team.

    “This is a territory of the anatomy that you don’t just go in and put a screw in and it heals itself. He’s had a break there once and we’re trying to be real cautious because he’s a young guy.”

    Because of the differing opinions the team will likely seek a third opinion before deciding on a course of action.

    Ariza originally injured the foot after coming down awkwardly on Derek Fisher’s foot in practice.

    Game 3: Lakers at Jazz In-Game

    4th Quarter

  • They got the tip, but quickly lost the ball and put the Jazz at the line. Ronnie Brewer makes one of two and Kobe’s three point attempt sails long. That’s gonna wrap this one up for the Jazz.
  • The Lakers take a 20-second timeout with just fourteen seconds left and a jump ball between Gasol and Williams in Jazz territory. It should be an easy grab for Pau, but the Lakers will need to get a quick bucket off the tip and then get the ball back to cut into the 103-99 Jazz lead.
  • Six points on three quick possessions by Carlos Boozer push the lead back to nine with under two to play. None of the three were easy ones either. He’s 5 of 7 this quarter.
  • Back-to-back steals for Fisher cut the Jazz lead to three points after the free throws with 3:22 left to play. Fisher is also shaking off a poor first half (two fouls in the first three minutes) to make a huge impact as time dwindles off the clock. 95-92 Utah.
  • I don’t have the skills to describe what Kobe Bryant does sometimes. We’ll work on that for next year.
  • Boozer has managed to play 36 of the first 42 minutes tonight after just picking up his fourth foul with just 5:27 to go. Quite a change from the first two contest where he was largely ineffective because of limited minutes. The 17 boards show what a problem a strong inside presence is for the Lakers in the absence of Andrew Bynum.
  • The Lakers are picking it up on the defensive end, making the right switches for the first time all game and staying with everything. Fish makes two free throws to cut the lead to five at 86-81 with seven minutes left.
  • Kobe comes out of the timeout looking to exploit the same matchup, getting the and one on Harpring.
  • The Lakers go small, subbing Kobe back in for Walton while keeping Sasha in at the two. The Jazz immediately try to exploit the matchup of Harpring on Bryant, but Kobe is up to the task, blocking Harpring’s shot.
  • Ronny gets nicked for three fouls in the first three minutes of the quarter, upping his total to five and sending him to the bench. One definitely wasn’t deserved and our man from Martinique is doing all he can to contain himself.

    3rd Quarter

  • The huddle between quarters is animated. Ronny came off the floor slamming the ball all fired up and Kobe goes straight to the front of the bench barking words of encouragement to the rest of the squad.
  • The see-saw quarter ended up going the Lakers (barely) way as they won the quarter 29-27, but still traile by seven points at 79-72.
  • Kobe came out looking to make up for the sub-par first half by making six of his seven shots for 12-points, but the Lakers still trail by seven at 70-63. Normally when Bryant goes on a rampage like he has this quarter the Lakers mix in some stops and it allows them to take control of the game while also taking the crowd out of the mix.
  • Not covering Memo Okur behind the arc is what the Lakers do (tonight at least). He’s four of five from out there. Pau got out on the next one and it was way long.
  • Earth shattering tomahawks are what #24 does.
  • Kobe is taking more of a role this quarter, taking four of the Lakers first seven shots and controlling the ball on almost every possession.
  • That tip by Kirilenko was at least one beat after the clock had buzzed to indicate the delay of game. I’m guessing that one shouldn’t have counted.

    Halftime

  • More than anything the Lakers have to feel lucky to only be down by 9 (52-43) with the way they played that half.
  • Out of sync is a word I use to describe the Lakers offensively in the first half. Pau is 3/6, but hasn’t been in any sort of rhythm. He’s letting Okur body him up. Kobe’s only has 8-points and 6 of them were from the line (that’s all you need to know about his first half). Vladi is back at it a little bit, that’s nice to see.
  • I hate seeing the Lakers whine on the court. It’s something that was rampant last season (and even into the start of this year), but hasn’t been much of an issue lately. It’s back in full force tonight. I think Kobe’s the only one that hasn’t made an official protest to the refs thus far.
  • 15-9 assists in favor of the Jazz, which is basically a flip flop of how the first couple games have gone.
  • Carlos Boozer reiterated after both games that the Jazz had played three good quarters each game, they just let one get away from them every night. Tonight they haven’t let that one get away…. yet.

    2nd Quarter

  • The Lakers finished the quarter 11-8 with Kobe back in it. They only shot 5 of 17 total that quarter.
  • Carlos Boozer vs. Derek Fisher in a jump ball situation. Of course Fish comes out with that one…. right?
  • Ronny just came up 4 inches short on a 30 inch shot, but his presence on the defensive end has carried over from game two as he continues to disrupt the paint on the Utah end.
  • The Jazz outscored the Lakers 18-10 to start the quarter while Kobe was on the bench.
  • Ronny Turiaf played the roll of super-sub, sliding over from the center spot to the power forward spot when Pau re-entered the game, and making all three of his shots. Still he’s on the sidelines upset. Emotions are running high tonight. I guess they always run high with Ronny, but everyone’s feeling it tonight.
  • Pau get’s hacked, doesn’t get the call, screams, and then gets a trey smashed in his face on the other end. Still going tough for that guy. Kobe gives him some words of encouragement as they roll to the TV timeout, but the big man has to keep his wits about him.
  • 9 turnovers and there’s still 8:36 left in this quarter. I guess the Lakers should feel lucky that Utah has only converted that into 12-points.
  • Even when Pau makes his first bucket of the quarter he looks at the official wondering where the foul is. Bad body language from the Spaniard.
  • Gasol starts the quarter after taking an early seat in the first. Kobe sits.

    1st Quarter

  • The Lakers shot a vastly superior percentage from the floor (53% - 41%), matched the rebounding effort (including the offensive boards where they’ve been getting killed all series), and shot the same amount of free throws, but still find themselves tied at 23 with the Jazz because of sloppy play. The six turnovers by the visiting team compared to just one for the home team killed any hope of taking the lead.
  • Pau is getting frustrated and possibly flustered by the physical play. He’s spent four post-possessions glaring at the official and asking for help–not a good sign this early in the game. With just over 2:30 to go in the quarter Phil decides to bring in Ronny to counter Boozer’s physical style.
  • There’s a sign being held up behind the Lakers bench, I can’t see what it says (I think it’s something to do with Most Valuable something I think), but Ronny doesn’t like it. He even goes so far as to tell the guys holding it “That’s stupid”, before discussing with Trevor how stupid the sign actually is.
  • The Lakers jumped out to an ealy 11-3 lead, but after three turnover and generally sloppy play the Jazz have come back to tie it, even worse the crowd has a reason to get excited. The mistakes have just been stupid ones too. A missed inbounds pass, stepping out of bounds, a three seconds call.
  • Jordan Farmar is going to have a hard time staying in front of Deron Williams. A very hard time.
  • Derek Fisher picks up two quick fouls in the first three minutes and gets replaced by Jordan Farmar. There was a smattering of jeers, but mostly cheers during the introductions. There were also multiple article in the local papers saying how fans should cheer Fish. Still, after each foul was lustily cheered, Fish hears it from a couple fans as he heads to the bench.

    Pre-Game

  • American Idol finalist David Archuleta sang the national anthem. I don’t watch the show and had no idea who he was, but he was on every single local station this morning as he made his way around the city. I couldn’t get away from the kid on the television dial and I can’t get away from him now that I’m at the game.
  • Deron Williams is introduced last and gets twice the ovation that Carlos Boozer got (although the crowd was distracted by the affectionate “BooooooZ” cheer). Considering Boozer was their lone all-star this year I thought he’s get more billing.

  • ESA Differences

    I attended a game at the Delta Center about 12 or 13 years ago in the middle of the Stockton/Malone heyday, but at that tender age (and without the aide of a press pass) I didn’t realize how close the fans actually are to the floor.

    You always hear about the fans being right on top of you, but it couldn’t be more true.

    There aren’t any courtside seats along the baseline because the grandstand extends all the way to the camera positions. There are some courtside seats along the sidelines, but they’re really just an extension of the grandstand as well.

    The noise is already at a decent level and it’s still more than seven minutes until tip.

    Phil Jackson realizes the noise is always an issue when you visit the Energy Solutions Arena, but this also isn’t the first time the Lakers have been here. Plus, it’s not like it was in the old days.

    “Well (you used to) get beer thrown at you at the Boston Garden when you’re walking out at halftime and that kind of stuff,” Jackson reminisced.

    Jackson went on to mention the basketball fever that the Salt Lake Area catches this time of year.

    “This is a rabid crowd. I’m sure they’ll protest every foul that’s called. They really love basketball in this state.”

    “It’s always fun to come play here and play.”

    More Physical in Utah

    With the series shifting here to Utah, the Lakers can expect an already physical series to become even more physical as the Jazz play in front of their home crowd.

    The popular opinion is that the calls have been mostly in the Lakers favor through the first two games of the series, but most believe that will change along with the change of venue.

    The Lakers will have to play through whatever is thrown at them and remained focused on the task at hand.

    “We talked about it, out that part of it, about playing through contact. I had a couple of young players that got distracted by contact in the last game and lost their focus on the team defense. So we talked about that,” said Jackson before Friday’s game.

    Game 2: What Went Right/Wrong

    What Went Right:
    •

  • MVP Night or not–once again, the Jazz had no answer for Kobe Bryant, who notched a game-high 34 points, eight rebounds and six assists in an all-around blitz of Utah’s backcourt. All this, with Andrei Kirilenko–widely considered one of the better defenders in the league–guarding him.
    •
  • After a quiet opening series against the Jazz, Lamar Odom delivered in a big way in Game 2, scoring 19 points and more importantly, pulling down a team-leading 16 rebounds. Pau Gasol (20 points) also helped Lamar form a solid secondary tandem to Kobe.
    •
  • L.A. shot a whopping 57% from the floor on 39-68 shooting, while holding the Jazz under 50% for the second game in a row at 45%. While Utah shot a respectable 7-18 from behind the three point arc, the Lakers were a much more efficient 7-11 from long range.
    •
  • Similar to Game 1, free throws were also a huge factor in Game 2 as the Lakers an impressice 35-43 from the charity stripe, led 11-12 from Bryant. By comparison, the Jazz only shot 16 free throws, making 13.
    •
  • Deron Williams ended up with 25 points by the final buzzer, but was kept at bay for the game by Derek Fisher. The Lakers point guard was also on his game offensively as well, scoring 22 points that ranked second behind Kobe on the team.
    •
  • After losing the rebounding battle in Game 1 by a humbling 58-41 margin, the Lakers fought back in Game 2, still losing the overall tally, but only by four time this time at 41-37.
    •
  • The Lakers continue to get contributions from their bench players with Sasha Vujacic leading the way for the second game in a row, this time scoring 12 points on 3-5 shooting from three point land.
    •
  • The Lakers established tempo early, building a first quarter lead that lasted until the end of the game, as evidence by only four early lead changes the entire game.

    What Went Wrong:
    •

  • Although L.A. cut the rebounding margin to just four in Game 2, they were still manhandled on the offensive glass, only managing to grab four rebounds off of their own misses, compared to 16 for the Jazz.
    •
  • Paul Milsap established his authority in the series in Game 2, scoring 17 points on 7-13 shooting and pulling down a team-high 10 rebounds.
    •
  • Led by Mlsap and Korver, the Jazz’s bench outscored the Lakers’ bench by 10, 33-24, led by Milsap’s 17 and Kyle Korver’s 10.
    •
  • Although the Jazz missed a lot more, they shot a incredibly 101 times from the field, compared to only 68 for L.A, meaning they had plenty of second chances, but were unable to take advantage of them.

  • Game 2: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game

    On a night when Kobe Bryant received the top individual award in the sport–the Most Valuable Player Award–his team shined, using a balanced effort to knock off the Jazz 120-110 to go ahead 2-0 in their best of seven series.

    The newly crowned MVP scored 34 points in addition to pulling down eight rebounds and dishing out six assists. After the game, Kobe said that his team was “excited” to head into Salt Lake City with a two game lead in the series, crediting the rhythm the Lakers established heading into the postseason.

    Coach Jackson praised the Lakers’ fast start, using the energy of a gold-clad STAPLES Center crowd, obviously amped up after Bryant received his MVP award prior to tip-off.

    “We got off to a great start,” said Jackson. “The energy of the crowd and Kobe’s night gave us a real quick start. I just didn’t think we played well the second quarter, and they kind of carried the ball from there on out the rest of the game. They kept attacking and we were able to manage point for point, but we were never able to gather momentum in the second half.”

    Continue reading ‘Game 2: Lakers vs. Jazz Post-Game’