Los Angeles Lakers Avoid Catastrophe By Closing Out Houston Rockets In 6 Games
When Luka Dončić went down with a hamstring strain, most of us completely wrote off the Los Angeles Lakers. Asking a 41-year-old LeBron James to strap the entire franchise to his back for a must-win road game in the Western Conference Playoffs felt less like a basketball strategy and more like elder abuse.
Yet, here we are. In a gritty, grind-it-out slugfest, the Lakers walked into Houston, absorbed the best the Rockets had to offer, and punched their ticket to the semifinals with a dominant 98-78 victory.
The Lakers’ Defense Smothers Houston
If you love offense, this was not the game for you. But if you appreciate the kind of defensive intensity that wins championships, the Lakers put on an absolute clinic. Head Coach JJ Redick clearly tweaked his game plan, tasking Deandre Ayton with locking down Alperen Şengün in single coverage. Ayton responded by snatching 16 rebounds and completely neutralizing Houston’s offensive engine.
Without an injured Kevin Durant to bail them out, the Rockets’ offense essentially collapsed. They shot a putrid 5-for-28 from beyond the arc, highlighted by Reed Sheppard’s agonizing 1-for-10 shooting slump. The Lakers capitalized on this misery with a ruthless 27-3 surge in the first half, sucking the life out of the building and securing a lead they would never relinquish.
LeBron James: Defying Father Time Again
At this point, we need to launch a formal investigation into LeBron James’ birth certificate. In Game 6, James played with the desperation of a man who desperately wanted a few days off to play golf. He poured in 28 points, grabbed 7 rebounds, and dished out 8 assists. During a blistering second-quarter stretch, he outscored the entire Houston roster by himself.
“I’m too old for that [stuff],” James joked after the game. But jokes aside, the emotion was palpable. To reach the 1,500 playoff-point milestone as a member of the Lakers while carrying a depleted squad speaks volumes about his legendary resilience. Redick summed it up perfectly: “It’s baffling in some ways… he’s one of, if not the greatest of all time.”
The Supporting Cast Answers the Bell
You don’t survive a playoff series without some unexpected heroes. Enter Austin Reaves. After missing over three weeks with an oblique injury, Reaves shook off the rust and dropped 15 points, matching his career-high with 3 blocks. His return injected a desperate dose of energy into a fatigued Lakers locker room.
Rui Hachimura caught fire as well, torching the nets for 21 points while sinking five crucial three-pointers. Even Marcus Smart, the ultimate glue guy, sacrificed his body by drawing three charges and setting a gritty, unapologetic tone on defense. It was a true “next man up” mentality.
Looking Ahead To the Thunder
Now, the Lakers get a well-deserved breather before clashing with the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder. It won’t be easy. The Thunder swept the Lakers in the regular season, blowing them out by an average of 29 points per game.
But if this first-round series taught us anything, it’s that you can never truly count out a team led by LeBron James. The Lakers are battered, bruised, and exhausted, but they are still standing.
For More Great Content
Find Justin on X: https://x.com/jrimp803 and LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justin-rimpi-11502014a/
