Lakers 116, Trail Blazers 111, OT
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Kobe Bryant had enough
after seven straight losses by the Los Angeles Lakers. He took
matters into his own hands against the Portland Trail Blazers and
left the court with the fourth highest-scoring game in franchise
history.
Bryant scored 24 of his 65 points in the
fourth quarter and added nine more in overtime, powering the Lakers
to a 116-111 victory on Friday night.
Last season's scoring champ shot 23-for-39
from the field, 8-for-12 from 3-point range and 11-for-12 from the
free-throw line.
``My daughter is outside waiting for me,
and I'm sure she doesn't give a damn about what just happened. She
just wants to watch Care Bears,'' Bryant said with a grin. ``I'm
just happy we won. We needed to get this one. We just had to win
this game and get back on track, just for a morale standpoint. We're
at a point now where everybody's a little beat up.''
It was the second-highest scoring game of
Bryant's career and his third with 60 or more points - including an
81-point outing against Toronto on Jan. 22, 2006, at Staples Center.
He also had 62 against Dallas on Dec. 20, 2005, at Los Angeles. The
All-Star MVP has 15 games with 50 or more points, including four
this season. The Lakers are 11-4 when he cracks the 50-point
plateau.
``I had to come out aggressive and assert
myself, just because our confidence was a little shaky,'' Bryant
said. ``We needed a breakout game. And it's my job as a leader to
kind of read what we need as a team. And sometimes, me taking over
games like this instills confidence in us all.''
Bryant's point total was the highest
against the Trail Blazers, one more than Rick Barry's previous
record. He averaged 35 points in his previous six games against
Portland, including a 50-point effort on April 14, 2006.
``Kobe Bryant made big shots. He made
tough shots,'' said Zach Randolph, who led Portland with 31 points.
``If he would have missed one, it probably would have given us a
chance.''
Bryant got the Lakers going in overtime
with a pair of free throws and a 14-foot running jumper. His 3-point
shot broke a 108-all tie with 44 seconds to go, and he capped it
with a pair of free throws with 17.1 seconds to go.
``That finish was incredible,'' Phil
Jackson said after his longest losing streak as an NBA head coach
ended. ``They couldn't keep the ball out of Kobe's hands, and they
couldn't keep him from putting that ball in the hoop. He knocked
those 3-pointers down. It was remarkable.''
Bryant scored 23 points in the half and
made the most spectacular basket of the game - although it didn't
count. The Lakers were trailing 31-27 when Bryant stripped the ball
from Brandon Roy, who immediately fouled Bryant to prevent a
breakaway. Bryant shot it anyway from about 5 feet behind the
midcourt line - and it went in to the delight of the sellout
crowd.
``That was a good indication that I was
hot tonight,'' Bryant said with a laugh. ``You throw something up
like that and it goes in, that's a pretty good indication that your
fingers are burning a little bit. I asked for it, but they said it
came a little too late.''
Portland's Travis Outlaw, who played less
than 8 minutes in the first three quarters and had only one point,
scored 10 points during a 3:34 span of the fourth to help Portland
grab an 83-79 lead.
Bryant made eight shots from 18 feet or
farther during his fourth-quarter surge to keep the Lakers close -
including four from 3-point range. Two came 52 seconds apart,
slicing Portland's lead to 96-95 with 49 seconds remaining. His last
3-pointer tied it at 98 with 17.2 seconds left.
``Kobe just made MVP-type plays,'' Roy
said. ``He made every shot down the stretch. We were trying to do
things to stop him. It was a great game to play in. But we need to
figure out a way to stop great players down the stretch.''
Portland called a time out to set up a
possible winning shot, but Randolph missed an off-balance 3-pointer
with Maurice Evans' hand in his face, forcing overtime.
Lamar Odom had 15 points, nine rebounds
and six assists for Los Angeles in his second game back in the
lineup, after sitting out the previous five because of a torn labrum
in his left shoulder.
Ime Udoka had 19 points for the Blazers,
who have lost five of their last six and three straight. Portland
was missing Raef LaFrentz, Darius Miles and Joel Pryzbilla, who left
the Feb. 21 game against the Lakers with a sore left knee and
underwent arthroscopic surgery on March 6.
The Blazers, who shot a season-best .597
from the field against the Lakers in a 112-108 victory on Feb. 21 at
Staples Center, trailed 46-43 at halftime in the rematch despite a
15-0 run that gave them a nine-point lead in the first quarter.
Bryant was called for a foul while
jockeying with Randolph for position away from the ball with 3:21
left in the half and the Lakers ahead 36-34. Bryant argued with
referee Sean Corbin and received a technical foul, which was
converted by Randolph.
``It's been frustrating,'' said Bryant,
who barely avoided his third one-game suspension of the season after
smacking Philadelphia's Kyle Korver in the face last week. ``People
want to say I'm a dirty player, and to me it's just absolutely
absurd and ridiculous. I just want to put all that stuff behind us
and just move on from it.''
Notes: Saturday marks the 34th anniversary
of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's 50-point game against the Lakers, for
Milwaukee in the Bucks' 123-107 loss at the Forum. He had eight
50-point games in his NBA career. ... The Lakers didn't get back to
Los Angeles until about 6 a.m. local time following Thursday's game
at Denver. Shortly after takeoff, their chartered plane had to go
back to the airport because of limited cabin pressure. The change in
planes delayed the team's return by about 4 hours. |