Lakers star Lebron James takes the game to the hoop during a 127-113 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies at Crypto.com Arena Friday night. (Luis Sinco/Los Angeles Times)
Darvin Ham got his chance early Friday night to make a statement. Two hours later, it was the Lakers‘ turn.
Facing what could be called a midseason crisis, the Lakers needed to approach Friday with the kind of attention and force the moment demanded, a chance to end a losing streak before hosting the red-hot Clippers on Sunday.
But instead of failing to meet the moment with effort, the Lakers, in some ways just as they did against the Miami Heat on Wednesday, failed to meet the moment with competency, replacing turnovers and bricks for slow closeouts on shooters and panicked late-game offense.
Read more: Thanks to Orlando Magic, Shaquille O’Neal becomes 2nd NBA player with 3 retired jerseys
Despite trailing by as many as 13 points in the first half, the Memphis Grizzlies shot their way past the Lakers in the fourth quarter of a 127-113 victory, outscoring L.A. by 14 in the final period.
“We just suck right now,” LeBron James said.
As Desmond Bane and Marcus Smart swished home dagger three-pointers, boos and murmurs replaced the early energy the Lakers helped ignite.
James hit his first four threes in the first quarter, skipping his way across the court to celebrate. Anthony Davis roared and muscled his way to 31 points. And Austin Reaves had 19 points and a career-best 12 assists.
Lakers coach Darvin Ham, right, watches as LeBron James skips across the court after hitting a three-pointer in the first quarter against Memphis on Friday. (Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)
But as the Lakers’ offense stalled — one of the worst in the league will do that from time to time — Memphis got hot and stayed hot. The Grizzlies made 23 threes — the most given up by the Lakers this season.
“We’ve got to do better as players to affect them to miss shots,” Reaves said. “… We have to take it upon ourselves to do better.”
Entering the game, Memphis was the worst shooting team in the NBA. The Grizzlies shot 51.1% from the field Friday as the Lakers went under screens and trudged into closeouts.
The Lakers’ timidity late didn’t match Ham’s defiance early.
“They shot the hell out of the ball,” Ham said of the Grizzlies.
Before the game, amid external scrutiny about his job performance, the Lakers’ coach said he felt affirmed about his standing with the organization.
“It comes with the territory. I’m solid,” Ham said. “My governor, Jeanie Buss, the boss lady; our president,