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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Dan Woike

‘We want Westbrook!’ chants aren’t enough to lift Lakers past disciplined Jazz

LOS ANGELES — Nearly 6,000 miles from the Crypto.com Arena in Limoges, France, a 7-foot-4 basketball prospect pushed the ball between his skyscraper legs before taking a one-footed three-point shot that swished through the rim, evoking some ungodly mix of Kevin Durant and Dirk Nowitzki.

This, everyone assumed, is where the Utah Jazz’s attentions would be.

Instead, the team that traded Donovan Mitchell, Rudy Gobert and Bojan Bogdanovic this offseason is the first in the Western Conference to seven wins, blitzing the lukewarm Los Angeles Lakers in a 130-116 win.

If Utah, organizationally, is trying to tank to the bottom of the standings for French prodigy Victor Wembanyama and projected No. 1 pick, no one has informed the players.

Friday, the Jazz were more disciplined, more skilled, more active and in the broadest sense, way better than the Lakers — a team with its eyes much more in the present.

But it just wasn’t that the Lakers lost — after all, it’s the sixth time it’s happened this season.

It was very much how they lost.

Offensively stunted for almost the entirety of their time together this season, the Lakers actually made shots in bulk on Friday.

Russell Westbrook, still thriving in his role as the team’s sixth man, scored 28 points on just 14 shots, again playing with the force and energy that were absent as a miscast starter deferring to LeBron James and Anthony Davis.

Four others scored at least 12 points and seven players connected on threes.

It was part of one of the Lakers’ best offensive nights of the year.

They hit 42.3% of their threes, were 89.3% on 28 free throws and made 48.2% of their total field goals — numbers that would’ve made them runaway winners in much of their earlier schedule.

They weren’t even particularly sloppy — 11 turnovers an acceptable number for a team playing as quickly as the Lakers.

But everything the Lakers have vowed would be the ingredients of their foundation — toughness, defensive-minded effort, force and hustle all vanished against a team that the league at large should probably no longer overlook.

Lauri Markkanen, one of the pieces the Jazz scored from Cleveland for Mitchell scored 27, showcasing the size and skill that once made him a lottery pick. Collin Sexton, another part of the Mitchell deal, zipped past every Lakers defender and scored 17 off the bench.

Kelly Olynyk, a bit of a journeyman who landed in Utah from Detroit, scored 18 on only 10 shots. Jordan Clarkson, one of the Lakers’ trade targets in Westbrook discussions this summer, scored 20. And Mike Conley, the veteran point guard who the Lakers didn’t want included in any Westbrook deal scenarios, had 15 and 10 assists.

Malik Beasley was one for seven and Rudy Gay missed both of his shots. The rest of the Jazz shot better than 54% from the field, torching what was the NBA’s third-ranked defense.

“They played hard and they played together,” Westbrook said.

Utah scored 40 points in the first quarter and 75 in the first half, the Lakers never able to turn off the persistent faucet of points that poured in at least 30 points in three of the game’s four quarters.

Davis, who was questionable to play after missing Friday’s shootaround to rest his ailing back, scored 22 points and grabbed eight rebounds.

James and Lonnie Walker each scored 17, though James continued to struggle.

He’s missed 13 straight three-point shots dating to the fourth quarter of the Lakers’ win against Denver.

If there were positives beyond the general offensive performance, it was Westbrook — who continued to rebuild his reputation with Lakers fans after another strong game.

In the fourth quarter, a “We want Westbrook” chant caught steam. And, later some fans even chanted “MVP.”

With the way the Lakers have played this season, normally it would’ve been more than good enough.

But Friday, against the team that was supposed to be in the tank, it made it so the Lakers’ flattening happened only more gradually.

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