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James and Davis make it rain to douse Blazers' hopes

China Daily | Updated: 2020-08-24 10:23
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Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James gets a hand to the ball ahead of Portland Trail Blazers guard Gary Trent Jr. during Saturday's NBA first-round playoff game in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. AP

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Florida-More of a spectator than a supporter for LeBron James in the first half, Anthony Davis had a message for his teammate.

"I told LeBron at half I've got to take some of the pressure off of him," Davis said.

With both superstars rolling and another dominant defensive effort, the Lakers again looked like the best of the West.

James had 38 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists, Davis scored 23 of his 29 points in the second half, and the Lakers beat the Portland Trail Blazers 116-108 on Saturday night for a 2-1 lead in the first-round series.

The Lakers shut down the high-scoring Blazers for the second straight game after the No 1 seed was knocked off in Game 1. This was Portland's highest-scoring performance in the series and it wasn't close to good enough.

"That's just who we've always been," James said. "That has not changed since the first day we stepped on the floor at training camp."

Damian Lillard scored 34 points playing with a dislocated left index finger, and CJ McCollum added 28 for the Trail Blazers. Game 4 is on Monday.

Davis scored 31 points in Game 2 but had only six at halftime on Saturday. Coach Frank Vogel thought the power forward was trying to move the ball and make the right play-he finished with eight assists-but looked for his own offense in the second half. "AD, he just turned it on," Vogel said.

Portland was down only three with about 9 1/2 minutes left. But Davis then reentered and started scoring from everywhere, turning lob passes into dunks or stepping outside for jumpers on his way to 12 points in the period.

The Lakers' defense handled the rest, limiting the Blazers to just three field goals over more than seven minutes as they pushed the lead to 109-98 with a little more than two minutes to go.

"It wasn't our night to make those shots," Lillard said. "The effort was there. The aggressiveness was there. We just didn't make the shots that we usually make."

Carmelo Anthony added 20 points. He was 4 for 17 in the first two games and he started Game 3 with seven straight misses before making his eighth-by tipping in his own miss.

The Blazers made a lineup change, inserting Hassan Whiteside to play alongside Jusuf Nurkic in a big starting five. The unit got Portland off to a good start and the Blazers nursed the early lead all the way through the second quarter without ever really stopping James, who was 5 for 6 for 15 points in eight minutes in the period. But McCollum capped his 13-point period with a 3-pointer from the corner at the buzzer, making it 57-53.

James and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope combined for 12 straight points to send the Lakers from six down to a 70-64 lead. The Blazers came back behind Anthony, who made three straight jumpers before a dunk on the break tied it at 72.

The Lakers surged back with a 10-0 burst to lead 89-78 and they led by seven entering the fourth.

"It came down to a fourth-quarter game. Anthony Davis made his perimeter shots and we came up empty too often," Blazers coach Terry Stotts said.

Lillard was hurt in Game 2 and hadn't done anything on the court until arriving early Saturday to test the finger, which was wrapped in black tape. It didn't appear to have much effect on his ball-handling or shooting for much of the game but he faltered in the fourth, going 1 for 6 and missing all four 3-pointers.

Associated Press

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