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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Tania Ganguli

LeBron leads Lakers over short-handed Pacers

LOS ANGELES_LeBron James stood near the free throw line under the Indiana Pacers' basket, while teammate Kyle Kuzma shot a free throw at the opposite end of the court.

"Come on, LeBron, I need more from you tonight!" one fan yelled from the section behind him.

The problem wasn't James, who had 22 points, six assists and five rebounds at that time. But the Lakers had just blown a 24-point first-half lead and were at that moment fighting for a game that should have been so much easier.

The Lakers defeated the Pacers 104-96, in a game that saw the Pacers take a three-point lead in the third quarter, eliciting boos from fans at Staples Center.

In the end, James took over and helped secure the win. In his 38 minutes, James finished with 38 points on 15-of-27 shooting, 12 of them in the fourth quarter. He had nine rebounds and seven assists and also took a charge midway through the fourth quarter with the Lakers up by three.

"That's the challenge of things I've been kind of battling with since the season started," James said. "How much do I defer and allow some of our young guys to kind of try to figure it out and how much do I try to take over games? I think tonight was one of those instances where they looked at me and they wanted me to close the game. I just tried to make plays."

Said Lakers coach Luke Walton: "LeBron was spectacular."

With the win, the Lakers improved to 12-9 while the Pacers, who were playing without All-Star guard Victor Oladipo, fell to 13-9.

Kuzma, Brandon Ingram, Josh Hart and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope each scored in double figures for the Lakers, who had a 38-15 lead after one quarter but saw it trimmed to 56-50 at the half.

Domantas Sabonis led the Pacers off the bench with 20 points and 15 rebounds.

Everything went right for the Lakers in the first quarter. They opened on a 13-0 run and didn't let the Pacers get comfortable. Indiana made only five of 25 shot attempts while the Lakers shot 69.6 percent and notched seven blocks. Lonzo Ball, Ingram and JaVale McGee each had two while Tyson Chandler had one.

"JaVale's first contest of the game was incredible and it kind of set the tone," Walton said.

The Lakers' 23-point lead in the first quarter was their biggest first-quarter lead since January 9, 2004, when they had a 28-point advantage against the Atlanta Hawks.

That prosperity didn't last.

Indiana outscored them 35-18 in the second quarter, notching twice as many fast-break points as the Lakers. Sabonis scored 14 points in the second quarter.

"I thought we played three quarters of really nice basketball, and one quarter of awful basketball," Walton said.

In the second and third quarters, the Lakers missed 10 consecutive three-pointers. During that stretch, back-to-back threes helped the Pacers take a three-point lead at 69-66, with Tyreke Evans scoring the go-ahead bucket. James then scored five quick points with a fadeaway and a three-pointer that finally broke the Lakers' drought.

Then the game bent to James' will and the Lakers never trailed again.

"Today he was really aggressive, played with a chip on his shoulder," Hart said. "When you have that, you want to get stops and get the ball in his hands."

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