SPORT / MISCELLANY
Lakers out of contention
Irving scores 42 as Nets top Rockets, stay in hunt
Published: Apr 06, 2022 06:31 PM
Dwight Howard (No.39) of the Los Angeles Lakers shoots the ball during the game against the Phoenix Suns on April 5, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. Photo: VCG

Dwight Howard (No.39) of the Los Angeles Lakers shoots the ball during the game against the Phoenix Suns on April 5, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. Photo: VCG

The Los Angeles Lakers were officially eliminated from postseason contention on Tuesday as the Phoenix Suns sent the crisis-stricken NBA giants spinning to a seventh straight defeat.

With an injured LeBron James watching from the sidelines, the Lakers' faint hopes of scraping into the playoffs were snuffed out as the Western Conference leaders turned on the style to complete a convincing 121-110 win in Phoenix.

The Los Angeles defeat - and San Antonio's 116-97 win over the Denver Nuggets earlier Tuesday - mean the Lakers will not be in the postseason for the first time since 2019.

It is only the fourth time since James entered the league in 2003 that the NBA superstar has failed to reach the postseason.

"We're extremely disappointed," Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. "Disappointed for our fanbase, disappointed for the [ownership], that gave us this opportunity.

"We wanted to play our part in bringing success to Laker basketball and we fell short. It's not been due to a lack of effort. We have all put in the work. 

"Guys stayed fighting right to the end. We brought integrity to the process we just fell short through a disjointed season. We're all disappointed."

Tuesday's loss brings the curtain down on a miserable campaign for the Lakers.

A decision to rebuild their roster last year in a blockbuster trade for Russell Westbrook has been a spectacular failure, accentuated by a long-term injury to Anthony Davis that kept the star forward sidelined for roughly half the season.

A pall of gloom shrouded the NBA's most glamorous franchise in recent weeks, as loss after costly loss piled up to leave the 17-time NBA champions needing a miraculous sequence of results to somehow scrape into the play-in tournament.

Before Tuesday's game, social media had been ablaze with speculation that the Lakers will move quickly to fire beleaguered coach Vogel, who led the team to the NBA championship in 2020.

Philadelphia 76ers coach Doc Rivers and Utah Jazz coach Quin Snyder have both been linked to the Lakers hot seat.

'Playing for our lives'

With San Antonio clinching victory over Denver well before the Lakers-Suns game had finished, Los Angeles knew that only a win would do in Phoenix.

But after a bright opening they were rapidly outclassed.

The Suns surged into a 59-50 lead shortly before halftime and kept the hammer down in the third quarter, Devin Booker draining a three-point jump shot to put Phoenix 84-65 ahead before the Suns pulled 26 points clear.

Booker led the scoring for Phoenix with 32 points, with Deandre Ayton adding 22.

Vogel said knowledge of San ­Antonio's win over Denver had not changed his team's approach against Phoenix.

"We've been playing for our lives for the last five, six, seven games," Vogel said. "It didn't change anything."

Westbrook, meanwhile, could not pinpoint how the Lakers' season had gone awry.

"There's not one thing," Westbrook said. "There's so many different things that happened but I don't like to point fingers or blame anybody."

The playoff picture in the Eastern Conference became clearer with Toronto and Chicago both clinching postseason berths. 

Toronto assured themselves of a playoff spot after defeating Atlanta 118-108 while rivals Cleveland slumped to a 120-115 loss in Orlando.

Chicago meanwhile were thumped 127-106 by the NBA champion Milwaukee Bucks but also secured a playoff place thanks to Cleveland's loss in Florida.

Cleveland and Atlanta are both assured of places in the play-in tournament next week.

Elsewhere, Kyrie Irving scored 42 points as the Brooklyn Nets led most of the way and picked up a crucial 118-105 victory over the Houston Rockets on Tuesday night in New York.

Brooklyn (41-38) moved into a tie for eighth place, alongside the ­Atlanta Hawks, and one game ahead of the Charlotte Hornets. The Nets also moved within 1 1/2 games of the seventh-place Cleveland Cavaliers.

Irving made 13 of 24 shots (54.2 percent) after shooting 12 of 32 (37.5 percent) Saturday in a seven-point loss at Atlanta. On Tuesday, he hit eight three-pointers, including consecutive threes that gave Brooklyn a 95-84 lead with 7:40 remaining after Houston had sliced a 21-point deficit to six.

Irving then converted a three-point play with 3 1/2 minutes left for a 107-95 lead. He converted another three-point play after beating the shot clock with 2:44 remaining, putting Brooklyn up 111-98.

Irving's best showing since being allowed to play home games occurred on a quiet night for Kevin Durant, who followed up his 55-point showing Saturday by finishing with 18 points on four-of-13 shooting Tuesday. He made nine of 10 free throws to make up for the poor field-goal performance.

Bruce Brown added 15 points, Cam Thomas contributed 13 and Andre Drummond totaled 10 points and 11 ­rebounds for Brooklyn, which was missing Seth Curry (sore left ankle), Goran Dragic (health and safety protocol) and James Johnson (non-COVID illness).