LOS ANGELES -- They don't have a nickname or a much of a reputation -- except for being inferior to most of the reserves they're playing against these
days.
And the Los Angeles Lakers' substitutes don't much care.
"We have three All-Stars," Rick Fox said, referring to Shaquille O'Neal,
Kobe Bryant and Glen Rice. "We at times are left wide open, we at times make
things happen.
"It's the bench that gets the criticism when we lose."
Entering the Western Conference finals, it was the bench that many thought
gave the Portland Trail Blazers an advantage.
Maybe so, but not in the second quarter Saturday as the Lakers blew the game
open on their way to a 109-94 victory in Game 1 of the best-of-7 series.
"Every bench in the league outscored our bench," said Robert Horry, who
led the way for the Lakers' reserves with 12 points -- all in the second
quarter. "We don't worry about that, we're just doing our job. We just go out
and play."
Horry and his mates went out and performed superbly after the Lakers and
Blazers battled to a 26-all tie after one period, combining for 20 points as
Los Angeles outscored Portland 37-16 for a 63-42 halftime lead.
Portland made it interesting in the fourth quarter, drawing within nine
points with five minutes left. But that was as close as the Blazers would get
as the Lakers overcame their tactics of continually fouling O'Neal by stopping
them at the other end of the court.
"We were just clicking today, on the offense end and on the defensive
end," Brian Shaw said of the reserves. "If we're hitting our shots like that,
it's going to be easier for Shaq."
With Horry scoring his 12 points, Shaw adding five points and Fox three in
the second period, the trio combined to make 7-of-9 shots -- including 5-of-7
from behind the 3-point line -- in outscoring the Blazers by themselves.
"Their bench hurt us," Blazers coach Mike Dunleavy said. "They made some
big shots, and stretched our defense with their 3-point shooting."
They reserves also impressed Bryant, who was held to an uncharacteristically
low 13 points.
"We're deeper than we thought," he admitted. "But the bench has been
doing a nice job for us all playoffs long coming in and hitting some big shots
for us and getting the momentum going."
Perhaps so, but it was the Sacramento Kings who had the "Bench Mob," and
the Phoenix Suns who had Rodney Rogers, the NBA's Sixth Man of the Year.
The Lakers beat both teams earlier in the playoffs with some help from their
reserves, and now they're up against the club considered to have more talent on
their bench than anyone.
"They're the better bench," Fox admitted. "Their bench outplayed our
bench. We've heard this talk before. I don't think we played any different than
we have all year."
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| Kobe Bryant (right) gets 2 against Brian Grant, but is held to just 13 points.(AP) | |
Portland's substitutes wound up with 41 points in 79 minutes, while the
Lakers' reserves had 28 points in 66 minutes. But the events of the second
quarter proved decisive.
Horry's first 3-point shot came with the Lakers leading 30-28 and triggered
a 14-0 run, with Horry scoring nine of the points and Fox capping the spurt
with his 3-pointer.
The advantage was 24 points before the end of the second period.
"It's just one of those days where you're shooting the rock, it's falling,
the guys are looking for you," Horry said of his performance. "Everybody's
double-teaming Shaq, some times tripling him. A lot of teams like to sag off
our (power forwards).
"I just took my shots when I had them. I wasn't being aggressive, I just
took the shots they gave me. Once I make two shots, I'm going to take that
third one, test that gun to make sure it's working."
It was in this game.
"Robert played very well," O'Neal said. "I think Robert likes it when
they double me, he stepped up and shot the ball very well."
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