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Lakers take 3-1 series lead over Grizzlies behind LeBron James' 22-point, 20-rebound overtime performance

USA TODAY Sports

Just when you thought the Memphis Grizzlies were about to tie this series at two games apiece, the Los Angeles Lakers reminded the basketball world how they've managed to go 22-10 since the trade deadline. Trailing by seven with just over five minutes to go, three straight D'Angelo Russell 3-pointers dragged them back into the game. And then, with only 0.8 seconds remaining, LeBron James tied the score at 104 apiece with a high arcing, banked layup with Defensive Player of the Year Jaren Jackson Jr. in front of him.

The game went to overtime from there, and the Lakers took over. James made a layup with Dillon Brooks breathing down his neck to give the Lakers a five-point lead with under a minute left to go, and that effectively clinched it. After trailing the Grizzlies for most of the second half, the Lakers pulled together and took back a game they desperately needed. Now they can clinch the series on Wednesday in Memphis, and the Grizzlies will have to figure out what went wrong down the stretch. Here are the biggest takeaways from Game 4.

Better late than never

The theme of this game for the Lakers? Better late than never. It started in the fourth quarter. D'Angelo Russell, who hasn't shot 35% from the field for his career in the postseason, had been even worse thus far in this series. He was a defensive punching bag for Memphis at the end of Game 2, and through three games, he was shooting just 33.3% from the field and 28.6% from 3-point range against the Grizzlies. Darvin Ham took an enormous risk by reinserting him into the game down seven with around five minutes left. Russell rewarded him with three consecutive 3-pointers before fouling out.

The turnaround was even more stark for LeBron James and Anthony Davis. The Laker duo combined for 54.8 points per game during the regular season... but had just 23 through 47 minutes and 53 seconds of Game 4. And then, they flipped the script with the following sequence:

  • James makes the game-tying layup with 0.8 seconds remaining.
  • Davis blocks Morant's game-winning mid-range attempt.
  • Davis scores the first two points of overtime on a layup.
  • James scores the next two points of overtime on a layup.

In one minute and 17 seconds of game time, James and Davis turned a probable loss into a probable win. That is what superstars do. They can struggle for entire games... and then swing the outcome when it counts most. Davis, dealing with a hip injury suffered in the middle of the game, never got it going offensively. He didn't need to. He was once again so dominant on defense that the Lakers managed to make it to overtime with only 104 regulation points. James spent the entire game settling for jumpers. On the two biggest possessions of the night, he went to the rack and found the points the Lakers needed most. Throw in his 20 rebounds (giving him the first 20-20 postseason game of his career), and the two of them both found a way to win the Lakers a game they had no business winning.

Morant feeling the hand injury

Ja Morant managed 45 points on Saturday. The Grizzlies may have lost Game 3, but it was encouraging to see their star put up such a gaudy stat line. It suggested that in a closer game, Morant could still carry the Grizzlies across the finish line. Well... he got a closer game on Monday, and if he'd looked anything like he did on Saturday, the Grizzlies probably would have won. He ultimately shot 8-of-24 in defeat. That included a 1-of-6 line from the field in the fourth quarter and overtime.

So what happened? A few things worked against Morant. Part of his 45-point performance on Saturday relied on making six 3-pointers. As we've covered, the Lakers strategically sacrifice those shots by going under screens. They continued to do so on Monday, but Morant missed those shots. That's to be expected. Morant shot below 30% on pull-up 3's this season. To some extent, he just cooled off. Dennis Schroder's ball pressure also deserves a ton of credit.

But here's a stealthier explanation. In the third quarter, Morant took a hard fall after a layup and clearly aggravated his hand injury. He stayed in the game, but he was visibly in pain. Whether or not James took this into account is not clear, but twice in the second half, he managed to draw charges on Morant. On both occasions, the two of them fell hard onto the court, but Morant, starting in the air on both of them, clearly took the brunt of the falls. Morant is known for taking big falls. We can't say for certain if his aggression cost him this game, but he clearly played through pain, and those tumbles couldn't have helped matters.

All bark, no Brooks

Dillon Brooks has likely delivered more trash-talk towards LeBron James in this series than any opponent has in years. He stated publicly that he wanted to face James and "knock him out right away" before the postseason began. He called him old after Game 2 claimed that he doesn't respect an opponent until they've dropped 40 on him. Unless you count the 20 points and 20 rebounds James accumulated in Game 3 as 40 in the aggregate, LeBron hasn't quite lived up to that billing.

But he's come a whole lot closer to that figure than Brooks has. In two Los Angeles games, Brooks wound up shooting 7-of-22 from the field and 2-of-12 from 3-point range. He was ejected from Game 3 after hitting James in the groin. James went at him one-on-one on the pivotal possession of overtime and not only scored over him, but drew a foul in the process. Brooks didn't speak to reporters after either road game.

Only the Memphis locker room knows just how tiring Brooks' antics really are, but it is a universally accepted truth in basketball that you have to actually back up your trash talk with your play on the court. Brooks has played well defensively, but he's been an undeniable net negative in the series as a whole. They've been outscored by 14 points during his minutes, and he riled up an already excited Los Angeles crowd that gave the Lakers a major boost in both of the last two games. Throw in any extra motivation for a Lakers team that has rallied behind its leader and this series is turning out to be a borderline disaster for Brooks.

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Russell time

Back-to-back 3's from D'Angelo Russell cuts the seven-point lead to one. He's delivering after a really bad start to the series. Given the target he is defensively, he has to justify his minutes on offense, and boy, is he doing so right now.

 

The game-changing sequence

Desmond Bane smacks Austin Reaves in the face. No call. Anthony Davis pushes off Bane on the other end. It's called. That takes two points off the board for the Lakers. Bane makes a 3. Suddenly it's a seven-point game.

 
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A bold substitution

At the end of Game 2, the Grizzlies attacked D'Angelo Russell mercilessly. They picked on him on virtually every possession, and it made sense, as he is by far the worst Laker defender. Well, he's on the floor now late in the fourth. Expect the same out of Memphis. Russell will have to justify these minutes with offense.

 

Bane is the Lakers' reckoning

26 for Desmond Bane. He's been the best player on the court tonight. It's not coming from deep either. It's been a three-level scoring masterpiece. He's getting to the rim, creating clean mid-range looks and taking timely 3's when they present themselves.

 

Common foul

The officials reviewed that illegal screen on Jaren Jackson Jr., but it's only considered a common foul. That feels like the correct call even with it coming in the groin area, which has been a frequent problem this postseason.

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LeBron needs to drive

When LeBron James has hunted switches in this series, he's only really ever gotten jumpers out of it. It's such a stark contrast from his peak self, when he used to abuse those mismatches to get layups and dunks.

 

Grizzlies answer

LeBron James gets hit in the face, and the Grizzlies use numbers on the other end to pick up a Jaren Jackson Jr. layup. Jackson then blocks Reaves, and Tillman scores on the other end. Now Memphis has an 87-84 lead. It isn't clear when or if Anthony Davis will return to this game.

 
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Smart play call by the Lakers

That Austin Reaves 3 came on a pick-and-roll with Reaves screening for James. The idea was to force a switch, and Xavier Tillman got lost. That gave Reaves the room he needed to swish that 3 and give the Lakers an 84-83 lead. 

 
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Morant takes back the lead!

What a play! Tied at 81 apiece, Ja Morant just threw down a ferocious dunk as time expired in the third quarter. That gives the Grizzlies a two-point lead with 12 minutes remaining.

 

Crashing back to Earth

Rui Hachimura has been unstoppable in this series, but he's shooting just 1-of-5 tonight. The Lakers knew they couldn't expect Hachimura to play like a star all series. They're seeing his regression tonight.

 

Smart play by LeBron James

LeBron James draws the foul on that Ja Morant charge, but as distasteful as this is to say, James had another bit of motivation there. He knows Ja Morant tweaked his hand earlier in the quarter. By forcing the collision, he knew he'd force Morant to risk more pain. 

 

A tactical sacrifice

Three Lakers surrounded Ja Morant on that last possession. They left Dillon Brooks wide open and dared him to shoot. He made it, but that was the right decision. Without Anthony Davis on the floor, the Lakers simply can't protect the basket otherwise.

 

Anthony Davis isn't right

According to Chris Haynes on the TNT broadcast, Anthony Davis isn't right physically. He hurt his hip earlier in the game but has been playing through it. He has four points on 1-of-8 shooting.

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Austin Reaves making a difference already

Austin Reaves has a plus-1 point-differential. The other four Laker starters are all negative, and three of them are negative by double digits. He is the only player on the team right now that can both create his own shot on the perimeter and survive defensively. It's hard to believe given his age and draft status, but he is the third best player on the team right now. They're getting slaughtered whenever he sits.

 

Do the Lakers plan to run an offense?

Everything the Lakers are doing right now boils down to bad one-on-one shot creation. They have to actually run an offense and try to generate shots for their players. If LeBron James and Anthony Davis can't create good shots on their own, the Lakers have to beat the Grizzlies as a team.

 
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The Lakers are melting down

What on Earth are the Lakers doing? A nonsensical foul was just called a clear path foul, giving Memphis two shots and the ball while already up four. They're letting their frustration get the best of them, and this game is slipping away.

 

When do the Laker stars plan to show up?

Desmond Bane has 20 points. LeBron James and Anthony Davis have combined for 16. That cannot happen if the Lakers want to win this game. They have to figure out how to get their stars going.

 
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How do the Lakers keep losing Bane?

Desmond Bane is the only reliable 3-point shooter on the floor for Memphis, and yet the Lakers keep losing him off of the ball. Austin Reaves could help with that, but he's stuck on the bench with foul trouble. 

 

Ja Morant is back on the floor

It looked like Morant was headed out after hurting his hand on that layup, but he's staying in the game despite the injured hand, and he immediately makes a behind-the-back pass to Xavier Tillman for the lead. 

 
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Ja Morant in some pain

Ja Morant looks like he's headed back to the locker room after falling on the injured right hand on that game-tying layup. It's 66 apiece in the third quarter right now. When Morant left Game 1, the Lakers responded with a 15-0 run. Memphis will need him back quickly.

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Russell to the rescue

The Lakers badly needed a bit of a run from D'Angelo Russell, and they've gotten one. The Grizzlies are playing drop-coverage against Laker pick-and-rolls, and Russell just scored six straight points in floater range as a result.

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