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Lakers vs. Grizzlies score, takeaways: Memphis takes down L.A. without Ja Morant to even series at 1-1

No Ja Morant? No problem for the Memphis Grizzlies on Wednesday night as they, essentially, controlled their matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers for all four quarters to even their best-of-seven series at 1-1 with a 103-93 victory. Thanks largely in part to a standout performance from Xavier Tillman, who finished with 22 points and 13 rebounds on 10-13 shooting, Memphis was able to pick up a big win and hold off a late run by LeBron James and the Lakers.

Now, these two teams will have another extended break with Game 3 in Los Angeles coming on Saturday. If Morant is healthy enough to go at that point, the Grizzlies could have a real opportunity to retake control of this series with a win on the road. If LeBron James is the only Lakers player who is efficient from the floor on Saturday, as Anthony Davis and D'Angelo Russell both struggled from the field tonight, it could be an uphill battle for Los Angeles if they want to take a 2-1 series lead. 

Here are the three biggest takeaways from Game 2.

1. Ancient shot-selection

The Lakers largely won Game 1 of this series from behind the arc. After starting the game 5-of-20 from deep, they proceeded to shoot 11-of-17 the rest of the way. It was, in part, a response to the defense the Grizzlies were playing. They helped off of just about every Laker shooter, and those shooters went on to punish them for it. The Grizzlies even acknowledged it after the game and effectively dared the Lakers to do it again.

Well, when the dust settled on Game 2, the Lakers had attempted only 26 3-pointers. At the trade deadline, they reshaped their entire supporting cast around the idea that LeBron James—especially in his 20th season—desperately needed more shooting around him. Yet on Wednesday, James attempted eight of their 26 3-pointers. That's over 30% of their total. The supporting cast that was added to shoot refused to even fire away.

The Grizzlies deserve some credit for that. They were more disciplined defensively, especially when it came to sticking to shooters. But the Memphis defense is still clearly oriented toward rim protection. Time and time again, a Laker drove into traffic, desperately tried to pass out of it, and turned the ball over in the process. In Game 1, the Lakers shot through the misses are were rewarded for it with a second-half explosion. That has to be their approach moving forward. They aren't beating the Defensive Player of the Year in the paint.

2. Tillman is the man

Jaren Jackson Jr. has been the best overall Grizzlies player in this series. There's an obvious solution that: let Anthony Davis defend him. The Lakers have largely avoided that matchup. Defending Jackson is a full-time job. Stick Davis on a lesser player, though, and he can give most of his attention to playing help defense. That's how he's racked up 12 blocks in two games. That lesser player, for the most part, has been Xavier Tillman.

Here's the twist: Tillman wasn't a lesser player on Wednesday. He was the leading scorer for the Grizzlies with 22 points on 10-of-13 shooting. To some extent, that was unavoidable. Tillman made four 3-pointers this season. If he wants to fire away from deep, guarding him would be irresponsible. But Davis needed to do a better job of balancing his help responsibilities with the man he was actually meant to guard. When he wasn't on Tillman, the rest of the team was even worse.

Right now, the Lakers are a small team. LeBron James is their backup center. That makes them vulnerable against just about any big man if his team is good enough at getting him the ball. That was the case on Wednesday, and it helped swing the game back to Memphis. 

3. One-way players

The Lakers seemingly did the impossible at the trade deadline when they managed to turn Russell Westbrook and only a single first-round pick into three usable role players: D'Angelo Russell, Malik Beasley and Jarred Vanderbilt. The reason this group cost only a single first-round pick? They are explicitly one-way players. Russell and Beasley play offense. Vanderbilt plays defense.

You can get away with having one-way players if they're actually thriving on the end of the floor they were acquired for. Things get a lot harder when they don't. The Grizzlies hunted D'Angelo Russell on almost every possession down the stretch. The idea was to get him isolated onto Desmond Bane, who frequently turned those matchups into free throws or good shots. If Russell had been making shots? The Lakers could've managed that weakness. But he shot 2-of-11 in Game 2. He wasn't helping on either end of the floor, and that was almost impossible for the Lakers to overcome when he played 30 total minutes.

There are moments when the same is true of Vanderbilt. When Ja Morant is healthy, Vanderbilt is a necessity in this series. He's the only Laker that can reliably stick with him defensively. Vanderbilt still played well defensively on Wednesday, but he wasn't as essential, and he cramped the Lakers' spacing. In the end, more Rui Hachimura might've been necessary.

There are teams that need to stick with rigid rotations. Certain players are more comfortable doing so, and there are rosters designed to stick with the same players every night. The Lakers have to be flexible. A player's flaws can only kill you when that player is actually on the floor. If Russell or Vanderbilt isn't justifying their minutes on one of the floor, then they might need to go to the bench for most of the night so the Lakers can lean on the players who are actually playing well.

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Live updates
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

Grizzlies winning the ball-control game

The Lakers have five turnovers, and have allowed eight points off of them. The Grizzlies have turned the ball over once, and the Lakers didn't score off of it. This shouldn't be a surprise. The Lakers have a tendency to get sloppy when they underestimate an opponent. Tyus Jones has the best assists-to-turnover ratio in basketball almost every year. In combination, this was always going to be an area of the game Memphis won.

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

Hachimura hot as ever

Rui Hachimura scored 29 points in Game 1. He's got five quick ones in Game 2, and the Memphis game-plan hasn't changed. The Grizzlies are still letting him shoot whenever he wants. He's just making all of the shots they're giving him.

 

A seven-point swing

In the span of a few seconds, one Lakers decision gave the Grizzlies seven free points. The Lakers left David Roddy wide open in the corner. He swished the 3-pointer. Then, when the Lakers went the other way, Luke Kennard stole the inbounds pass, made a 3 and got fouled on it. That turned a four-point game into an 11-point game.

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

The Grizzlies aren't taking jumpers

The Grizzlies have 14 points in this game thus far. All of them have come in the paint. This is unusual for a Lakers team that protects the rim as well as any team in the NBA, but the Grizzlies are attacking the rim with pace and it's caught the Lakers off-guard thus far.

 

Jaren Jackson Jr. is fine.

The Grizzlies big just needed to get his ankle re-taped. He's back on the game and will return shortly.

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

Jaren Jackson Jr. in the locker room

Jaren Jackson Jr. has a leg injury and has gone back to the locker room. It is unclear what exactly happened to him, but with Ja Morant also out, the Grizzlies are in serious trouble without their star big man as well.

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A sloppy start all around

We've played five minutes or so and seen just 15 total points. The two teams are a combined 0-7 from 3 and 6-of-21 from the field. It makes sense for the Grizzlies. They don't have their primary scorer and they're playing against an elite defense. But the Lakers? They've talked a big game about getting greedy and going back to Los Angeles with a 2-0 lead. So far, they haven't backed it up offensively.

 

LeBron settling for jumpers early

This happened in Game 1, and so far, it's been the case again in Game 2. LeBron James wants no part of Jaren Jackson Jr. near the basket. Instead he's settling for jumpers early on instead of driving to the rim when he gets the ball in the half-court. The Grizzlies are among the best rim-deterring defenses in the NBA, and so far, they've earned that title in this series.

 

Lakers sticking with the same matchups

Interesting note early on: the Lakers opened Game 1 with Jarred Vanderbilt guarding Ja Morant. The idea here was to put their best perimeter defender on the best Grizzlies scorer. This worked well, but it forced LeBron James to defend Jaren Jackson Jr. in the post. Jackson scored 31 points. In theory, Vanderbilt could've shifted onto Jackson with Morant out to save LeBron from that post matchup. But the Lakers have instead stuck with James on Davis and Vanderbilt on the point guard. In this case, that point guard just happens to be Tyus Jones, not Ja Morant.

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

Memphis must do better on the boards

In Game 1, the Grizzlies gave up 22 second-chance points to the Lakers, and I know what you're thinking, this wouldn't happen if Steven Adams wasn't injured. You're right, Adams' rebounding significantly helped the Grizzlies, but they don't have him right now. That means that Jaren Jackson Jr. -- or Mr. Defensive Player of the Year -- and Xavier Tillman need to clear the boards and not let the Lakers get multiple opportunities on offense. 

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@Lakers via Twitter
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@Lakers via Twitter
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Beating them at their own game

The Grizzlies ended the regular season as 1 of 2 teams to average 18+ fastbreak points per game. However, in Game 1, the Lakers had 26 fastbreak points, the most of any team so far in these playoffs and nine more than Memphis (17). If that happens again tonight, it could be a rough road for the Grizzlies. 

 
@Lakers via Twitter
 
@Lakers via Twitter
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 

History is on the Lakers' side

The Lakers have won their past 24 best-of-7 series after winning Game 1 (longest streak in NBA history). Obviously, that has very little impact on how Wednesday night's game will play out, or even this series moving forward, but that is one impressive statistic that is in Los Angeles' favor. 

 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@memgrizz via Twitter
 
@Lakers via Twitter
 

What, if anything, will Morant provide?

Ja Morant is considered a game-time decision for this matchup after taking a hard fall toward the end of Game 1. An MRI revealed an aggravation of soft tissue in Morant's hand. Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins said on Tuesday that Morant was progressing but it remains to be seen just how effective he can be if he winds up playing on Wednesday night.  

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