The Los Angeles Lakers scraped past the Houston Rockets 107-98, but don’t let the final score fool you. This was a grind, not a statement, exposing more questions than answers for both squads.
THE EDIT
- Luke Kennard exploded for 27 points, hitting a perfect 5-5 from deep. Where has this been all season?
- LeBron James dished out 13 assists, showing he’s still the engine. But 19 points isn’t enough for a true superstar carry job.
- The Rockets’ Tari Eason went 7-7 from the field for 16 points in just 24 minutes. Why was he glued to the bench for so long?
The Lakers secured the win at crypto.com Arena, improving their record to 53-29. Houston dropped to 52-30. This was a battle, not a blowout.
The score was tight early. The Lakers led 33-29 after the first quarter. Houston clawed back, winning the second quarter 19-17.
LAKERS’ RELIANCE ON OLD HABITS
Luke Kennard was the unexpected hero, dropping a game-high 27 points. His 5-5 shooting from three-point range was clutch. He kept the Lakers afloat.
LeBron James, as always, orchestrated the offense. He finished with 19 points, 8 rebounds, and a massive 13 assists. He even had 8 assists in the first quarter alone. That’s vintage LeBron.
Deandre Ayton provided the muscle inside. He posted a strong 19 points and grabbed 11 rebounds. Marcus Smart added 15 points and 8 assists, plus 2 blocks.
Rui Hachimura contributed 14 points, along with 3 steals and 2 blocks. The Lakers needed every bit of it. They relied on individual brilliance, not cohesive team play.
The lead swelled to 16 points after back-to-back threes from LeBron James and Luke Kennard. That was the turning point. But it shouldn’t have been that close.
ROCKETS’ MISSED OPPORTUNITY
Houston had their chances. Alperen Sengun led the Rockets with 19 points, 8 rebounds, and 6 assists. But he shot a dismal 6-19 from the field. That’s not winning basketball.
Amen Thompson chipped in 17 points, 7 rebounds, and 7 assists. Reed Sheppard also scored 17 points, hitting 5-14 from three. Volume shooting, but not efficient enough.
Jabari Smith Jr. had a double-double with 16 points and 12 rebounds. The talent is there. The execution is not.
The biggest head-scratcher? Tari Eason. He was perfect from the field, going 7-7 for 16 points. He also grabbed 10 rebounds and had 3 steals.
Yet, he only played 24 minutes. That’s a coaching decision that screams missed opportunity.
Why keep your most efficient scorer on the bench? This is the kind of mismanagement that costs games.
It leaves you wondering about the locker room dynamics. Are players being held back?
THE REALITY CHECK
The Lakers got the win. Their record looks good at 53-29. But this wasn’t a dominant performance.
They needed a career night from Luke Kennard to seal it.
LeBron James is still a wizard with the ball. But he can’t do it alone every night. The team’s reliance on him is a ticking clock.
The Rockets, despite their 52-30 record, showed their immaturity. They have individual talent. They lack the killer instinct to close out big games.
Their coaching staff needs to answer for Tari Eason’s limited minutes.
The playoff brackets are set. Both teams are in the mix. But this game revealed the Lakers are still too dependent on heroics.
The Rockets are still too inconsistent. Neither team looks like a true contender after this showing.
This win for the Lakers feels more like a sigh of relief than a roar of triumph. It’s a reminder that star power can only take you so far.
The Rockets learned a hard lesson about efficiency and coaching strategy. Will they adapt, or will this be their ceiling?










