Knicks hold off Lakers 114-109 despite LeBron's 109th triple-double
Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (L) dribbles the ball against New York Knicks guard RJ Barrett in the second half at Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles, California, U.S., Dec. 18, 2023. (Reuters Photo)


Jalen Brunson contributed 11 of his 29 points in the fourth quarter, leading the New York Knicks to a 114-109 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers on Monday, despite LeBron James achieving his 109th career triple-double.

Julius Randle had 27 points and 14 rebounds, and Immanuel Quickley scored 20 points while the Knicks hung tough in the final minutes and fended off a rally led by James to earn their second road win over the Lakers in 2023. New York went 2-2 on the Western portion of its five-game road trip.

"We took a step forward tonight, and we are going to try to keep moving forward," Brunson said. "We’re learning how to bounce back, but we’ve got to continue to stack wins. You can’t be comfortable after just one. Keep stacking them, keep being resilient and stick together."

James had 25 points, 11 assists and 11 rebounds for the Lakers, who have lost three of four since winning the inaugural In-Season Tournament. Anthony Davis had 32 points and 14 rebounds, but Los Angeles couldn’t capitalize on numerous chances down the stretch to close the gap.

James scored back-to-back baskets to cut the Knicks’ lead to 103-99 with 3:38 left, but Randle rattled home a desperate 3-pointer to beat the shot clock moments later. James missed a 3-pointer with 40 seconds to play that would have trimmed New York’s lead to two points and Randle cherry-picked a dunk on the other end.

"I feel like our energy was up and down throughout the course of the game," said James, who has two triple-doubles this season as the only player to get one in his 21st NBA season. "We’ve been feeling it, definitely. Even through that, we still competed and gave ourselves a chance, but it’s a tough one for us."

Los Angeles’ superstar duo was again let down by its supporting cast as the other Lakers combined for 33.3% shooting.

"It’s very rare we get outscored in the paint, and (the Knicks) were very deliberate in trying to play downhill, get to the paint, but just constantly coming at you," Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. "I felt like they caught us standing a little bit."

Randle scored 16 points in the first half against his former team, while Brunson contributed three 3-pointers in a strong all-around game as New York rebounded from losing to the Clippers two nights earlier.

The Knicks are already playing without injured center Mitchell Robinson, and big man Jericho Sims then sprained his ankle early on against the Lakers. Isaiah Hartenstein scored nine points and 17 rebounds while playing for nearly 39 minutes.

"We knew we would be challenged in this way to be mentally tough, to get through adversity," New York coach Tom Thibodeau said. "There’s going to be some bumps. We took on a big injury, and I think the guys that are stepping in have been terrific. You need everybody, and we’ve got different guys, someone different almost every night."

Austin Reaves scored 20 points for the Lakers, who couldn’t win despite getting Davis, D’Angelo Russell, and Cam Reddish back from injury after they all missed an embarrassing loss to San Antonio three nights earlier.

"It’s tough (because) for the whole month of December, we’ve basically been on the road," Davis said. "There’s nothing we can really do about it. It’s the schedule. We’ve just got to take care of our bodies and get some guys back, hopefully in the next few games. But it’s definitely a mental challenge."

Before their first home game since Dec. 5, the Lakers unveiled a banner celebrating their unbeaten run through the In-Season Tournament, culminating in their victory over Indiana in Las Vegas nine days ago.

With their fans providing polite cheers, the Lakers unveiled the modest black banner – which has room to add future championship years – next to the five Minneapolis Lakers championship banners. They’re all hung in a less-prominent spot on their downtown arena’s north wall, which is dominated by Los Angeles’ 12 gold title banners.