LeBron James and the Lakers emerged victorious in front of the franchise’s first sellout playoff crowd in 10 years, delivering a spectacular performance in the opening quarter that ranks among the team’s finest moments.
Los Angeles leaped to a 35-9 lead amidst one raucous ovation after another from fans eager for a return to the Lakers’ tradition of playoff success.
After all those first-quarter fireworks, Ja Morant could not carry the Memphis Grizzlies back to prevent the Lakers from seizing Game 3.
Anthony Davis had 31 points and 17 rebounds, James finished with 25 points after Dillon Brooks was ejected for striking him in the groin, and Los Angeles survived Morant’s 24-point fourth quarter to beat the Grizzlies 111-101 Saturday night for a 2-1 lead in their first-round playoff series.
Rui Hachimura scored 16 points in another strong effort off the bench for the seventh-seeded Lakers, who came out impressively in this long-awaited return to an authentic playoff atmosphere for a franchise with 17 titles. Los Angeles tied an NBA record by taking a 26-point lead into the second quarter, and Memphis couldn’t get closer than 13 points until the final two minutes.
Brooks was ejected 17 seconds into the second half after the Memphis agitator struck James in the groin while guarding him near mid-court. While the top scorer in NBA history rolled on the court in pain, officials tossed Brooks after a brief video review – and James stood up and led the Lakers to victory.
"I didn’t make a statement," James said. "I’ve been doing this too long. I’m not making any statements. We had the opportunity to come home and play well on our home floor, and we did that. No statement was made. We just wanted to play well, and we got a win. I don’t need to make statements."
Game 4 is Monday night in Los Angeles.
Morant scored 45 points in his return from a one-game absence with a sore right hand, even scoring 22 consecutive points for the Grizzlies during his stunning fourth quarter while they attempted to rally from an early 29-point deficit. He wore a black brace and padding on his hand and appeared tentative early but eventually found his usual unguardable form.
Morant also had 13 assists and nine rebounds, but second-seeded Memphis couldn’t fully recover after the lowest-scoring first quarter in franchise history.
"I think we won by double digits in the last three quarters, so obviously, that first quarter pretty much hurt us," Morant said. "(I) feel pretty good, man. Some stuff you’ve just got to play through and tolerate. ... In that fourth quarter, I was trying to win the game. Got it going pretty good, making shots, and just couldn’t get it over that hump."
With the Lakers’ sellout crowd booing his every move, Brooks had just seven points on 3-for-13 shooting before his ejection. He drew the Lakers fans’ ire for his behavior during and after Game 2, when the 27-year-old Brooks called the 38-year-old James "old" and belittled James’ abilities.
Brooks declined to speak to reporters after the game. Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins only commented tersely on Brooks’ ejection: "Officials made a call."
This rivalry stayed chippy in the third quarter, with Lakers forward Hachimura getting a technical foul for a furious reaction to a foul.
Aside from the physical play, the Lakers were in control of Game 3 until the Grizzlies made it mildly interesting late, never getting closer than nine points.
"First quarter, I thought we were playing hard, (but) our offense significantly impacted our defensive ability," Jenkins said. "The way our guys fought for quarters 2, 3 and 4 showed a lot of great resiliency. We’ve got to learn to get better from this. Adversity is going to bring out the best in us."
Desmond Bane scored 18 points for the Grizzlies.
Lakers fans ripped into Brooks in pregame warmups each time he touched the ball before his ejection. But, more importantly, the Lakers played with a similar edge from the opening tip.
The Grizzlies flailed offensively in the first quarter, going 3 for 25 with six turnovers. Brooks was evil, missing 10 of his first 12 shots and making little impact on defense.
"I thought our crowd was phenomenal," Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. "Really felt them in the building. Thank God we gave them something to cheer about, the way we came out."