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LeBron James made his much-anticipated debut with the Los Angeles Lakers Thursday night.
Here’s what you may have missed in Portland’s 128-119 win:
First reaction to LeBron’s Lakers
The season opener only supported the preconceived notions we held about the Lakers coming into Thursday: Los Angeles can run (outscoring Portland 34-12 on fastbreak points); Los Angeles can’t shoot (starting 0-for-15 from 3 en route to a 7-for-30 night); and Los Angeles is much better when LeBron James in on the floor than when he’s not (Lakers were outscored by five points in the 10:40 that James sat). Another thing we knew: LeBron struggles to get wins in Portland, losing his sixth in a row at the Moda Center; Los Angeles has lost 16 straight games overall to the Trail Blazers. — Dave McMenamin
Every NBA team scores better in transition than half court, but we saw in Thursday’s loss in Portland why this difference might be pronounced for the Lakers. They were terrifying when they ran off turnovers, misses and even the occasional make, using their quickness and multiple ballhandlers to get easy scores. But too often the Lakers’ offense bogged down in the half court due to lack of shooting. The Lakers missed their first 15 3-point attempts, and while they’ll improve on that, offseason concerns about adding non-shooters were validated Thursday — when a 34-12 edge in fast-break points wasn’t enough. — Kevin Pelton
With 3:18 left in the third quarter, trailing by three, the Lakers went to a small-ball lineup featuring two point guards (Rajon Rondo and Lonzo Ball), Josh Hart, Lance Stephenson and Kyle Kuzma at center. They played fast and got hot early, with Hart and Rondo making the team’s first two 3s of the night, rushing L.A. out to a lead. The Trail Blazers countered by playing big, controlling the paint and going on a run, but Hart hit a trey at the buzzer to end that session with the Lakers having shaved a point off the lead. That lineup is one to watch going forward. — Andre Snellings
Welcome To Showtime
Lebron James ��
– Todd Gurley II (@TG3II) October 19, 2018
LeBron throws it down for his first @Lakers bucket! ��#LakeShow pic.twitter.com/0cPpSrWaHc
– NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) October 19, 2018
Nonsense��
– Donovan Mitchell (@spidadmitchell) October 19, 2018
Poetry in motion… LeBron James’ first basket with the @Lakers! #PhantomCam pic.twitter.com/tnOQXXLJXH
– NBA (@NBA) October 19, 2018
LeBron’s first dunk as a Laker from every angle
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More live reaction
LeBron James (26 pts, 12 reb, 6 ast) finishes with the 2nd-most points in a Lakers debut in franchise history.
Back at it in L.A. on Saturday. pic.twitter.com/n7rsqKjKKg
– Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) October 19, 2018
Call me crazy, but Swaggy P could help the Lakers. #shootersneeded
– Tim MacMahon (@espn_macmahon) October 19, 2018
I’m right here
– Nick Young (@NickSwagyPYoung) October 19, 2018
Dame was NOT having it with all this LeBron-Laker stuff in HIS crib!!!
– Freddie Coleman (@ColemanESPN) October 19, 2018
Too easy. �� pic.twitter.com/zwk7hE0BXE
– NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) October 19, 2018
A concern heading into the season was whether the Lakers had enough perimeter shooting around LeBron James. In the first half, the Lakers opened the season going 0-for-12 from behind the arc. Brandon Ingram and Lance Stephenson were both 0-for-3 from 3-point range. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, whom the Lakers are hoping will be one of their best shooters this season, made two free throws but was 0-for-0 from the floor in the half.
Lakers F Mo Wagner rookie duties include:
Putting Lebron’s seat cushion down �� pic.twitter.com/KqrsTNmhUl
– Grind City Media (@grindcitymedia) October 19, 2018
LeBron and Nik Stauskas go way back pic.twitter.com/1gmxuWGy0G
– Brian Windhorst (@WindhorstESPN) October 19, 2018
Random guys ALWAYS have big games vs LeBron teams.
In Miami, fans used to use the hashtag #RSHK
Today’s guy: Nik Stauskas
– Jorge Sedano (@SedanoESPN) October 19, 2018
LeBron James scored 13 points in the first quarter.
This is the most points LeBron has ever scored in the first quarter of a season opener. His previous mark was 12 points in 2003 (his NBA debut) and in 2005. pic.twitter.com/QxKu1gPdlu
– ESPN Stats & Info (@ESPNStatsInfo) October 19, 2018
LeBron already has the Lakers locked all the way in. Not many teams set the tone by picking up full court in the NBA on defense. BI is everywhere! And on offense, their pace of play is fast and intentional.
Just like that, there’s an entire culture shift for the Lakers.
– Chiney Ogwumike (@Chiney321) October 19, 2018
The Lakers did get the first bucket after LeBron went to the bench, but this looked similar to Cleveland. https://t.co/Ls3S7t3krZ
– Kevin Pelton (@kpelton) October 19, 2018
“Anytime y’all fall, stay down. Your brother’ll come pick you up.” – @KingJames pic.twitter.com/E46MXQwDk4
– Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) October 19, 2018
Ok, I’m entertained! #dunkcity #ripcity #lakers
– Ramona Shelburne (@ramonashelburne) October 19, 2018
The King has Arrived
LeBron James is introduced for the 1st time as a Laker. pic.twitter.com/Wh3RhY1IJ4
– NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) October 19, 2018
LeBron & the @Lakers take the floor in Portland. #LakeShow pic.twitter.com/d1giHpJu77
– NBA on TNT (@NBAonTNT) October 19, 2018
LeBron getting ready for his first regular season game as a Laker pic.twitter.com/UVlekVvPin
– Ohm Youngmisuk (@NotoriousOHM) October 19, 2018
LeBron James clocks in for his @Lakers debut in #PhantomCam!
��: #LakeShow x #RipCity
⏰: 10:30pm/et
��: @NBAonTNT pic.twitter.com/p0Hk2aX7px– NBA (@NBA) October 19, 2018
������������������������ https://t.co/5i1s53byHz
– LeBron James (@KingJames) October 18, 2018
ICYMI
LeBron James calls Lakers debut “First step in long journey”
It felt like a major event, bigger than your typical season opener, with all the hype that has followed James joining the Lakers. Before the Lakers madness started, James listened to his pregame music while wearing a Nike T-shirt with an ad of himself wearing a Lakers jersey. — Ohm Youngmisuk
The Atlas of LeBron James: How the King became an offensive force
“The story of James transforming from inefficient rookie into NBA scoring champion is one of a player learning how to attack defenses with his ferocious blend of speed and strength to create scoring chances in the paint. That’s still the key to his scoring portfolio now.” — Kirk Goldsberry
Inside the Lakers’ plan to push the pace with LeBron
“The 2018-19 Lakers, with all of their fresh parts and mix of young and old, intend to come out of the gates running. Literally. Throughout training camp, X’s marked the spots deep in the corners — taped on the court by Lakers coach Luke Walton — as a reminder of where he wanted his wings speeding to when the ball changes possession. — Dave McMenamin
Must-see video
LeBron James talks about fitting in with his new team, winning a championship and his minutes.
Dave McMenamin looks at how much better the Lakers are with LeBron James, but suggests they need a little “more magic” to get to a championship.
On Oct. 29, 2003, LeBron James makes his NBA debut for the Cavaliers against the Kings.
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