LOS ANGELES — From the outside, it felt like the Lakers were in as good of a place as they’ve been in several months after Saturday afternoon’s home win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The victory was their 21st in their previous 29 games. They moved into the eighth seed in the Western Conference for the first time since late December, with a strong possibility of moving up the standings. At the minimum, they were in full control and could avoid falling to the 10th seed.
How quickly a few days – and a couple of tough losses – change circumstances.
The Lakers quickly dropped back to the ninth seed with Sunday’s 127-117 home loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.
And while they stayed at No. 9 after Tuesday’s 134-120 home loss to the Golden State Warriors, the Warriors clinched the head-to-head tiebreaker in the standings, moved just one-half game behind the Lakers with the victory and tied them in the loss column.
This means the Lakers will need outside help to ensure they don’t fall further down the standings even if they win their final two games on the road against the Memphis Grizzlies on Friday and the New Orleans Pelicans on Sunday.
“If we are as competitive as I think we are and then we really look within … yeah, it’s a difficult situation, but it’s not impossible,” coach Darvin Ham said. “Again, we just need to do what we’ve always done. Every team is not gonna be like Golden State offensively. But just look within ourselves and see how [badly] we want it. Just come ready to work, that’s it.
“It’s not a mystery or secret formula. If you’re a competitor, and you have to be if you make it to this level – whether you’re a player, coach, executive, owner, whoever, you’re a true competitor – then you’ll make the best of a tough situation. So I expect us to do that.”
The Lakers have shown resiliency in these situations throughout the season.
They’ve lost consecutive games just twice over the last two months…
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