History eluded. Embarrassment avoided. Belief restored.
The most secure legacy played with the most desperation. The most creaky veteran played with the most aggression. The winningest superstar played like he had everything to lose.
So it went at Houston’s Toyota Center on Friday night when the Lakers, just two losses from becoming the first team in NBA history to blow a three-games-to-none lead, blew away the Rockets 98-78 to win their first-round series four games to two.
It was a night that prevented possibly the greatest meltdown in NBA history. It was a night that celebrated possibly the greatest player in NBA history.
“Started with LeBron,” said Marcus Smart. “The OG came out.”
When the shorthanded Lakers needed him most, their ageless 41-year wonder indeed showed up huge. LeBron James fought down the lane, threw in from deep, found teammates like the sizzling Rui Hachimura and the surging Austin Reaves, and led with his entire massive being.
James wasn’t going to be on the wrong side of history. He wasn’t going to further stain his sterling 42-13 close-out record. He wasn’t going to let his final season end so early.
Wait a minute, this is not his final season? Not a chance. Bury any lingering doubt. After watching him dominate the youngest starting five in these playoffs Friday, it is impossible to imagine he’s going to call it quits.
He scored a game-high 28 points while enduring a team-high 37 minutes. He added eight assists, seven rebounds, and only three turnovers. He even played defense, as the Lakers were a game-best plus-26 when he was on the court.
His night ended with him appropriately surrounded in the locker room by teammates who were bleating like goats. Because he’s the, well, you know.
“It speaks to his greatness,” said Lakers coach JJ Redick. “To me he’s had the greatest career of any NBA player … for him to do it again and answer the bell again, it’s … baffling in some ways.”
