Los Angeles Lakers guard Kobe Bryant (24) goes past Charlotte Hornets forward Michael Kidd-Gilchrist (14) to the basket in the second half of the game at Staples Center, Nov 9, 2014. Lakers won 107-92. [Photo/Agencies] |
LOS ANGELES - Purple and gold streamers descended from the ceiling and fans were on their feet applauding at the end. The Los Angeles Lakers finally won a game after five straight losses to open the season.
"I know the city probably feels good about it," said Byron Scott, who got his first victory as Lakers coach after they rallied to beat the Charlotte Hornets 107-92 on Sunday night.
The party atmosphere didn't extend to the Lakers' locker room.
"They were all pretty quiet," Scott said. "What I said was, 'OK, that's one."'
Kobe Bryant and Jeremy Lin each scored 21 points, and Carlos Boozer added 16 as the Lakers left Philadelphia as the NBA's only winless team at 0-7.
"We got to start somewhere," a subdued Bryant said.
Lin and Boozer's offense dominated the third, when the Lakers were down by seven before a 25-6 run sent them into the fourth leading 76-64.
It was a lead they never gave up.
"Mentally, it gives us the vision that we can win," Scott said.
Al Jefferson scored 23 points and Kemba Walker added 17 for the Hornets, whose two-game winning streak ended. Gary Neal added 10 of his 14 in the fourth off the bench and Lance Stephenson had 10 rebounds.
"The difference was that they made shots and we didn't. Kobe hit a couple of tough fades and Lin hit a few," Neal said. "It doesn't matter that the Lakers were 0-5. Any time you have a Hall of Famer like Kobe, you always have a chance to win."
The Lakers scored 14 unanswered points in their dominating third-quarter run, including eight in a row by Boozer, whose jumper gave them their first lead of the game at 61-59.
The Hornets were held to five field goals in the third, and just two over the final 3:48, while getting outscored 34-13 in the period.
"We sat down on them defensively," Bryant said. "We flew around and made them take tough shots, made a conscious effort to post Booz early."
Bryant, prone to taking over games while his younger teammates watched, still put up the most shots (20) of any Laker, but he scored just nine points in the second half.
Bryant had one basket in the fourth, with six other Lakers contributing to the offense. Lin and Wesley Johnson hit consecutive 3-pointers that had the long-suffering crowd on its feet cheering a victory that wasn't in doubt.
"Guys weren't just looking to get the ball to Kobe and step out of the way," Scott said. "I talked to Jeremy before the game about being more assertive on both ends of the floor."
The Hornets got no closer than eight in the fourth, when the Lakers shot 62 percent.
"We stopped playing defense in the second half," Charlotte coach Steve Clifford said. "You could see our language starting to fade when we started missing shots and not playing defense."