I know this game isn't going to be on TV, but if you can still follow it by listening to the radio or checking the boxscores on the internet. So far the Lakers are down 24-18
Lakers won 94-79. I don't have the boxscore though, but I'm sure it will be up on Yahoo or NBA.com soon
Got some pictures from the game http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/photos?gameId=261010013 Look at Kwame Dunking on ppl and Vujacic got bigger.
Kwame: 1-6 from the field, 2 points, 5 rebounds Good overall FG and 3pt FG % for our team though, over 50% in both.
Rambis did a nice job coaching the game. Just looking at the box score, very proud of some of the Lakers. Sasha, SMush, and Lamar especially, who had a very efficient 18 pt game. Sasha 5-6 fg, that's what I'm talking about, I've been supporting him since last year when everyone hated him, I think he's gonna be a deadly shooter this year. Him, Vlad and Kobe on the court are gonna tear sh!t up. Smush had 8 ft attempts....this is telling me he's attacking the basket more and not settling for the jump shot, really good to know. Vlad and Kwame the disappointments of the night, hopefully they will pick it up. Mo Evans and Luke Walton very solid game as well. THings are looking good fellas! The addition of Kobe with this well rounded team is gonna be great. Can't wait for Thursday.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">FRESNO, Calif., Oct. 10 (Ticker) -- Even without the presence of Kobe Bryant, Lamar Odom and the Los Angeles Lakers were on fire. Odom scored 18 points and handed out six assists as the Lakers posted a 94-79 victory over the Utah Jazz in the preseason opener for both teams. Bryant, who averaged a league-high 35.4 points per game last season, missed the contest due to offseason surgery on his right knee. But Odom picked up the slack, netting 6-of-9 shots, including three 3-pointers. Smush Parker and Sasha Vujacic added 13 points apiece for the Lakers, who shot 51 percent (33-of-65) from the floor, including 8-of-15 from the arc. Acquired in a draft-day trade, Maurice Evans contributed 12 points and free-agent signee Vladimir Radmanovic had seven. First-round pick Jordan Farmar collected three points and two steals in just five minutes for Los Angeles, which turned a three-point halftime edge into a 71-57 cushion after three quarters. Carlos Boozer scored 18 points and grabbed 12 rebounds and Deron Williams added 16 for the Jazz, who controlled the boards, 52-38, including a 20-7 advantage on the offensive glass. Derek Fisher, who was acquired from Golden State during the offseason, tallied five points, five assists and four steals for Utah. Second-round selection Dee Brown had an assist and a turnover in three minutes. Los Angeles coach Phil Jackson was not in attendance due to hip surgery. </div> Source Box Score It looks like a solid game for the Lakers. Farmar had a good 5 minutes as well with 2 steals and 3 points.
The guards played very well. Sasha grew and looks that his game is going to improve this year. As well as Smush. Big concern was Kwame going 1- 6 and Bynum not doing much. Odom played a solid game. I think Odom will be inspired this year and will finally reach an All-Star level. Well I know its the first game and Thursday will be a second game to evaluate the Lakers. From what I heard....the most likely to get dropped from the Roster if things go this way is Von Wafer, two more to be determine.
Glad to get the pre-season started on a positive note. Even though these games are meaningless, it's nice to get the W and start building a winning mentality in the locker room. Ronny Turiaf had a productive night 5 points and 6 boards. Odom still struggling with his free throws only making 3 out of 7 is not a good sign for Laker fans. He needs to bump his average up to 75% to 78% this season to make teams pay for fouling him. Great night for Sasha, if he can shoot with that type of confidence every game, he could challenge for the starting PG spot or be the PG to finish out games the same way Kerr and Paxson used to. The best stat from this game is 35 FTAs vs. 15 3PTAs. This tells me the Lakers weren't settling for outside shots and attacked the rim.
<div class="quote_poster">Quote:</div><div class="quote_post">First impressions count for something, even in a half-filled arena in Fresno. Four guys who made good ones in the exhibition opener against Utah were Sasha Vujacic, Lamar Odom, Maurice Evans and Jordan Farmar. Vujacic faces greater competition this season with the additions of Shammond Williams and Farmar. He had one of his best halves since coming to the Lakers in the opening two quarters Tuesday. Not only did Vujacic hit all four shots he took - - Vladimir Radmanovic even passed on a shot to slide the ball to him for a 3-pointer at the end of the first half - - but he drew two offensive fouls by being a pest. If he can do those two things, Vujacic will have a nice role for himself this season. Odom, meanwhile, was the best player on the floor at the start of the second half. It wasn’t a coincidence that the Lakers went from leading 44-41 at halftime to going up 12 in that stretch. He took Carlos Boozer off the dribble for layups, knocked down a 3-pointer in transition and kicked out a pass to Luke Walton for a 3-pointer off a drive. Odom also was grabbing rebounds and pushing the ball the other way. Odom finished with 18 points (on nine shots) with 6 assists and 5 rebounds in 28-plus minutes. The only weakness he had came in missing four free throws. ``Right now, I’m playing with the spirit of two people in me,’’ Odom said, referring to the tragic death of his infant son. ``I want to just keep attacking, keep attacking, keep attacking, pour it on as much as I can. ``I lost my legs a little bit on my free throws. There’s always things you can improve on. Defensively, I want to just keep improving and knock down those free throws.’’ Evans was a 37.1 percent 3-point shooter last season in Detroit and showed that he can be more than just a defensive stopper. He connected on jumpers from 19, 26, 25 and 18 feet in the fourth quarter. Assistant coach Kurt Rambis said Evans had been struggling to learn both the guard and forward spots in the triangle offense. But Rambis praised him at the same time for wanting to get better and being a quick learner. Needless to say, Evans was impressive Tuesday. He still faces a minutes crunch trying to get on the floor as Kobe Bryant’s backup. Farmar played the last 4:19 but made those minutes interesting. He was so eager to play that he jumped up in the third quarter to check in when Andrew Bynum’s name was called. By the time he realized his mistake, Farmar tried to squeeze in next to assistant Brian Shaw on the bench. On the court, Farmar whipped a pass to Ronny Turiaf as he drove the lane, which led to two free throws for Turiaf. He also was visibly frustrated as he posted up Utah’s small guard Brian Chase and didn’t get the ball. Farmar had two steals as well in a matter of 15 seconds. He finished the game by slicing to the basket for a layup with the clock running out. He missed the only jumper he took, but Farmar brought an unmistakable energy to the court. As for some of the other players, Radmanovic missed all three shots he took in the first half and was way, way short on an open 3-pointer and a baseline jumper. He finished with seven points on 2 of 7 shooting. Bynum turned in the lowlight of the game. He showed off a great spin move in the third quarter but somehow short-armed his shot from point-blank range. Bynum was so upset at himself, he smacked himself in the head a couple of times. You could hear Odom on the bench asking why Bynum didn’t dunk the ball. Bynum was asking himself the same question after the game. Here's the story on the game. There's also a trivia question related to the part below about Derek Fisher: Name the five active players who were a part of all three of the Lakers championship teams this decade. By Ross Siler Staff Writer FRESNO--Lakers forward Lamar Odom has taken to calling guard Maurice Evans by the nickname ``Herschel Walker’’ for the simple reason that Evans is built more like an NFL running back than an NBA player. That might be the case, but Evans did a pretty good Kobe Bryant impersonation in the fourth quarter of the Lakers’ exhibition opener Tuesday night. Evans connected on two 3-pointers and an 18-footer as the Lakers reversed course after giving back most of a 14-point lead and went on to a 94-79 victory over Utah. He started in place of Bryant, who skipped the trip to continue strengthening his right knee, and scored all 12 of his points in the final quarter. Evans was acquired from Detroit in a draft-night trade and came with the reputation as a defensive stopper. But Evans, who can defend three positions, showed the other side of his game Tuesday. ``When I was in college, I was one of the top scorers in the country,’’ said Evans, who averaged 22.6 points his sophomore season at Wichita State. ``I had never been known for being a good defender until I got to the NBA.’’ Evans best sequence might have come after he missed a shot. He kept the rebound alive, tipping it back outside, and drilled a 3-pointer from the corner after he got the ball back from Odom. Teenage center Andrew Bynum, meanwhile, had his ups and downs in finishing with two points, six rebounds and four turnovers in 17-plus minutes. Bynum hit a turnaround 12-footer on the baseline in the fourth quarter and blocked a Rafael Araujo shot in the second quarter. But he had the ball plucked from his hands twice by Derek Fisher in the first half. ``You can see that he’s still got a long way to go in terms of his strength,’’ assistant coach Kurt Rambis said, ``and for a big guy that’s 7-feet tall he brings the ball down way too many times.’’ Jazzed: There might not have been a worse possible time in Fisher’s life for a trade to Utah, with his wife delivering twins only days before the veteran guard learned he was leaving Golden State unexpectedly after two seasons. It took Fisher a little longer than expected to report for a physical but he has since come to appreciate the move. He was traded for Keith McLeod, Devin Brown and Andre Owens, with Utah taking on the $26 million still owed Fisher. ``Once I kind of got over the shock of the trade itself and really just concentrated on my family for a couple of weeks,’’ Fisher said, ``then I was able to step back and really just look at it from the perspective that I’m still able to play this game that I love to play.’’ Fisher, 32, was coming off a season in which he played in all 82 games and averaged a career-best 13.3 points. The losing, though, took its toll, with the Warriors finishing 34-48 once again. “It starts to feel like a job,’’ Fisher said, ``when you’re not enjoying going out there every night.’’ He will be counted on to provide veteran leadership to a Utah team that hasn’t made the playoffs in three seasons. Fisher also will serve as mentor to Deron Williams, the Jazz’s point guard of the future. ``It’s a good place for him,’’ Rambis said. ``He’s a system player. (Utah coach) Jerry Sloan is going to love him. He plays hard, he gets after it. . . . I thought whenever he got traded that was a good move for him and the Jazz.’’</div> Source Here's two recaps of how the game went.
From the recaps, it seems like Sasha and Odom both had a terrific game! Big ups to both. Hopefully Sasha can continue his play in the regular season. Kwame and Vladmir sort of struggled. Vladmir was just signed to the Lakers this off season, so he is probably still adjusting to the triangle. I'm not too worried about him. As for Kwame? The guy better step it up. I was expecting a lot more than 2 points.......