Lakers Guard Takes Blame After Costly Rockets Loss

LeBron James and Marcus Smart during Lakers Game 3 win vs Rockets
Getty
LeBron James looks on during the Lakers’ Game 3 comeback as an NBA review later revealed missed calls in the final moments.

The Los Angeles Lakers still hold a 3-2 series lead over the Houston Rockets, but Game 5 was a missed opportunity. With a chance to close out the series at home in front of their own crowd, the Lakers came up short in a 99-93 loss at Crypto.com Arena. The series now heads back to Houston for Game 6.

The Rockets are one of the most aggressive defensive teams in the league. They force turnovers, create chaos, and make opponents pay for careless possessions. Los Angeles knew that going in. On Tuesday night, they could not avoid it. The Lakers finished with 15 turnovers, many of them on sloppy plays that killed momentum and kept the crowd disengaged at critical stretches.

After the game, one Laker was not looking for excuses.

Smart Takes Accountability After Six-Turnover Night

Marcus Smart, Lakers, Lakers vs Rockets

GettyMarcus Smart of the Los Angeles Lakers.

Marcus Smart was the Lakers’ biggest turnover culprit, finishing with six alongside just two assists. He did not deflect or point fingers. Postgame, he was direct about what happened and what it means heading into Game 6: “Myself, I had six turnovers and that’s unacceptable for me.

That kind of accountability is notable in a playoff setting. Smart has been one of the more important pieces of this Lakers run, providing energy, defense, and clutch playmaking in moments that have defined the series. Game 5 was not that. He knows it, and he said so plainly.

The broader issue extends beyond Smart alone. Fifteen turnovers as a team against a Houston defense built to create exactly those situations is a recipe for trouble. The Rockets do not need many opportunities to make you pay, and the Lakers handed them too many on Tuesday night.

What the Lakers Need to Fix for Game 6

Smart was clear about the adjustment. The game plan is sound. The coaching staff has put the players in the right positions. The issue is execution, specifically protecting the ball and converting on open looks. As he put it, turning the ball over prevents shots from even getting to the rim, and that hurts any offense regardless of talent level.

LeBron James finished with 25 points but the Lakers could not generate enough consistent offense to put the Rockets away. Houston, without Kevin Durant for the second straight game due to an ankle injury, found a way to keep it close and eventually pull ahead.

Final Word for the Lakers

Los Angeles still controls this series. A road win in Game 6 ends it. The Rockets have shown they will not go quietly, and Houston is a difficult place to close out a series.

Smart set the tone postgame. Six turnovers. Unacceptable. He said it himself.

The Lakers know what needs to change. Game 6 will show whether they can do it.

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Lakers Guard Takes Blame After Costly Rockets Loss

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