CLEVELAND -- Kobe
Bryant was sick. The Cleveland Cavaliers just looked it.
With Bryant
suffering from the flu, Lamar Odom scored a season- high 28 points -- 15 in the
third quarter-- and Paul Gasol scored 18 as the streak-busting Los Angeles
Lakers dominated the second half and handed Cleveland its first home loss this
season, 101-91 on Sunday to complete a 6-0 road trip.
Bryant was not
himself. The superstar vomited before the game, shivered with chills throughout
and needed intravenous fluids at halftime. But Odom picked up the offensive
slack, helped contain LeBron James on defense, and was the biggest factor in
the Lakers outscoring the Cavaliers 50-30 after halftime.
"That was one
of the best games he's played for us," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said of
the enigmatic Odom. "He's had some spectacular games, but that was a
terrific game. It was the total package of his game. He broke people down with
his speed and quickness to the basket and got some easy shots."
It's been a tough
few days for Cleveland. First, guard Mo Williams was bypassed for the second
time as an All-Star. Then, James had his apparent historic triple-double in New
York downgraded by an NBA review, and now, the Cavaliers have had their invincibility
at home stripped by the road-weary Lakers.
"You have to
give the Lakers credit," said James, who scored 16 but missed 15 of his 20
field-goal tries. "I missed a lot of easy looks that I usually make."
The Cavaliers came
in 23-0 at Quicken Loans Arena, but were stopped by the Lakers, who are gaining
a reputation for stopping streaks.
They ended
Boston's 19-game winning streak on Christmas Day and halted a 12-game run by
the Celtics earlier this week. This was Cleveland's first loss at home since Game
5 against Washington in the first round of last season's playoffs.
"I didn't
want it to happen," James said. "But I'm glad it's over."
The Lakers weren't
intimidated in one of the NBA's rowdiest arenas and went undefeated on a road
trip that also included stops in Minnesota, Memphis, New York, Toronto and
Boston. Los Angeles' trip started rocky with center Andruw Bynum injuring his
knee against the Grizzlies, but it couldn't have ended any better.
Beginning with
Bryant's record-setting 61-point performance against the Knicks, the Lakers
have gone 4-0 without Bynum. They didn't commit a turnover in the final 19:28
against the Cavs.
"We're
playing for perfection," Odom said, "and in order to do that, it
takes a lot of energy, focus and commitment to winning and doing whatever it
takes. We got production from everyone."
Zydrunas Ilgauskas
scored 22 to lead Cleveland, which shot just 28 percent (11-of-39) in the
second half and didn't play its customary shutdown defense. Williams, whose
All-Star snub had infuriated the Cavs, scored 19 and James finished with 12
assists and eight rebounds.
Odom, who added a
season-best 17 rebounds, was unstoppable in the third, when the Lakers
outscored the Cavaliers 31-16 and turned a 10- point deficit into a 82-77 lead
entering the fourth.
"I never play
the game for stats," Odom said. "It's all about winning."
Guarded by Wally
Szczerbiak and rookie J.J. Hickson, Odom scored 13 of Los Angeles' last 16
points to close the quarter, capping his one-man scorefest with a two-handed dunk
off a miss in the final second as the Lakers became just the fourth team this
season to lead Cleveland at home after three.
But unlike the
three other teams, the Lakers finished the job.
Los Angeles pushed
its lead to 10 in the fourth before the Cavaliers closed to 93-89 on two free
throws by Ilgauskas with 3:06 left. But Bryant hit a high-arching fadeaway, and
Gasol dropped one of two free throws to make it 96-89 when the jumbo scoreboard
above midcourt went dark, a symbolic moment for Cleveland's players and fans.
James was stripped
on the Cavs' next possession, and Gasol made two more free throws and scored on
a putback as the Lakers put an exclamation point on one of their biggest wins
this season.
Cleveland's crowd
was at a playoff pitch from the outset for one of the most anticipated games of
the season, a matchup of the league's top stars, both leading MVP candidates,
and two of the NBA's best teams.
But the game never
materialized into a Bryant vs. James affair as Odom stole the spotlight.
Bryant got more
medical treatment after the game and was not available for interviews.
James was careful
not to complain about losing his triple-double in New York, but he was clearly
miffed by the league's decision.
"Um. Should I
say something?" he wondered before opting to keep his opinion a secret.
"We won the basketball game and that's all that matters."
Notes: Lakers G
Derek Fisher didn't have a turnover in 28 minutes and hasn't made one in 158
minutes over his last five games. ... Cavs F Sasha Pavlovic sprained his right
ankle late in the first quarter and didn't return. Pavlovic had missed
Cleveland's two previous games with the flu. ... Before the game, Jackson was
told Celtics coach Doc Rivers was fined $15,000 by the NBA for complaining
about the officiating following Boston's overtime loss to the Lakers on
Thursday night. "Is that all?" Jackson said. "It should have
been more. That's Boston." ... Lakers F Adam Morrison, acquired in a trade
from Charlotte on Saturday for Vladimir Radmanovic, hasn't taken his physical.
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