Anthony Davis rips Los Angeles Lakers after 'embarrassing' loss to Minnesota Timberwolves
LOS ANGELES -- Anthony Davis unloaded on the Lakers after Friday night's 107-83 loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves that was largely determined by a third quarter in which his team was outscored 40-12.
"We sucked," Davis said when asked about the third. "No defense. Can't score. That's not just this third quarter, it's every third quarter we've played this season. We come out slow, lackadaisical offensively and defensively. We got to get it together. Why? I can't tell you. But we got to do a better job."
Including the mauling at the hands of Minnesota, the Lakers have been outscored by 83 points in the third quarter this season, according to research by ESPN Stats & Information. It's the worst points differential by any team in any quarter this season.
"We got to decide who we want to be. A championship team? That's not us right now," Davis said. "We're not winning a championship the way we're playing. We got to be better, and we got to care more for our wins at home. Wins in general. That was embarrassing."
After taking a five-point lead into halftime, L.A. shot just 4-for-21 from the field (19%), including 1-for-13 from 3-point range (7.7%), in the third quarter with six turnovers. Meanwhile, the Wolves shot 15-for-24 overall (62.5%), including 7-for-13 from 3 (53.8%), with just three turnovers. They were led by Karl-Anthony Towns, who personally outscored the Lakers 18-12 in the quarter.
"The inconsistency is a problem," Russell Westbrook said when asked about L.A.'s third-quarter woes.
Adding to L.A.'s letdown was the fact that the loss snapped a two-game winning streak that was supposedly sparked by a similar loss to the Portland Trail Blazers last weekend when the Lakers said they vowed as a team to play with better energy and effort moving forward.
"Well, there's no better motivator than a bad loss," Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. "I think our guys are angry, our coaching staff is angry, and we'll get back to work and do whatever we need to do to fix it and get our execution better. And all of those things: effort, focus, execution."
While L.A. played its fifth straight game without LeBron James, who is out with an abdomen strain, the Lakers were still above .500 without him and the defeat was delivered by a Wolves team that came into the night with a 3-7 record.
"Oh, we definitely should be winning games," said guard Wayne Ellington, who made his first start of the season. "We still should be winning games. Obviously, LeBron is LeBron. But at the same time, no excuse for us to come in and have a performance like we did tonight. That team was not better than us."
Davis said the Lakers will benefit from a film session Saturday in order to try to get back on track ahead of their next game Sunday afternoon against the San Antonio Spurs.
"What we can't do is, one, point the finger," Davis said. "You know, 'It was you.' 'It was you.' 'It was you.' 'This play was you.' Like, we got to stay together. And we'll stay together. But also, we got to learn from the film. And so the film tomorrow is going to be big for us to have another heart to heart about these type of games. We hate feeling this way. Obviously, if we lose -- we're going to lose games, everybody loses games. But doing it the right way. Having a team actually beat us. Not beating ourselves.
"And those are the frustrating ones, when we beat ourselves."
For Westbrook, whose 33rd birthday on Friday was soured by a game in which L.A. trailed by as many as 33 points, the film will only reinforce what was abundantly clear during the game: This cannot be the team's standard this season.
"Sometimes you know it's time to let it go and move on," Westbrook said. "Sometimes you cuss people out and get on everybody's ass and sometimes you just kind of let it play out. We'll watch film tomorrow. We'll kind of see the vibe, and I think there's not a soul in that locker room that doesn't know what we were supposed to do tonight, and we just didn't do it.
"So, sometimes you just kind of ... you already know. You don't need to beat a dead horse."