Lakers' Anthony Davis takes blame for buzzer-beating loss to Mavs

ByDAVE MCMENAMIN
March 18, 2023, 3:29 AM

LOS ANGELES -- Over and over again, sitting in front of his locker after the game, Los Angeles Lakers star Anthony Davis repeated how tough it was to stomach Friday night's 111-110 loss to the  Dallas Mavericks at the buzzer.

Tough because his closeout wasn't enough of a deterrent to stop Mavs forward Maxi Kleber from getting off the game-winning 3 with 0.2 seconds left on the clock. Tough because the shot from Kleber was preceded by Davis going 1-for-2 from the foul line with 6.7 seconds left, failing to give L.A. a three-point cushion that would have at least made Kleber's shot force overtime rather than win it outright.

Tough because just before that with 7.2 seconds left, with the Lakers leading by four, Davis fouled Kleber on a 3-point attempt, and Kleber drained all three free throws to bring Dallas within one.

"I already came in and told them the last play was my fault," said Davis, who has taken the blame for a loss twice in the Lakers' past four games, with the other loss coming in Houston when he had to sit out because of a lingering foot injury.

And tough, Davis said, because on a night when four other teams surrounding L.A. in the standings -- Golden State, Minnesota, New Orleans and Portland -- all lost, the Lakers failed to capitalize.

"It's tough all the way across the board," Davis said after his 26 points and 10 rebounds were for naught.

Instead, all the momentum swung to the Mavs. Playing on the road without Luka Doncic and welcoming Kyrie Irving back to the lineup after a three-game absence because of right foot soreness, the Mavs came in and took it.

The win moved Dallas to No. 6 in the Western Conference at 36-35, and they won the season series against L.A. 2-1.

The Lakers are No. 10 in the West at 34-37, two full games behind Dallas with 11 games to play, but it might as well be three games because the Mavs now own the tiebreaker.

As painful a night as it was for Davis, it was just as thrilling for Kleber, who nearly cost the Mavs a game in San Antonio on Wednesday by throwing a full-court inbounds pass out of bounds with 1.8 seconds remaining in regulation and then blowing an assignment to free up Keldon Johnson for a lob to send it to OT.

Kleber said during an on-court interview after the game that Irving -- who scored 38 points and had the assist to Kleber on the last shot -- told him, "That's redemption" for the near debacle in San Antonio.

Wenyen Gabriel, who had nine points and 11 rebounds off the bench and was instrumental in helping erase a 14-point Dallas lead to help put L.A. in position to get the win, offered similarly uplifting support for Davis.

"I mean, AD is our leader," Gabriel said of Davis putting the blame on his shoulders. "He's our best player right now, and that just shows that taking accountability as being the best player. That's something that's important for the continuity as a team and having trust in each other, and obviously we trust AD. That was just a moment. It's obviously not just on AD, but him taking accountability for that is something that is important instead of pointing fingers in terms of chemistry going forward."

The Lakers host the Orlando Magic (28-42) on Sunday, the first of four more games at home before leaving L.A. for four road games.

Time is running out for this Lakers team. The crowded West has kept them in it, but Friday brought to mind other near misses, such as when Davis missed late free throws in an overtime loss in Philadelphia or when he missed another free throw in the final minute and Indiana won at the buzzer with a 3 from nearly the exact same spot on the floor that Kleber launched his.

The Lakers have been digging themselves out of a hole ever since their 2-10 start out of the gates. Just when it looked like they had some breathing room, winning six out of eight after the All-Star break, they've now lost three out of four and are slipping backward at the worst time possible.

"We're missing our opportunities, for sure. It's frustrating," Davis said.

But he added: "We're still in a position to do something special, with the way we started."