Lillard's late three halts Lakers' comeback bid in Portland

— -- PORTLAND -- Damian Lillard handed the Los Angeles Lakers a heartbreaking loss that only gets more painful with the loss of starting power forward Larry Nance Jr.

Lillard buried a clutch stepback 3-pointer over Brandon Ingram with seven-tenths of a second left to give the Portland Trail Blazers a 113-110 win over the Lakers. And, as if the Lakers' 13th straight loss to Portland wasn't bad enough, the Lakers lost Nance Jr. to a broken left thumb. The power forward left the game in the third quarter and X-rays revealed the fractured second metacarpal in his left hand.

The Lakers will face the Brooklyn Nets in D'Angelo Russell's return on Friday with a new starting power forward in the lineup.

This loss was a tough one for the Lakers to swallow. They battled back from an 18-point deficit and played well enough to win in one of the toughest buildings in the NBA.

But Lillard (32 points, 5 assists) was too much at the end. Rookie Lonzo Ball had his worst offensive game of the season, going scoreless with just four assists and three rebounds. But Brook Lopez had 27 points, and late first-round rookie power forward Kyle Kuzma came up big off the bench with 22 points. Kuzma missed at the buzzer on a potential game-tying 3.

The Lakers (3-5) have had stretches this season where they fall behind big, and this game was no different. The Blazers blitzed the Lakers in the first quarter, building a 41-23 lead just before the end of the first quarter.

Ball, who has had his best games when he was aggressively pushing the pace and looking for his shot, seemed out of sorts on offense in the first three quarters. He was engaged defensively, trying to challenge Lillard when he could. But offensively he didn't seem like himself.

Ball took just two shots in the first three quarters, one that was a poor decision after fans booed him while he milked the clock toward the end of the first before taking a 3-pointer that was blocked. Ball also didn't grab a rebound until the third quarter, which is uncharacteristic since he crashes the boards often.

But despite their rookie point guard struggling, the Lakers continued to do something they have done most of this early season -- they showed fight and mounted a comeback after falling behind big. After trailing 43-25 with 11:43 left in the second, the Lakers outscored the Blazers 55-31 over the next 19:33, taking an 80-74 lead with 4:10 left in the third quarter.

But the real reason the Lakers got back into this game was their defense. After playing no defense and finishing 30th in the league in defense the past two seasons, the Lakers came into training camp preaching defense and spending hours working on defensive details.

The Lakers have made strides this season, surrendering 106.6 points per game (tied for 16th best in the league entering the Portland game) and ranking ninth in defensive efficiency. They contested shots with Lopez and Nance Jr. making things difficult inside before Nance Jr. left the game for good in the third with his broken hand.

Ball even blocked Lillard on a drive to the basket and deflected another pass for a turnover that led to a transition basket with his length. Lakers like Corey Brewer and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope deflected passes that started fast breaks, but the Lakers got sloppy and wasted some of those transition opportunities.

The Blazers, who lost the night before in Utah in overtime, turned to Lillard. The star point guard scored 10 of his points in the third as Portland regained the lead.

But while Ball struggled offensively, fellow rookie Kuzma was big in the fourth. He scored seven points early in the fourth as the Lakers opened a 98-93 lead. The two teams went back and forth to the end. Caldwell-Pope caught an inbounds pass and buried a 3 to tie the game at 110-110 with 15.5 seconds left.

Lillard, though, calmly brought the ball up court out of a timeout before drilling a lightning quick stepback 3 over Ingram for the win.

The Lakers got to see what life is like when Lopez gets going. Lopez, who will be facing his old Nets team for the first time on Friday night in Los Angeles, had his best stretch as a Laker when he made five-of-six shots and scored 13 points in the second quarter. The game took a retro turn where both teams went inside to their respective seven-footers. Jusuf Nurkic scored 20 of his 28 points in the first half as he and Lopez went back and forth.