Russell Westbrook has first turnover-free game since 2016
LA Lakers Russell Westbrook had a turnover-free games since 2016 in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 122-114 victory over the Sacramento King on Tuesday.
Westbrook bounced back from his disappointing nine-turnover outing on Sunday by committing zero miscues, the first time the point guard protected the ball that well in nearly six years.
Speaking after the game Westbrook stated that the team did a hard job against the Sacramento King.
“It shows that when we put our mind to it we can do it as a team,” said Westbrook, who finished with 19 points, seven rebounds and a game-high plus-minus of plus-17 in 34 minutes.
LeBron James, who tallied 31 points, five rebounds and five assists to top 30 points for the eighth time in L.A.’s past nine games since Anthony Davis suffered a sprained MCL in his left knee, stated that the Lakers’ management of their miscues was the difference-maker.
“Well, that’s the reason we won the game,” James said. “We won the game because we did not turn the ball over tonight. And when we get shots at the goal, we can be very dangerous. And we weren’t shooting the ball well at all, and because we didn’t turn the ball over, we caught fire. We caught fire, because we got shots at the goal and we didn’t turn the ball over.”
The Kings were effective last night with their shootings, hitting 51.8% from the field as compared to 49.5% for the Lakers — including 41.2% from 3 as compared to 34.4% for L.A. — but the Lakers had plenty more possessions and thus more opportunities to score.
“We shot the ball 99 times; they only shot it 83 [times],” Westbrook said. “We like that better than turning the ball over.”
The Kings turned the ball over 18 times, leading to Lakers having 21 points in the game. By taking care of the ball, L.A. were strong defensively and was able to hold Sacramento to just six fast-break points, well below the Kings’ average of 12.6 fast-break points per game.
“Defensively, obviously live ball turnovers kill you,” Lakers coach Frank Vogel said. “They’re what Phil Jackson used to call ‘CFUs,’ right? Compound … mistakes. So, it hurts you on both sides.”
Westbrook was defiant after his nine turnovers in a win over the Minnesota Timberwolves on Sunday.
“I’m allowed to miss shots. I can do that. Like any other player, I can do that,” he said. “I can turn the ball over too. I can do that.”
Vogel praised Westbrook for playing so well after the Wolves game and staying engaged. Tuesday’s victory was the Lakers’ third win in a row and fourth in their past five games to pull within a virtual tie with the Denver Nuggets and Dallas Mavericks. All three teams sit five games behind the No. 4-seeded Memphis Grizzlies in the Western Conference standings.
“Russ is really invested in this team, you know that? He’s not always perfect, but he really cares, and he really wants to do the right thing,” Vogel said. “And I was really proud of a bounce-back performance after having that high-turnover night the last game and coming out and having zero turnovers tonight. That’s a great exhibit of ball security, which I challenge our team, not just Russ, but I challenge our team to be better with ball security. And it was a big part of the win.”
Source: ESPN