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Russell Westbrook, Stanley Johnson spark Lakers’ defeat of Jazz

Before the Lakers’ Russell Westbrook made a mess of Utah center Rudy Gobert, he cleaned up.

Early in the first quarter Monday night, Utah star Donovan Mitchell slipped on a spilled drink, stopping action while officials and Crypto.com Arena staff grabbed for towels. Westbrook, searching for a more simple solution, went underneath the nearest basket and grabbed a mop.

That was polite — what was about to happen later in the half was much more rude.

Displaying the kind of athleticism and ferocity that he hasn’t really shown since being traded to the Lakers this summer, Westbrook hit the paint, jumped and uncorked a violent one-handed slam over one of the NBA’s premiere defenders.

If that was the moment of the season, this might’ve been the best win to go along with it — a 101-95 victory in which the team came back from a 10-point deficit in the second half to even its record at 22-22.

LeBron James led five Lakers in double digits while the team rediscovered some defensive snarl after being walked over in three straight losses. It ended with the entire team on their feet celebrating a Westbrook three-point play that capped what has to be considered their biggest win of the season.

Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell drives between Lakers guards Avery Bradley (20) and Talen Horton-Tucker (5).

Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell drives between Lakers guards Avery Bradley (20) and Talen Horton-Tucker (5) during the first half Monday at Crypto.com Arena.

(Ringo H.W. Chiu / Associated Press)

And then there was Stanley Johnson, signed to his third 10-day contract with the Lakers earlier Monday before playing like someone who the team needs to keep from walking out the door again.

Playing center with LeBron James and mostly reserves, Johnson repeatedly attacked Gobert without any fear for the French player nicknamed “The Stifle Tower.”

Possession after possession, his confidence grew, Johnson playing to the crowd, flexing at Gobert and refusing to back down even though he’s functionally an hourly employee playing against a bunch of tenured professionals.

Johnson scored 15 points on seven-of-nine shooting with 10 of those points coming in the fourth quarter as the Lakers needed to mount a comeback.

Spurred on by Johnson’s play, the Lakers started flying around the court with the kind of energy they’ve been unable to sustain all season.

It all had to mean a lot to the Lakers and to coach Frank Vogel, who was starting to lose his ability to disguise how losing affected him.

“Not seeing the results wears on you,” Vogel said pregame. “I will say that strongly.”

After making eight of 12 three-pointers early, the Lakers finished with just three more makes on 25 attempts. They were outscored by seven at the foul line — the same number of free throws they missed. And Trevor Ariza, pushed into the starting lineup, made just one of eight shots in 27 minutes.

But whether it was showy stuff like Westbrook’s dunk, James’ repeated aggression or Johnson’s fearlessness, the Lakers grabbed a win and some good vibes for a team — and coach — that needed them.

— via www.latimes.com

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