Lakers’ Lonzo Ball makes triple-double history, but winning-obsessed rookie doesn’t care
November 12, 2017 by admin
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MILWAUKEE — Thirty-one seconds into the fourth quarter of the Los Angeles Lakers‘ 98-90 loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Saturday night at a packed Bradley Center, Lonzo Ball made history. And he didn’t even have to move to do it.
Standing under the basket, Ball caught the airball Thon Maker threw up from 3-point land, and in doing so, secured his 10th rebound. With that he officially recorded his first NBA triple-double, making him the youngest player in the history of the NBA to achieve the feat.
At 20 years and 15 days old, the Lakers’ rookie point guard surpassed a player you might have heard of before: LeBron James. The King has held the record since Jan. 19, 2005, when, at 20 years and 20 days old, he put up a triple-double for the Cleveland Cavaliers. He had 27 points, 11 rebound, and 10 assists that night.
Ball, for his part, finished with 19 points, 11 rebounds, and 13 assists. He also had four blocks and three steals, falling just short of a vaunted 5×5 game.
The accomplishment, though, meant nothing to Ball. Or at least that’s what he told the crowd of media huddled around his locker after the game. “I really don’t care,” he deadpanned. “We took a loss, so, it doesn’t really mean nothing.”
Perhaps, with time, he will look back and see the record for what it is, an incredible feat, and something to be proud of.
But on Saturday night, Ball wasn’t interested in celebrating. Even when pressed, the eldest Ball boy was steadfast in his disinterest. “No, it don’t matter to me, to be honest,” he reiterated. “I just wanted to win tonight. I thought we put ourself in a good position to get it, but it didn’t happen.”
Despite the loss, Saturday’s performance was the one everyone has been waiting for from the big baller, and the type the Lakers foresaw when they made him the No. 2 overall pick this summer.
He pushed the pace, as he always does, and his aggressiveness helped set his teammates up for easy baskets. Of the 13 assists he recorded, all but three were for dunks or layups. Of course he also crashed the glass well, but most importantly, he was efficient on the offensive end. He shot 7-12 from the field, including 3-5 from downtown, which was by far his best shooting performance of the season.
His coach Luke Walton, in particular, was impressed. “He was really good tonight,” Walton said after the game. “Obviously it helps when you get some of those shots to go in, but I thought he did a great job, playing at a pace, creating for others, constantly kind of being the aggressor on the offensive end, keeping a defense that’s a very aggressive defense on their heels. It was a great road, overall game for him.”
It was only fitting that Ball’s triple-double came against the Bucks, who are coached by none other than Jason Kidd. Ball has been compared to the legendary point guard time and again — both before the draft, and in recent days, as the two recorded eerily similar stats over their first 10 games. Kidd himself even commented on the similarities, dismissing them as a “stretch” during an appearance on First Take.
After the game, however, the Bucks’ coach had nothing but praise for the young Laker. “He’s a very talented player,” Kidd remarked. “His strengths in finding the teammates and being able to rebound the ball make the game easy for his team, and he played at a very high level tonight. He can play, and he’s going to make his team better. The triple-double is going to be the norm for him. He’s going to fill up stat sheets.”
Given Ball’s multitude of talents, that certainly could be the case. But no matter how frequently the triple-doubles come, they won’t matter to the man himself.
As Ball said after the game, “I’d rather have a win.”
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What Kirby Smart, Georgia players said after losing to Auburn
November 12, 2017 by admin
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No. 10 Auburn imposed its will on No. 1 Georgia with a 40-17 win that sent the Bulldogs to their first loss of the season.
Below is transcript of what Georgia head coach Kirby Smart, running backs Nick Chubb and Sony Michel, and wide receiver Javon Wims said after the game.
Kirby Smart, Georgia coach
Opening Statement…
“First off, give a lot of credit to Auburn and Gus’ staff. They did a tremendous job. They were more physical than us on both sides of the line of scrimmage. Every SEC game that I have ever been a part of, if you lose the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball, you don’t have a great chance of a good outcome. I thought it was a momentum game. We certainly lost the momentum there with some really uncharacteristic penalties. Throw that in with the fact that they were more physical than us, they controlled the line of scrimmage, were able to run it at will, and they stopped our run. So you shake their hand, tell them they did a good job, and we have to pick it up and go get better. Kentucky is not going to feel sorry for us. So humility is always a week away. This team will answer and respond the right way because we have some good leaders in that room, and they want to improve upon what they just showed.”
On the change of success offensively after the good first drive…
“We had a big conversion on that drive, and that’s what you need on these guys. You have to get extra downs. They are hard to run the ball on. They were hard to run the ball on that drive because that’s what brought up the third down. I thought we executed well there, and then after that we didn’t execute well. We struggled to get off of press-man. They do a good job of getting their hands on you, and they just whooped us up front. The bottom line is we couldn’t move them.”
On if he was surprised that they struggled on the things he preaches every week…
“Yes. The out of bounds penalty, the halo penalty and the ‘jumping over the ship’ penalty were uncharacteristic. We never do that. We never ‘jump over the ship.’ I talked to them about that. That’s what’s disappointing because it was out of character, and in a hostile environment I resorted to things I don’t normally do. That’s the disappointing part, but that’s not what won or lost the game. It was the line of scrimmage and their physicality, but what made it so lop-sided were the undisciplined penalties.”
On if the team can learn something from this…
“I certainly think so. You learn from every experience, positive or negative, and we are going to learn from this one. We have to play our brand of football. We have to execute. We have to be disciplined. We don’t have to play perfect, but we have to play smart. Riley [Ridley]‘s play over the middle, that changes the momentum of the game, and we didn’t make the plays. At the end of the day, you give Auburn credit. They did a great job, and they were more physical than us. That’s the bottom line.”
On the change of momentum after the muffed punt by Mecole Hardman…
“It’s tough on Mecole [Hardman]. He catches hundreds and hundreds of those punts, and he knows that he wanted to run up and get under it and didn’t get his arms tucked. Mecole is a really good player. He’s is going to make a lot of plays around here, and he’s starting to develop and gain confidence with what you saw today. You saw some of the return game that he is capable of. He wishes he had it back, but that’s part of football. Mecole is going to have things that happen to him in life that are going to be a lot tougher than that.”
On his decision to run the ball at the end of the first half instead of throwing…
“It was not a good decision there – probably a mistake. If we had it to do over again, we would’ve definitely thrown the ball. The thinking was that we didn’t want to get knocked out of field goal range, but we should have thrown the ball, no doubt.”
On why the undisciplined mistakes came in this game specifically…
“I can’t put a finger on it. Honestly, we preach it hard. It’s part of our program. It’s part of what we do every day – making sure every kid understands the discipline you have to play with. When you lose that discipline you get what you had here tonight, and that’s undisciplined, foolish penalties. When you play a good team you can’t get away with that. You can’t give them an extra drive. It exposes you when you have undisciplined penalties because you’re playing longer, you’re getting less chances to run the ball and wear them down. We didn’t tackle really well tonight either.”
On Jake Fromm dealing with Auburn’s pass rush…
“I thought [Jake Fromm] made some good decisions. Jake is a battler. If he showed anything tonight it was that he can move in the pocket. They have some good rushers. That front is a really good front. We showed the ability at the end to still be able to move the ball and throw it when they had the good rushers still in. At the end of the day, I thought Jake played well. He played hard and made good decisions.”
On a possible discussion on passing the ball more often…
“There’s always a discussion about that. Part of it is because there were some sacks involved in there, too. But there’s a discussion every drive. With Auburn, if you throw it every play, you will get in trouble because they have really good pass rushers. The threat of running the ball has to slow down the pass rushers, and we tried to maintain that threat. I just don’t think we did a good job.”
On what was uncharacteristic of Georgia’s defensive play…
“First characteristic is that they have good players. They have a great back who is very patient behind the line of scrimmage. We talked about it the whole week. (Kerryon Johnson) waits and then he bursts. He is a great running back, and he totally bellowed our defense. I have a lot of respect for his toughness and the offensive line’s toughness. We didn’t keep our edges well. He bounced out and made some plays. They are hard to defend. With all that said, we did not play that well defensively. We did not get off the field with the punt. We just gave them a lot of things. They punched us in the mouth, and we did not respond to it. We did not stop the run like we are capable of.”
On what was happening with the offensive line tonight…
“They were more physical than us, on both sides. They played more physical than us in both ways. I always say in coaching ‘it’s not as bad as it seems, and it’s never as good as it seems.’ We will watch the tape and there will be some plays that we missed, as well as some opportunities that we missed. At the end of the day, you have to credit Auburn. They came out and played more physical than we did tonight.”
On Riley’s missed catch…
“I don’t even think it matters. We didn’t catch it. I’m not looking to blame anybody. I actually think it was an opportunity missed, and it was one of several opportunities that we missed. We have to give Auburn credit. They have good players. They played really physical football, and they dominated us.”
On how the defense handled Auburn’s fast offense…
“At times, we were able to give them a couple of negative plays on fast-pace plays. They do a great job at trying to create chaos. We have to do a better job as coaches to help our guys to get lined up and be able to keep responding to the fast pace. That’s always a challenge. It’s not my first time playing them that we had to worry about tempo. We know what comes with it, and we have to do a better job preparing for it to give our guys a chance.”
On the team talk he gave the players after their first loss…
“The season is not built in one game. This team will be defined by how they respond, not by how they did tonight. We have a lot of leaders in that room that need to go play a really good Kentucky team next week. Our whole deal is how you respond to some adversity. Things did not go your way, but how are you going to respond? That is all across college football, and you have to respond the right way.”
On the involvement he has with leaders…
“I’m very involved. It’s tough emotionally. It’s tough when you are out there in that environment and things are not going well. You don’t respond with undisciplined things. That’s not indicative of who you are and not Georgia’s brand of football. You can’t do that against a good team and give them 100 yards of penalties.”
On how important it is to stay positive after a tough loss…
“I’m the one in charge. I’m the one responsible of what we just did out there. I’m not running away from that. We didn’t play the way we are capable of, and our kids understand and respect that. Now we have to respond. That’s why we do all the stuff we do. This is just an opportunity for our leaders to come forth, including me.”
On getting back on track after a loss…
“It’s a wake-up call for some of those guys. Auburn had a better game plan and they beat us physically. Our job is to respond the right way and move on now to Kentucky. You don’t want Auburn to beat you twice. You go get ready to play Kentucky.”
On if he sensed the outcome of the game during practice…
“We had good practices. It wasn’t a matter of that. It was a matter of them playing more physical, executing better and being more disciplined.”
Nick Chubb, running back
On how to deal with the emotions of this loss…
“We need to bottle up our emotions. It’s good to get that first practice after the game in and get the bad taste out of our mouth. We will continue to get better at practice.”
On if they can use this for motivation…
“Definitely. We need to keep everyone’s heads up and keep the guys going. We need to keep practicing hard.”
On Auburn’s defensive line…
“It is hard to tell right now what went wrong. Those guys just came out and played hard.”
On where Georgia goes from here…
“We need to just continue to get better. We need to refocus and keep practicing hard.”
On why it was tough to run against Auburn…
“They play hard, fast and physical. They did a lot of great things against us.”
Sony Michel, running back
On getting down early…
“It brought us another perspective. At the end of the day, it shows our players to just keep fighting.”
On his personal foul and discipline issues…
“Discipline is something that we have to focus on. We just had some undisciplined penalties, including myself, and that can’t happen. We have to take full responsibility. Passion gets mixed in with emotions and sometimes you make bad decisions. You have to eliminate those to win games.”
On Auburn’s defense taking the run away…
“They were more physical up front. Our goal is to come out and be more physical, and we didn’t do that today. We need to go back and fix that and move on.”
On possibly playing Auburn again in the SEC Championship…
“Whatever is destined to happen is going to happen. We are just going to focus on our next opponent. We aren’t going to overlook any opponent. We played a great team tonight, and we are about to play another great team next week.”
Javon Wims, wide receiver
On Auburn…
“They are a good football team, and we just have to stick to getting better.”
On Georgia’s early success in the passing game…
“The opportunities were there. We just ended up short tonight.”
On the Georgia offense putting too much pressure on the defense…
“We have to do a better job putting us in better situations. Auburn has an unbelievable defense, but there was a lot of things we normally don’t do that happened tonight. We had a solid game plan and made some solid adjustments early. Auburn was just the better team tonight.”
Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde.