
Orange County baseball standings: Saturday, April 15
- April 15, 2023
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Orange County high school baseball standings through Friday, April 14
TRINITY LEAGUE
League
Overall
Santa Margarita
8-1
16-5
Mater Dei
7-2
14-7-1
Orange Lutheran
5-5
14-8-1
JSerra
4-5
12-8
Servite
3-7
13-10
St. John Bosco
1-8
10-12
SURF LEAGUE
League
Overall
Huntington Beach
4-1
17-7
Los Alamitos
2-2
13-8
Fountain Valley
2-3
11-9
Corona del Mar
1-3
10-11
WAVE LEAGUE
League
Overall
Edison
4-0
11-9
Newport Harbor
2-1
9-11
Laguna Beach
1-3
6-10-1
Marina
0-3
8-12
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Tesoro
7-1
15-6
Capistrano Valley
5-1
12-9
Trabuco Hills
2-4
10-12
Mission Viejo
2-7
13-10
Dana Hills
1-4
6-15
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
League
Overall
San Juan Hills
4-2
11-10
Aliso Niguel
3-3
9-12
San Clemente
3-3
14-6
El Toro
2-4
8-13
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Woodbridge
15-2
19-5
Northwood
11-5
14-8
Beckman
9-6-2
13-9-2
Irvine
8-8-1
10-13-1
Laguna Hills
8-8
14-8
Portola
6-9
8-14
University
4-9-1
9-11-1
Sage Hill
1-15
3-16
ORANGE COAST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Estancia
8-2
16-5
Costa Mesa
5-3
17-5
Calvary Chapel
5-3
10-10
Orange
4-3
9-11
St. Margaret’s
3-4
4-8
Santa Ana
4-6
6-13
Saddleback
0-8
2-14
ORANGE LEAGUE
League
Overall
Savanna
6-0
13-3-1
Century
4-2
14-7
Anaheim
4-2
10-11
Magnolia
4-2
10-8
Santa Ana Valley
0-6
2-13
Western
0-6
1-12
CRESTVIEW LEAGUE
League
Overall
Villa Park
4-1
14-9
El Dorado
3-2
13-9
El Modena
2-3
13-10
Foothill
1-4
11-12
NORTH HILLS LEAGUE
League
Overall
Yorba Linda
3-1
10-10-1
Brea Olinda
2-2
10-9
Esperanza
2-3
7-12
Canyon
1-2
12-7
GOLDEN WEST LEAGUE
League
Overall
Katella
5-1
11-10
Ocean View
4-1
12-9
Segerstrom
3-3
4-13-2
Westminster
2-3
11-4
Garden Grove
2-4
13-8
Godinez
0-4
1-15
EMPIRE LEAGUE
League
Overall
Pacifica
6-0
18-2
Cypress
6-0
18-6
Crean Lutheran
4-2
17-6
Tustin
1-5
3-16
Kennedy
1-5
9-10-1
Valencia
0-6
4-16
FREEWAY LEAGUE
League
Overall
Fullerton
5-1
13-6
La Habra
4-2
13-3-2
Troy
3-3
10-9-1
Sonora
3-3
11-10
Buena Park
2-4
9-11
Sunny Hills
1-5
8-8-1
GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE
League
Overall
Loara
6-3
7-7
Los Amigos
6-4
10-7
Bolsa Grande
5-4
8-9
Santiago
5-5
6-9
La Quinta
4-5
6-9
Rancho Alamitos
2-7
4-10
SAN JOAQUIN LEAGUE
League
Overall
Western Christian
10-0
11-1
Calvary Chapel/Downey
11-1-1
13-5-2
Pacifica Christian
6-3-1
8-4-1
The Webb Schools
4-5-1
4-5-1
Fairmont Prep
4-7
4-8
Southlands Christian
2-7-1
3-10-1
Tarbut V’ Torah
2-7
2-7
Avalon
0-9
1-11
Capistrano Valley Christian
0-0
14-9
Orange County Register
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Galaxy hopes facing rival LAFC can revive its slow start
- April 15, 2023
Jalen Neal has watched every El Trafico game.
On Sunday, he finally gets to play in one and it might just be one to save the Galaxy’s season.
By now, everyone in the league knows about the Galaxy’s struggles, winless (0-3-3) to start the season.
To borrow a line from America’s favorite soccer coach, Ted Lasso, the Galaxy remain a “work in Progmess.”
“No one would have had these expectations of us starting the way we’ve had this season,” Neal said. “I think we’ve shown glimpses of what we can truly do and a few of the games we’ve been good for the entirety of the game, but the results didn’t happen to go our way.
“We know what we’re capable of, we know our potential and any game now we can have that jump start.”
To quiet the “noise” or to shut out the noise as coach Greg Vanney put it Thursday, the Galaxy will have to find a way to slow down a high-flying LAFC attack led by Denis Bouanga.
“He likes to go inside a lot, he’s right-footed, playing on the left, he’s going … a lot of inverting runs off of the ball and he’s a creative player on the ball,” Neal said of Bouanga. “We know his strengths and weaknesses.”
In 10 MLS and CONCACAF Champions League games, Bouanga already has 11 goals. That’s translated into LAFC starting the season on a six-game unbeaten streak (4-0-2) and advancing to the Champions League semifinals.
“They’re running a nice, confident wave,” Vanney said. “Coming off the end of last season, which gives every team confidence and then they’ve hit the ground running in terms of the start of this season, in terms of getting results both (CONCACAF) Champions League … they’re getting a lot of games under their belt, they’ve got a solid rotation, they’re healthy, which is key. And again, swagger, confidence and riding a guy or two that’s having lights out beginnings to the season, helps … it helps everybody.”
The Galaxy, however, lands on the opposite side of the fence.
Injuries have contributed to the slow start. And in last Saturday’s 3-0 loss in Houston, frustrations boiled over as Martin Caceres and Douglas Costa picked up red cards in separate incidents and will have to sit out Sunday’s game.
“They want to win, they want to win a game and so there’s that desire and I think natural stress you would have to want to come out and win,” Vanney said. “They know a game like this is a big opportunity to turn a season around in one day, one game and these games a lot of times come down to just competing … out-competing the opposition, winning your duels, finishing your opportunities when you get them. Obviously we’ve got to manage them and they have some difference makers who can, with one play, change the course of a game instantly.”
The Galaxy will likely have Javier “Chicharito” Hernandez back in the starting lineup. Hernandez made his season debut last week, coming on as a second-half sub.
“At the end of the day, he is our alpha player,” Vanney said of Chicharito. “When we miss him, we don’t just miss him on the field, we miss his personality in the group and so it’s really nice to have him back.
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“It’s brought another level of just … I don’t know if you want to say personality inside of our group, but there’s Javi no matter what we’re doing. If it’s a warmup and the fitness coaches are putting out a little game at the beginning, he’s analyzing and figuring out how to win that game and he’s competing at that. And then he gets everybody on his team in that game competing at that and it’s contagious.”
LAFC (4-0-2) at Galaxy (0-3-3)
When: 1:30 p.m. Saturday
Where: Dignity Health Sports Park, Carson
TV: Fox, Apple TV
Orange County Register
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Angels promote prospect Zach Neto, send down David Fletcher
- April 15, 2023
BOSTON — The Angels promoted 2022 No. 1 draft pick Zach Neto on Saturday morning and sent infielder David Fletcher to Triple-A, a stunning roster shakeup.
Neto, 22, was hitting .444 with three homers at Double-A, including two homers Friday night. In his career, he’s played just 44 pro games, hitting .322 with a .937 OPS. The shortstop played extensively in spring training this year, demonstrating he is major league-ready defensively, at least.
Fletcher, 28, had slipped on the Angels’ depth chart, starting just four times in their first 13 games. He was 2 for 16. They notably didn’t even use him as a defensive replacement to protect late leads Tuesday and Wednesday.
Fletcher signed a five-year, $26-million deal prior to the 2021 season.
More to come on this story.
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Orange County Register
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Yorba Linda’s Adventure Playground is ready after $7 million renovation
- April 15, 2023
Check mark: The water slide works.
Check mark: The zipline zips.
Check mark: Yorba Linda’s beloved Adventure Playground is still a place of exploration and fun after a $7 million renovation.
Community leaders, invited guests and, most importantly, several children, got a sneak peek at the park’s new features Friday night, putting them through their paces.
“This is so great, just a fun place for kids to go and be adventurous,” said Cindy Maddox, visiting with a neighbor. “It is so well thought out and going to be a great thing for the community, I think.”
New features include suspension bridges connecting three towers of a play structure; a splash pad, but this is just a concrete slab with some sprinklers, this is 5,000-square-feet with a waterfall boulder, rocks to clamber over and water sprays; two water slides, including one that stretches more than 170 feet; and bathrooms onsite. There is also a lot more shade offered.
And community favorites, like the opportunity to build forts and the zipline remain – there are now two 100-foot lines for children to ride. And there is the wiffleball field.
Building forts, getting dirty, using their imagination in play during summer camp has been a rite of passage for children growing up in Yorba Linda since the early ’80s. Now several amenities will be open to the community throughout the year, officials said.
“It’s taken a lot of work by a big team of people to reopen this special facility, and while it’salways amazing to see a concept take shape in real life, the execution of this project is trulyexceptional,” Mike Kudron, the city’ s parks and recreation director, said. “As a result, Yorba Linda residents are going to enjoy Adventure Playground for decades to come.”
City officials expect to announce soon an opening date later this month for the playground, but summer camps are already planned, check online at YLRecOnline.com for more information.
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Tips for growing healthy container plants in the garden, patio or deck
- April 15, 2023
1. If you have a patio or deck, you may be considering adorning it with potted plants. The problem with containerized plants on concrete or wood surfaces is the stains that they create. To prevent such stains, you must elevate your plants above the surfaces involved. You can do this by placing your pots in plant stands or by positioning so-called pot feet under them or their saucers. Saucers present another problem, however, since the water that collects in them may attract mosquitoes. In such cases, if your patio is roofed, you may wish to opt for hanging baskets to house your patio plants. Another solution is to position potted plants on the earth around your patio perimeter. Plants in containers are increasingly finding their way into the garden, especially where the edge of a garden meets the edge of a hardscape feature or driveway. A whole row of container plants just beyond the outside edge of a concrete pool deck or driveway will soften the look and feel of these surfaces.
2. If you are looking for plants suitable for container growing that will bloom from now until the fall, consider these: petunias, although you will need to pinch back growth every now and then to encourage branching; million bells or Calibrachoa, which look like petunias, to which they are related, only with flowers one-third the size; fanflower (Scaevola aemula) in mauve or pink; star clusters (Pentas lanceolata) in red, pink, purple, or white; cannas, which have silky flowers in red, pink, yellow, orange, and white that look like irises and banana leaf foliage that may be striped or variegated in a Joseph’s coat of colors; dragon wing begonias for half day sun. Container plants with non-stop foliar interest include red Abyssiniany banana (Ensete ventricosum var. Rubrum), red African milk bush (Synadenium grantii var. Rubrum), coleus, the otherworldly Persian shield (Strobilanthes dyeriana) with its handsome, lanceolate purplish foliage with silver highlights, and sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas), with cascading leaves in lime green or dark purple.
3. It is essential to thin fruit at this time not only so that your remaining fruit reaches their proper size, but also to keep branches from breaking when they are overloaded with a crop. Peach, nectarine, plum, and apricot branches are especially susceptible to such breakage and, with this possibility in mind, thin peaches and nectarines when they are as small as an inch or two in size so that a space of five inches is created between any two fruit on the same branch. Where plums and apricots are concerned, the distance between any two of them should be three inches. If you want to go exotic in your selection of fruit trees, the place to do it is Papaya Tree Nursery (papayatreenursery.com) in Granada Hills. Select from Persian mulberry, cherimoya, litchi, and dozens of other species that you won’t find in your average plant nursery. San Gabriel Nursery and Florist (sgnursery.com), Laguna Hills Nursery (lagunahillsnursery.com), and Otto & Sons Nursery (ottoandsonsnursery.com) are excellent sources for a large variety of more conventional fruit tree types.
4. Plant asparagus for a generation of spears. The plants do last for several decades and the crop they produce is not getting any cheaper. Asparagus thrives in deep, well-drained soil that is rich in organic matter. Preparation for planting involves digging a trench one foot deep and one foot wide in a full sun location. Back-fill the trench with four inches of the original soil mixed with a healthy quantity of aged compost. Now spread a 5-10-10 fertilizer and cover with two more inches of compost-enriched soil. Set asparagus crowns (asparagus stem bases plus roots) 18 inches apart, in rows, and cover the crowns with two more inches of soil. As asparagus shoots emerge, shovel additional soil into the trench. Follow the progress of the shoots with a gradual elevation of the soil level until the trench is filled in completely. Asparagus produces two types of growth: the spears that you see on your dinner plate and frizzy, fernlike shoots. These frizzy shoots turn brown during the winter but should not be cut off until spring, allowing the carbohydrate they manufacture to be completely transported down into the roots where it can be stored for later use by developing spears. You can order asparagus crowns by mail order from Stark Brothers (starkbros.com), Keene Garlic (keeneorganics.com), or Gurney’s Seed and Nursery (gurneys.com).
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5. You can enjoy corn throughout summer and fall by planting early, mid-season, and late varieties now. There should be two and a half to three feet between rows. While the earliest varieties will produce just one ear per plant, later varieties will often yield two ears, especially when spacing between plants is twelve inches or more, although plants can be as little as eight inches apart. As long as the pollination periods of the various varieties do not overlap, there is no danger of producing inferior kernels. To ensure pollination, however, especially if you plant in an enclosed area where not much wind blows, or if only a couple dozen plants are involved, you should probably hand pollinate, too. Each corn plant has both male flowers (tassels) and female flowers (silks) but they are separated on the plant, with the tassels sprouting at the top. In order to hand-pollinate, cut off the tassels when they begin to shed pollen, which you then dust onto the silks. Make sure the soil is prepared to the depth of a shovel blade, around six to eight inches deep, with finished homemade compost or a bagged soil amendment prior to planting. Corn is a heavy feeder so you can apply a low-analysis fertilizer recommended for vegetables when the plants reach heights of 16 and 36 inches. To prevent infestation of corn earworms (moth larvae), apply spinosad, a non-toxic organic insecticide to silks and tassels as soon as they appear and make repeat applications every four to five days until you harvest the corn.
Please send questions, comments, and photos to joshua@perfectplants.com.
Orange County Register
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Clippers vs. Suns: First-round scouting report, prediction
- April 15, 2023
SERIES SCHEDULE
(best-of-seven, all times PT)
Game 1: Sunday at Phoenix, 5 p.m. (TNT/Bally Sports SoCal)
Game 2: Tuesday at Phoenix, 7 p.m. (TNT/Bally Sports SoCal)
Game 3: Thursday at Clippers, 7:30 p.m. (NBA/Bally Sports SoCal)
Game 4: Saturday at Clippers, 12:30 p.m. (TNT/Bally Sports SoCal)
*Game 5: April 25 at Phoenix, time TBD (TV TBD)
*Game 6: April 27 at Clippers, time TBD (TV TBD)
*Game 7: April 29 at Phoenix, time TBD (TV TBD)
*If necessary
HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Clippers and Suns split the regular-season series, 2-2
Oct. 23: Suns 112, Clippers 95, at Crypto.com Arena
Dec. 15: Suns 111, Clippers 95, at Crypto.com Arena
Feb. 16: Clippers 116, Suns 107, in Phoenix
April 9: Clippers 119, Suns 114, in Phoenix
TALE OF THE TAPE
Clippers (regular-season rank) … category … Suns (regular-season rank)
44-38 … Season Record … 45-37
113.6 (17th, tied) … PPG … 113.6 (17th, tied)
113.1 (12th) … Opp. PPG … 111.6 (6th)
47.7 (13th) … FG Pct. … 46.7 (23rd)
38.1 (3rd) … 3pt Pct. … 37.4 (7th)
78.1 (18th) … FT Pct. … 79.3 (10th)
43.2 (17th) … Rebounds … 44.2 (11th)
23.9 (24th) … Assists … 27.3 (4th)
7.1 (15th, tied) … Steals … 7.1 (15th, tied)
4.4 (21st) … Blocked Shots … 5.3 (5th)
13.5 (17th) … Turnovers … 12.9 (11th, tied)
STARTING BACKCOURT
Eight-time All-Star Paul George (sprained knee) is expected to be out for this series, leaving the fifth-seeded Clippers with a huge void in the backcourt. But they have nine-time All-Star point guard Russell Westbrook, who has proven to be efficient with the Clippers and if he can continue to play within his game (i.e., not try to do too much), he could pose problems for the Suns with his attack to the basket. The Clippers have made 50.9% of their field goal attempts with Westbrook on the court, and they will use Eric Gordon to space the floor with his 3-point shooting. … Fourth-seeded Phoenix has far too much talent in its backcourt to be worried. Devin Booker, when healthy, has enjoyed a career year, averaging 27.8 points. Future Hall of Famer Chris Paul, who memorably scored 41 points in Game 6 of the 2021 Western Conference finals to eliminate his old team, is shooting 44% from the field and averaging 13.9 points and 8.9 assists in 32 minutes per game. EDGE: SUNS
STARTING FRONTCOURT
Kawhi Leonard will be in his well-known playoff mode, but it might not be enough to offset the Suns’ Kevin Durant, who came to Phoenix in a February trade with Brooklyn. With Durant in the lineup, those two teams have lost only once in 22 games. The Suns are unbeaten in eight games with a healthy Durant. With George out with a sprained knee, Leonard has upped his game, posting 40, 25, 27 and 25 points in his past four games but he will also be expected to defend Durant. That could be a tough, draining assignment. Veteran forward Nicolas Batum (39.% from 3-point range) has stepped in admirably for Marcus Morris Sr., who has been out with back spasms. … Suns center Deandre Ayton is the team’s third-leading scorer at 18 ppg and is pulling down an average of 10 rebounds. Clippers center Ivica Zubac averages 10.8 ppg and 9.9 rpg. EDGE: EVEN
BENCHES
The Suns traded most of their key role players to bring Durant to Phoenix, leaving their bench light on talent. The Clippers, meanwhile, have a corps of two-way wing players who can shoot from outside and space the floor. Finding the right combination has been a problem this season, especially when going small. Still, the Clippers have several players, such as Norman Powell, Bones Hyland and Terance Mann who Lue can use to adjust to opponents and exploit their weaknesses. EDGE: CLIPPERS
COACHES
In three seasons with Cleveland, Tyronn Lue led the Cavaliers to three consecutive NBA Finals, winning the 2016 title. In his first season with the Clippers, he guided them to the conference finals, rubber-stamping him as one of the league’s best coaches. Last season, without Leonard, the Clippers lost a pair of play-in tournament games (they were also without George for the second one). … Phoenix coach Monty Williams led the Suns to the 2021 NBA Finals and was named the 2022 NBA Coach of the Year after guiding them to a league-best 64-18 record before they lost in the second round of the playoffs. EDGE: CLIPPERS
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INTANGIBLES
It remains to be seen how George’s absence will affect the Clippers’ chances of advancing. The All-Star wing is coming off a sprained knee and is expected to be back should the team reach the second round. The Clippers’ deep bench will be counted on to pick up the slack. Westbrook could be the X-factor the Clippers need. … Williams is faced with putting together a rotation with few pieces who are not named Durant, Booker or Paul, but that threesome is considered a threat to anyone’s title hopes. EDGE: SUNS
SERIES PREDICTION
Although both rosters have undergone significant changes since the 2021 conference finals, the Clippers would love nothing more to avenge that outcome. Any team facing the Suns would surely rather meet them now, when they are still trying to develop chemistry with Durant, as opposed to later in the postseason when they could find their stride. Even with Leonard’s reputation for elevating his teams in the postseason, George’s absence cannot be discounted. The rest of the team faces a heavy lift against the star-studded Suns. SUNS IN FIVE
Orange County Register
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Lakers vs. Grizzlies: First-round scouting report, prediction
- April 15, 2023
SERIES SCHEDULE
(Best-of-seven, all times PT)
Game 1: Sunday, at Memphis, noon (Ch. 7)
Game 2: Wednesday, at Memphis, 4:30 p.m. (TNT, Spectrum SportsNet)
Game 3: Saturday, at L.A., 7 p.m. (ESPN)
Game 4: April 24, at Lakers, TBD (TV TBD)
*Game 5: April 26, at Memphis, TBD (TV TBD)
*Game 6: April 28, at Lakers, TBD (TV TBD)
*Game 7: April 30 at Memphis, TBD (TV TBD)
*If necessary
HEAD-TO-HEAD
The Lakers won the regular-season series 2-1
Jan. 2: Lakers 121, Grizzlies 120, at Crypto.com Arena
Feb. 28: Grizzlies 121, Lakers 109, at Memphis
March 7: Lakers 112, Grizzlies 103, at Crypto.com Arena
TALE OF THE TAPE
Grizzlies (regular-season rank) … category … Lakers (regular-season rank)
51-31 … Season record … 43-39
116.9 (9th) … PPG … 117.2 (6th)
113.0 (11th) … Opp. PPG … 116.6 (20th)
47.5 % (27th) … FG Pct. … 48.2 % (10th)
35.1 % (23rd) … 3-point Pct. … 34.6% (25th)
73.3% (30th) … FT Pct. … 77.5% (20th)
46.6 (2nd) … Rebounds … 45.7 (6th)
26.0 (9th) … Assists … 25.3 (15th)
8.3 (3rd) … Steals … 6.4 (26th)
5.8 (3rd) … Blocked shots … 4.6 (16th)
13.6 (12th) … Turnovers … 14.1 (15th)
STARTING BACKCOURT
The Grizzlies are most often described as talented but young. No one typifies that description more closely than guard Ja Morant, the Grizzlies’ leading scorer with an average of 26.2 points, who has had off-court issues this season. The NBA suspended him for eight games after a video surfaced showing him waving a gun around while in a Denver-area strip club. The Washington Post, in a recent article, detailed further incidents that included joining a group of eight or nine others in confronting a sporting goods store employee Morant claimed had upset his mother. Morant also reportedly punched a 17-year-old during a pick-up altercation last summer. Each case was investigated by police, but only after lengthy delays. … A sense of calm has come over the Lakers since they traded Patrick Beverley and Russell Westbrook at the NBA’s deadline on Feb. 9. D’Angelo Russell – the most high-profile addition they made at the deadline – had a rough night in the play-in game (two points on 1-for-9 shooting), and the Lakers will need him to bounce back strong in this series. EDGE: GRIZZLIES
STARTING FRONTCOURT
The Grizzlies are expected to be without injured center Steven Adams (knee) and power forward Brandon Clarke (Achilles) for the rest of the season, so that should give the Lakers a significant advantage around the basket. That leaves Jaren Jackson Jr. as the Grizzlies’ most effective big man, with averages of 18.6 points and 6.8 rebounds. He must contend with Lakers counterpart Anthony Davis and Rui Hachimura, two players at home in the paint and on the perimeter. Davis had a stellar stretch run for the Lakers interrupted by several less-than-productive games to close the regular season. But he stepped up in their play-in victory over the Timberwolves with 24 points, 15 rebounds and three blocked shots. LeBron James is in his 20th NBA season and averaged 28.9 points, 8.3 rebounds and 6.8 assists. Not bad, eh? EDGE: LAKERS
BENCHES
The Lakers must ease the burden shared by Davis and James with a number of bench players that include Hachimura, Malik Beasley, Troy Brown Jr. and Dennis Schröder. Lakers coach Darvin Ham is expected to tighten his rotation for the playoffs, as all coaches tend to do. The Grizzlies will be short-handed up front with Adams and Clarke sidelined, and their depth will be tested. EDGE: LAKERS
COACHES
Ham won an NBA championship as a player with the Detroit Pistons (over the Lakers) in 2003-04 and as an assistant coach with the Milwaukee Bucks (over the Phoenix Suns) in 2020-21. He’s in his first season as a head coach with the Lakers and probably feels like he has coached several different versions of this team already given the injuries to Davis and James and the trade deadline roster makeover. Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins, part of the Mike Budenholzer coaching tree like Ham, is in his fourth season with the Grizzlies, leading them to a second consecutive Southwest Division title. EDGE: GRIZZLIES
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INTANGIBLES
It seems weird to speak of James as an intangible, but when it comes to leading a team in the playoffs, there’s no one with his sparkling résumé in this series or any other. At present, he’s without a peer in the NBA, and that gives the Lakers a very large advantage in a first-round series against the youthful Grizzlies. The play-in game was the Lakers’ eighth game in a 14-day stretch, but counting their days off following the play-in win, their next four games will be played over 13 days, surely a welcome change. EDGE: LAKERS
SERIES PREDICTION
The Grizzlies are probably a slight favorite in what figures to be among the most closely watched first-round series. The Lakers’ experience in the form of past NBA champions James and Davis will likely give them an edge when things get tight. Game 1 certainly looms as a must-win for the Grizzlies, who would gain a huge boost of confidence while maintaining home-court advantage. LAKERS IN SEVEN.
Orange County Register
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Alexander: Can Lakers make history against Grizzlies?
- April 15, 2023
So far this spring, the Lakers have hung their hats on resiliency. After falling behind by 15 points to a drastically short-handed Minnesota Timberwolves team on Tuesday, and finally winning in overtime to advance beyond the play-in round for the second time in three years, much was made of the self-imposed struggles they’ve overcome to get here.
It’s that old “nobody believed in us” trope, and so what if they dug their own trench and climbed out of it?
“That’s where we started, 2-10, and the analytic guys and the media, (people) upstairs in our front office, saying that we had 0.3% chance of getting to the playoffs, and obviously we defeated those odds,” Anthony Davis said after the 108-102 overtime victory over the Timberwolves.
Then, he added:
“You know, we don’t want to stop there, just getting in. Obviously, you got small victories, seeing where we started, but now we want to get greedy and make some noise in these playoffs.”
In one sense the task is steeper when the No. 7 seed Lakers face the No. 2 seed Memphis Grizzlies, beginning with Game 1 on Sunday afternoon in Memphis. In the three previous years of play-in games, no team getting out of that preliminary round has won its first-round series – and of the nine series, only three have reached as many as six games and none have gone seven.
There’s usually a reason, in other words, why a team is a No. 2 seed, and the underlying message is that punting the first part of the season and depending on a hot streak at the end is no way to win a championship.
Then again, Laker fans can argue that their team, which knocked off the Golden State Warriors to reach the main draw in 2021, might have beaten Phoenix in the next round if Davis hadn’t hurt his groin in Game 4. Instead, they lost in six. There’s a theme here.
Those Lakers finished 42-30 in a truncated schedule, were the defending champs and were actually favored against the Suns, their low seed having a lot to do with LeBron James missing 27 games to injury and Davis missing 36.
Which brings us to these playoffs and this series. That team was never as underwater as this one was for most of the season, and yes, James again missed 27 games this season while Davis was unavailable for 36.
And yes, these Lakers are underdogs against Memphis, which was 51-31 in the regular season and features one of the game’s most dynamic (if sometimes impetuous) young players in Ja Morant (averaging 26.2 points, 8.1 assists, 5.9 rebounds per game) along with the league leaders in blocked shots (Jared Jackson, 3.0) and 3-point percentage (former Clipper Luke Kennard, .494).
But if you’re a Lakers fan looking for hope, consider: The Grizzlies will be without center Steven Adams (knee) and power forward Brandon Clarke (Achilles injury), meaning that as long as Davis can stay upright, he will be a thorny problem for Memphis and possibly the difference in the series.
“We have a healthy, active A.D. playing at a high level,” Coach Darvin Ham said before Tuesday’s game. “It takes a lot of pressure off the rest of the team, including Bron. You know Bron is going to be Bron. Bron is going to be spectacular. But A.D. has to be the guy that initiates for us, that sustains and finishes at a high level on both sides of the ball.”
But this is worth noting. The teams played three times this season, with the Lakers winning the two games in L.A. and Memphis winning its home game. And none of those games included James and Davis on the court together.
L.A. pulled out the first meeting, a 122-121 decision at home on Jan. 20, with a 41-point fourth quarter. Davis was out and James had 23 points, nine rebounds and six assists. When the Grizzlies won at home on Feb. 28, 121-109, Davis had 28 points, 19 rebounds and five blocked shots but was 9 for 19 from the field, two nights after James injured his foot in Dallas.
In the most recent meeting, a 112-103 Lakers victory on March 7 at home with LeBron still sidelined, Davis had 30 points, 22 rebounds and two blocks and was 11 for 17 from the field. Adams did not play in either of the last two games, and Clarke was out for the March game as well.
“In our matchups with Memphis they didn’t double(-team),” Davis recalled. “Usually Steven Adams guards me, and then (6-foot-7) Xavier Tillman, he kind of guarded me straight up, so I’m not sure what their plan is. Haven’t seen many double-teams against Memphis.”
In the last meeting, with both Adams and Clarke out, Tillman played 32 minutes and 7-foot rookie Santi Aldama played 26½. Rest assured, the Grizzlies have spent the last four days devising a defensive plan for Davis and for James. Also rest assured that the plan likely will change the longer the series goes and will be revised the first time that D’Angelo Russell or Dennis Schröder or Austin Reaves burns the Grizzlies.
Ham and Grizzlies coach Taylor Jenkins both come from the Mike Budenholzer coaching tree, so the strategic game within a game could be a classic. The game on the floor, meanwhile, could turn nasty, given the taunts and trash talk between the sides the last three years.
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Consider, too, that the league and its TV partners seem to have handed the Lakers a favorable schedule for the early part of the series. They’ve had four days of rest before Game 1, and they’ll enjoy two days off before Game 2 and two more days before Game 3 on Saturday evening in Los Angeles.
But the bottom line? This is not the Lakers team that struggled through the first four months of the season. Rob Pelinka’s moves at the trade deadline gave James and Davis a far better supporting cast. This truly is that proverbial team you don’t want to face in the postseason.
And as long as the two stars stay healthy, the pick here is that it will end in downtown L.A. two Fridays from now with the purple and gold streamers raining from the rafters, and the Lakers pivoting to prepare for either Golden State or Sacramento.
Maybe all of those folks who had the phrase “Lakers in 6” trending on Twitter a few days ago were prescient.
jalexander@scng.com
Orange County Register
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