The nail in the coffin and the eulogy has been delivered
Report: Anthony Davis unlikely to play in Game 5 vs. Suns
Los Angeles Lakers star big man Anthony Davis will reportedly miss Game 5 of the team’s first-round series with the Phoenix Suns. The Athletic’s Shams Charania reports that Davis, who is suffering from a left groin strain, will be unlikely to play in Tuesday’s Game 5
Due to a knee sprain, Anthony Davis was questionable
entering Sunday’s Game 4 vs. the Suns. Due to a groin strain, he exited it.
Davis was questionable entering Game 4 on Sunday because of a knee injury suffered in Game 3. But Davis started and played 19 minutes, 24 seconds in the first half. He was clearly hurt after colliding with Jae Crowder on a drive to the basket.
Davis did not reappear with the team after halftime, and Kyle Kuzma started in his place. The
team revealed the new groin injury shortly after. The Suns, who opened a double-digit lead in the third, would tie the series with a 100-92 victory to tie the series 2-2.
“I thought he was laboring a little bit” even before the groin injury, Lakers coach Frank Vogel said of Davis, who missed 30 games in the regular season. “He was saying that his knee was sore, but there was no way that he was not going to play. I thought he gave a heck of a run at it, trying to compete through pain.”
LeBron James had 25 points and 12 rebounds for the Lakers, who fell too far behind in the third quarter while Davis was being evaluated in the locker room. Before its last-minute surge, Los Angeles struggled in the absence of starters Davis and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, who injured his knee in Game 3.
Davis left Staples Center before the game ended for medical treatment. James will be carrying even more responsibility if Davis misses any games, but he’s ready.
“For me, it’s putting our team in position to be successful,” James said. “These shoulders were built for a reason, and if it takes a little more to put on top of it, I’m ready for the challenge.”
Phoenix made a 32-15 run starting shortly before halftime and encompassing the whole third, during which it held the Lakers to 15 points on 3-for-16 shooting with Davis absent.
Wesley Matthews started in place of Caldwell-Pope, whose absence boosted the Lakers’ 3-point game early: After hitting just nine combined 3-pointers in the first halves of the first three games, Los Angeles hit nine in the first half of Game 4 alone with two apiece from Matthews and Ben McLemore, who got playing time mostly because of Caldwell-Pope’s absence.
The Lakers hit just four more 3-pointers in the second half, however. Matthews and McLemore didn’t score again after their early burst.