After the Lakersβ third straight loss Thursday, JJ Redick promised things would get βuncomfortable.β The second-year coach, frustrated after the team delivered a lump of coal in a Christmas Day blowout by the Houston Rockets, said he couldnβt stand to rewatch the same tired story. Leaning his elbow on the table at his postgame news conference, Redick called out players who donβt give enough effort on defense or play hard.
Two days later he stood in front of reporters with a different tone.
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βRecalibration,β Redick said calmly of the message he delivered during Saturdayβs team meeting. βReconnection.β
Redick has cooled, but the Lakers still are under fire. Not only are they trying to snap a season-high three-game losing streak at home Sunday against the Sacramento Kings (6:30 p.m.), but also the Lakers (19-10) still are looking for their first home win in December and must navigate this defining moment without guard Austin Reaves.
Reaves was diagnosed with a grade 2 strain in his left calf Friday and will be reevaluated in four weeks. The latest setback comes less than two weeks after he was sidelined because of a βmildβ strain in the same calf that kept him out for three games.
Reaves is averaging career highs in points (26.6), assists (6.3) and rebounds (5.2) and his ascent from undrafted rookie to potential first-time All-Star was one of the teamβs feel-good stories of the season. Reaves scored a career-high 51 points against Sacramento in October, rescuing the Lakers in a game without LeBron James or Luka Doncic and showing Reavesβ potential in a starring role.
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Read more: Lakers guard Austin Reaves out for at least a month because of calf injury
Now without their second-leading scorer, the Lakers are looking for their supporting cast to step up.
βWe just need our guys to be stars in their roles,β Redick said. βCertainly from a top-end talent standpoint, it diminishes that. But it doesn’t change the non-negotiables or how we’re trying to play.β
After losing the last three games by an average of 20.7 points per game, the Lakers needed to get reacquainted with their non-negotiables during Saturdayβs meeting. The session was uncomfortable in the way confronting truth can be uncomfortable, Redick said. It wasnβt just coaches lecturing, but also players speaking up.
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The top priority was creating more clarity, Redick said. The team needed to get back to building its defensive fundamentals after so many lineup changes because of injuries. The Lakers have used 16 different starting lineups in 29 games and have to readjust their rotation again in Reavesβ absence.
βTogetherness is going to have to be emphasized to where it looks like an exaggeration,β center Deandre Ayton said, βwhere it becomes a habit. And that’s what winners do. And it’s pretty easy for this team. It’s just that there’s always a different group out there and we’re going to get it for sure.β
Forward Rui Hachimura said coaches reminded players of the teamβs three pillars that again were displayed on a screen in the practice gym Saturday β championship habits, championship communication, championship shape.
Read more: ‘We donβt have it right now.’ Takeaways from the Lakers’ third straight loss
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βWe just talk about everybody, players, coaches, we just gotta kind of tighten up,β Hachimura said. βWe had a good stretch in the beginning and now we kind of, I don’t know, we relaxed or we kind of got tired of winning, you know, but we just stopped doing what we’re supposed to do.β
The Lakers are 29th in the NBA in defensive rating in the last 15 games, giving up 122.2 points per 100 possessions. Itβs a significant drop from their rating of 113.7 in the first 14 games in which they went 10-4.
Since James returned from, the Lakersβ preferred starting lineup β Doncic, Reaves, James, Ayton and Hachimura β has a net rating of minus-19.9 in seven games.
Offensively the Lakers have lacked organization since James came back, Redick acknowledged. James declined to speak to reporters after practice.
βToo many random possessions,β Redick said. βThat’s on me.β
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.