With Gasol little more than a spectator to the Kobe show, Lakers fall behind in finals

By Brian Mahoney, AP
Sunday, June 13, 2010

Gasol little more than a spectator to Kobe show

BOSTON — Pau Gasol finally got the ball with a chance to shoot, and Kevin Garnett sent it back at him.

A few minutes later, the same thing happened.

Gasol was little more than a spectator of the Kobe Bryant show in Game 5 of the NBA finals on Sunday night. And if he doesn’t become part of the offense again, he might be watching something else: another Boston Celtics celebration at the Los Angeles Lakers’ expense.

The forward from Spain either couldn’t get himself involved or the Lakers wouldn’t involve him. Gasol got only four shots in the first half and finished with 12 points on 5-of-12 shooting in the Celtics’ 92-86 victory that gave them a 3-2 lead in the series.

“He’s been consistent for us for a while now, so he can afford to have a bad game every once in a while,” Bryant said.

Even worse for the Lakers, Gasol looked passive and pouty, getting overwhelmed by Garnett and often complaining to the officials, just as he did when the Celtics beat the Lakers in the 2008 finals.

“I’ve got to find ways to get better looks throughout the game, and then when I do just be assertive and be aggressive and don’t be hesitant when I get the ball,” Gasol said. “Just attack.”

Gasol was hardly the Lakers’ only problem. Nobody else was in double figures until his free throw with 2:25 remaining, and they would’ve been blown off the TD Garden floor if not for Bryant’s sensational third quarter.

But Gasol is the one who is most expected to step up and be the No. 2 man, the All-Star big with enough skills to score inside or out. And he had been mostly making up for his miserable 2008 series, averaging 20.5 points on 54 percent shooting in the first four games while largely outplaying Garnett.

But he has occasionally expressed frustration when the Lakers forget to throw the ball into the post, and he got few touches in the first half. He put up only four shots, then was swatted twice by Garnett in the third quarter when the ball did come his way.

“He didn’t have a lot of opportunities in the first half, and in the second half it looked like he broke away, went by Garnett, got to the front of the hoop, and he blocked it from behind,” Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. “He had another one blocked.

“You know, until I see the edit, I can’t make a comment on what happened out there, whether he was tentative or whether he had good defensive plays made against him. I thought Garnett made a couple good defensive plays.”

Just for good measure, Tony Allen got him, too, racing in from nowhere to stop Gasol’s attempt under the basket.

This resembled a Lakers game from the 2005-06 season, when they had little talent around Bryant and forced him to be great nearly every game for a chance to win.

He was superb in the third quarter, scoring 19 points on a series of long jumpers. But that’s not going to beat the Celtics, who are prepared to deal with big nights from Bryant as long as nobody else has them.

“We are going to have to win a game eventually in this series where he goes off for a big number,” Boston coach Doc Rivers said before the game. “But that number, whatever it is, it’s still not the final number. Other people still have to score for them.”

Derek Fisher and Andrew Bynum couldn’t, going scoreless after combining for 15 points in the first quarter. Gasol couldn’t do much better in his lowest-scoring game of the series.

He needed to be better in 2008, and still does now.

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