Mateo’s Hoop Diary: Don Luka tattooed 60 points on Pat Riley Court as the Lakers handed the Heat their third loss in a row
The Heat didn’t have enough horsepower to hang with Luka Dončić and LeBron James despite the close result. The former had the highest scoring game against the Miami Heat in history by an opponent, and the hosts were also significantly smaller, being unable to contain dribble penetration.
Dončić bent the defense to his liking with drive-by and pull-up 3-pointers. He didn’t slow down in the first quarter even after tripping hard on Austin Reaves’ foot coming down the court. Meanwhile, the Heat were scorching from short and long range and got a good chunk of their production from Davion Mitchell, Simone Fontecchio and Kel’el Ware combining for nine first-quarter baskets..
Then the Lakers soon turned the tables as LeBron James was immaculate, shooting at the nail and at close range, and Dončić caused damage in the same areas.
Bam Adebayo subsequently got blasted by Dončić’s artillery strikes, plus the crew soon gave up the lead, being slow to recover and were down double digits. Miami’s offense was also ineffective from the outside, but Adebayo and Kel’el Ware got loose in the lane to buy them some time.
Yet Donićić kept his foot on the accelerator, scoring 20 points in the fourth quarter. The team managed to stay within single digits for the period thanks to Norman Powell and Tyler Herro’s seven combined baskets, but they couldn’t protect the arc or avoid late fouls.
The Heat lost after five lead changes and two ties, 134-126. Despite scoring 70 in the lane, they couldn’t keep up with the Lakers’ shooting 43.8% from deep.
Coach Erik Spoelstra gave Dončić props. “To start the half, he had three straight threes and that just ignited him,” Spoelstra said, snapping his fingers for emphasis. “From there, it became an incredible display of shot-making and drawing fouls, you know, etcetera.”
Takeaways:
- The Lakers were on the second night of a back-to-back. The Lakers were a step slow to start, going behind by double digits within a few minutes. Their flight got into Miami at 3:59 AM, per the Associated Press’ Tim Reynolds. Nonetheless, they get stronger as the game went on, and James tied Robert Parrish for the most games played in NBA history. He was also a beast off-ball, and logged his second triple-double of the season (19 points, 10 assists and 15 rebounds).
- The Heat deployed their 25th starting lineup and they were without their best bench scorer, Jaime Jaquez Jr., among their absences. The reserves still outscored LA’s by 25, and the team got what they wanted in the lane, even going a perfect 11-for-11 in the restricted area during the second half. The team went on to score 124.8 points per 100 possessions, good enough for the 78th percentile, per Cleaning the Glass. Yet even with scoring 42 points in the first quarter and 38 in the fourth, that wasn’t enough to outweigh getting outscored by 22 points in the second and third.
- The team has lost three in a row after being at a season best 10 games over .500. They are a half-game outside of the sixth seed, which is claimed by the Atlanta Hawks, who are on an 11-game win streak.
- Dončić heard MVP chants at Kaseya Center, finishing with 60 points on 60% shooting, with seven rebounds, three assists and five steals. Adebayo said, “He hit some tough shots out there. Like it is what it is. I know what it’s like to be in that mode.” Furthermore, Dončić and James’ played a part in slowing down the Heat in transition by making them check the ball in so often.
- Adebayo finished with 28 points on 47.4% shooting, with 10 rebounds and two assists. After him, the team had five double-figure scorers log between 11 and 21 points.


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