The News

Lakers stun Warriors 112-95 for Golden State’s 6th loss

Los Angeles Lakers forward Kobe Bryant, right, handles the ball while Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry, left, defends during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Los Angeles, Sunday, March 6, 2016. (AP Photo/Kelvin Kuo)

LOS ANGELES – Even a team that dominates the way the Golden State Warriors have this season is bound to stumble every now and then.

They tossed out a clunker against the Los Angeles Lakers, losing 112-95 on Sunday while shooting a season-worst 13 percent from 3-point range.

“We got what we deserved,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “When the ball doesn’t go in, you have to win with energy and defense and toughness, and we didn’t have any of that.”

The young Lakers did, led by Jordan Clarkson with 25 points and rookie D’Angelo Russell with 21. They handed the defending NBA champions just their sixth loss of the season, all on the road.

Kobe Bryant added 12 points in one of the biggest upsets in NBA history and the Lakers’ most important victory in a downtrodden farewell season for Bryant, who spent the fourth quarter on the bench resting his aching right shoulder and mentoring his teammates.

Los Angeles Lakers guard Jordan Clarkson, left, attempts a shot during an NBA basketball game in Los Angeles. Photo: AP/Kelvin Kuo

“Kobe kept us on our toes,” Russell said. “He was coaching us the whole game from the sideline. Telling us to push it when we got it, don’t wait, and it worked.”

Stephen Curry scored 18 points on a day the Warriors were awful offensively. Klay Thompson added 15 points, but the Splash Brothers were a combined 1 of 18 from 3-point range. In all, the league’s best long-range shooting team missed 26 of 30 attempts, a season low for makes for a team that averages nearly 13.

“I would say 24 of them were good shots that just missed,” Curry said. “It happens.”

Golden State fell to 55-6 and the Lakers improved to 13-51.

“We haven’t brought our A-plus game, but we’ve found different ways to win,” Curry said. “That’s what we’ve been most proud of this year. Today could have been the same story had we made shots in the third quarter and not dug ourselves such a huge hole.”

The loss snapped Golden State’s seven-game winning streak and was its first since a 32-point blowout at Portland on Feb. 19.

“It happens,” said Draymond Green, who just missed a triple-double, with nine points, 10 rebounds and nine assists. “It just can’t happen anymore.”

The Lakers effectively put the game away in the second quarter, when they built a double-digit lead that Golden State threatened just once, pulling to 65-57 early in the third.

That was as close as they got the entire second half.

Clarkson answered with a pair of 3-pointers sandwiched around Julius Randle’s dunk and the young Lakers kept on rolling. Brazilian Marcelo Huertas fed Larry Nance Jr. for an alley-oop dunk in the fourth that had the fans exploding in cheers, seemingly exorcising the demons of another losing season for the once-proud franchise with the league’s third-worst record.

“We’re just growing as a young group here,” Clarkson said. “We just have to keep our foot on this pedal and keep going.”

The Lakers stretched their lead to 16 points in the third, when both teams scored 24 points apiece. The Warriors scored five straight to trail 84-73 going into the fourth.

Nick Young hit back-to-back 3-pointers and Huertas scored four in a row to keep the Lakers ahead 95-79.

Bryant made it back for his final career game against the Warriors on national TV after sitting out Friday’s loss to Atlanta. Gleeful fans chanted his name in the fourth while he grinned from the bench, clearly delighted that his junior teammates rose to the occasion, with seven players in double figures. The Lakers had lost two straight and 10 of 13 coming in.

“We executed the game plan very well. We paid attention to detail very well,” Bryant said. “For the young guys, it’s extremely important to see the results of it. As they grow, they start trusting that more and more, they start trusting the process more and more. From that aspect, it was a big game.”

BETH HARRIS