

LeBron James remains unfazed by Jabari Smith Jr.'s remarks following the Houston Rockets' narrow 99-93 triumph over the Los Angeles Lakers, a result that stretches their Western Conference playoff saga to a tense Game 6. Post-game, James dismissed Smith's assertion with a candid declaration of being 'too old for that s--t'. Smith's bold stance reflects his unyielding faith in his team: 'I don't care who we play, I always believe we're the better team. That mindset's been consistent, even when wins were sparse. But it’s more than words; proving it comes in the grind on the court.' The playoff series displays competitive intensity, if not high-caliber play. Both teams grapple for supremacy, yet Rockets seem to have bettered the Lakers irrespective of their trailing position in the series. They held leads late in Game 3 before a last-minute crumble swung the tide in Lakers' favor. Since their setback, Houston outperformed Los Angeles by scoring 214 points to Lakers' 189 in subsequent matchups. The Lakers faced scoring droughts, failing to hit the 100-point mark consecutively for the first time this season. Austin Reaves' comeback in Game 5 yielded minimal uplift; his shooting was off-target, hitting merely four of his 16 attempts, albeit he accumulated 22 points via consistently drawing fouls. Simultaneously, James' usual prowess seems elusive, as evidenced by his mere 35 points on 11-of-29 shooting, accompanied by 16 assists but marred by 10 turnovers over Games 4 and 5. A notable shift is seen in the Lakers' previously reliable scorers Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard. Their remarkable average of 41.7 points per game from the first three victories dwindled to just 28 points combined across the last two games. In contrast, the Rockets' attack was formidable in Game 4 with 115 points. Yet, their inconsistency surfaced again, failing thrice to surpass the 100-point threshold against a defense not traditionally robust, ranked 20th in the regular season. Lakers still hold sway over the series at 3-2, positioned to clinch it in Game 6 set in Houston’s Toyota Center with a tip-off at 9:30 p.m. ET. If Rockets prevail on Friday night, history beckons as they could match the rarity achieved last by the 2023 Boston Celtics, forcing a Game 7 after trailing 3-0 in a series. Yet, no team in the NBA’s annals has ever rewritten destiny to win a seven-game series after an initial trifold loss.