What began as a midseason surge for the Los Angeles Lakers after acquiring Luka Doncic has now given way to inconsistency, warning signs, and a mounting sense of urgency. Monday’s 118-106 loss to the Orlando Magic marked the team’s seventh defeat in ten games, punctuating a worrying trend as the regular season enters its final stretch.
After briefly rocketing up the Western Conference standings behind a revitalized defense, the Lakers have struggled to sustain their momentum. The loss to Orlando leaves them at 3-7 in their last ten, with a brutal average losing margin of 15.7 points. Now clinging to the No. 4 seed, the Lakers are just three games ahead of the No. 7 Clippers, who sit in the play-in zone.
“I think we just got a little bit satisfied,” Doncic admitted postgame. “We can’t afford that right now.”
The cracks first appeared during Saturday’s blowout loss to the Chicago Bulls, where Los Angeles was dismantled 146-115. Monday’s game followed a similar pattern, especially in the third quarter, where the Magic outscored them 34-18. It was déjà vu from the Chicago game, where the Lakers were outscored 39-27 in the same frame.
“We let our offense mess with our defensive energy,” said forward Dorian Finney-Smith, pointing to a lack of resilience when shots aren’t falling.
Doncic, who scored 21 points in the first half, added just 11 more after halftime. LeBron James, returning to better form with 24 points, 7 assists, and 6 rebounds, still finished with a team-worst minus-17 rating. The Lakers’ stars recognize the onus is on them to arrest the team’s slide.
“I think me and Bron, think we should be the guys to do that,” Doncic said. “That’s on me. Obviously, I’ve got to do better, I’ve got to talk more.”
Coach JJ Redick acknowledged the rocky patch, saying, “We’re going through it a little bit.” With just 11 games remaining — seven of them on the road and three back-to-back sets — time is running out for the Lakers to correct course before the playoffs.
Still, some within the team see value in the current adversity. “We need the adversity,” said Finney-Smith. “You usually don’t see things when you’re winning. So we got the chance to grow.”
Whether that growth comes fast enough will determine how deep this new-look Lakers squad can go once the postseason arrives.