Lakers beat Rockets; Yao has double-double (AP) Updated: 2006-02-09 14:11 "Right now, I'm just in a really bad funk on offense and why? I don't know,"
McGrady said. "It's just very disappointing."
Neither star did much in the first quarter.
Bryant attempted only one shot, a layup off an inbound pass that Yao
partially blocked. McGrady, meanwhile, missed his first six shots before
finishing a fast break with a one-handed dunk.
Lakers coach Phil Jackson sensed that McGrady wasn't himself.
"He looks like he's injured to me," Jackson said. "Except for that dunk, he
didn't seem to play with as much vim and vigor."
McGrady said he's physically fine — he's just not playing well.
"I've got to bring more to the table on the offensive end," he said.
Bryant swished his first basket, a 3-pointer from the wing, with 10:16 left
in the second quarter to give the Lakers a 22-19 lead.
But Bryant spent most of the half finding Cook, who was averaging only 7.3
points coming into the game. The 6-foot-9 forward started 7-for-10, most of them
mid-range jumpers, and had 15 by the midpoint of the second quarter.
"That's a very important weapon to have, especially when you have somebody
like Bryant," Van Gundy said.
After a slow start, Bryant hit five straight jumpers and the Lakers rebuilt
their lead. Bryant had seven assists in the first half, but only one in the
third quarter.
"I became much more assertive in the second half and took over the game,"
Bryant said.
While Bryant found his range, McGrady stayed quiet, scoring only two points
in the third. He threw a bad pass late in the quarter that Bryant intercepted
and turned into a fast break.
A minute later, Bryant scored on a drive to restore the Lakers' double-digit
lead. With McGrady guarding him early in the fourth quarter, Bryant swished a
deep 3-pointer for a 73-62 Lakers' lead.
The Rockets started the fourth quarter 2-for-8 and never made a serious
charge.
"We didn't try hard enough," Van Gundy said. "It gives you pause to think
what do we really have here? We should've been frothing at the mouth, like pit
bulls. I so much want to have a team that really, really, really wants to play
every day, every night."
The Lakers, who won in Houston for the first time since November 2004, play
their next eight games at home.
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