Lakers looking to maintain their pace from start to finish
‘It’s great to have a lead, but you have to continue to do what got you the lead in the first place,’ Coach Darvin Ham says of the pace of play dropping in the second half of the first two games

LOS ANGELES — Lakers coach Darvin Ham had a clear message for his team ahead of Game 3 of their first-round playoff series against the Denver Nuggets on Thursday night: don’t lose the pace in the second half.
Among the common themes in Games 1 and 2 in Denver, which the Nuggets won to take a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series, was the pace of play dropping in the second half of both games – which favored the Nuggets.
Game 1 had a pace (possessions per 48 minutes) of 99 in the first half, with the Lakers leading 60-57 at halftime. But the pace dropped to 89 in the second half.
The same thing happened in Game 2: a 98 pace in the first half, which the Lakers led 59-44, but an 88 pace in the second half in which the Lakers blew a 20-point third-quarter lead before Jamal Murray’s game-winning shot at the buzzer.
“We get out the gate, we were able to get out, run early in the first half,” Ham said. “Just gotta sustain that pace going into the second half and doing a better job finishing at the rim and obviously just trying to generate those same open looks that we got.”
The Lakers had an offensive rating (points per 100 possessions) of 121.4 in the first halves of those games but a 92.2 offensive rating in the second halves.
Ham attributed the offensive dip to the Lakers not playing as quickly as the games wore on.
“It’s just a matter of continuing to play in rhythm,” Ham said. “You can’t play not to lose. You have to continuously play winning basketball and having winning results on that side of the ball in terms of getting into your actions early within the first six seconds, the six seconds of the possession and trusting that.
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