Utah Jazz: Gasol turns over on and off the court
On Friday night, it was Pau Gasol's turn to count sheep, stare at his hotel room's ceiling and restlessly fidget while replaying his Game 3 performance in the Lakers' 104-99 loss over and over in his mind.
One thing's becoming a trend in this Western Conference semifinal for the key big men: You don't snooze if you lose.
"It took me a while to go to sleep, probably like 4 in the morning," Gasol said Saturday before the Lakers' practice at the Jazz's Zions Bank Basketball Center. "It took me a while. I don't take losses lightly, especially when I didn't do a good enough job. ... It was a long night."
Turnovers were mostly to blame for Gasol's insomnia. The 7-foot Spaniard shot the ball well when he wasn't coughing it up for five turnovers but he ended up scoring only 12 points on 6-for-10 shooting. That was nine points below his playoff average a chunk of scoring the Lakers could have used and a number the Jazz will gladly allow.
Three of Gasol's turnovers led to Jazz baskets in the first half, when Utah swiped it from him four times. He wasn't the only Laker with slippery fingers, either. L.A. ended up with 18 turnovers, including four from Kobe Bryant and three by Lamar Odom, compared to just 12 for the Jazz.
Gasol, who also had only six rebounds in one of his quietest games as a Laker, said he has to improve how he handles the extra pressure if the Jazz aggressively throw more guys at him again as they did in Game 3.
"I just got to do a better job of protecting the ball," Gasol said, "being stronger with the ball, be stronger on my moves and make sure the referees see the contact better in the next game."
On that note, Lakers coach Phil Jackson thought Gasol pleaded too often with officials to bail him out after he lost the ball.
"This is a game in which Pau was looking at the referees every time he got stripped there in the first half," Jackson said moments after Game 3. "And they were just attacking him every time he put the ball on the floor."
Bryant also credited the Jazz for effectively taking Gasol out of his game, which essentially minimized one of L.A.'s most potent weapons, aka "the Lakers' midseason gift from Memphis."
"I think they did a good job crowding him once he put the ball on the floor and tried to surround him," Bryant said. "We'll have to make adjustments in this next game in terms of freeing him up a little bit. Get him a little more spacing."
But spacing, Jackson said, wasn't Gasol's only problem.
Recent comments
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Gasol isn't too smart | May 11, 2008 at 12:27 p.m.
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