
LeBron James didn’t dodge it—he owned it.
After the Lakers were crushed 115-96 in Game 4, LeBron pointed the finger directly at himself, saying he has to be better following one of his worst playoff performances in recent memory.
And he’s not wrong.
LeBron finished with just 10 points on 2-of-9 shooting, adding nine assists but also turning the ball over repeatedly as the offense completely fell apart. It wasn’t just inefficient—it was disconnected. The Lakers never found rhythm, and when your leader plays like that, everything else starts to unravel.
LeBron James tonight:
— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) April 27, 2026
10 Points
8 Turnovers
2/9 FGM
0/3 3PM
-18 +/-
33 Minutes pic.twitter.com/kP9fs9ZVnB
This game flipped fast.
Houston came out desperate, knowing their season was on the line, and never let up. The Rockets dominated the third quarter, blew the game open, and never looked back. They forced over 20 Lakers turnovers and turned those mistakes into easy points, completely controlling the pace.
Meanwhile, the Lakers looked like a team that expected to win instead of one that needed to.
Deandre Ayton was one of the only bright spots with 19 points and 10 rebounds before being ejected, but outside of that, there wasn’t much to take away. Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves being out continues to hurt, but that doesn’t excuse the effort level or execution.
And LeBron knows that.
At 41 years old, he’s been carrying this team all series—but Game 4 showed the reality: when he’s off, the Lakers don’t have enough right now. That’s why he took the blame publicly. Not just for the stat line, but for the tone the team set.
The good news for LA? They’re still up 3-1.
The bad news? This loss just gave Houston life—and reminded everyone that this series isn’t over if the Lakers come out like this again.
Game 5 is now about response. And it starts with LeBron.
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