The Los Angeles Lakers got 43 points from Luka Doncic and 26 points from Austin Reaves Tuesday night. It wasn't nearly enough to down the Golden State Warriors with LeBron James out injured.
The Warriors defeated the Lakers in Los Angeles, 119-109. That means that while Doncic and Reaves combined for 69 points, the rest of their team managed only 40 combined.
Gabe Vincent scored three points in 29 minutes. Rui Hachimura hit back-to-back threes in 33 seconds at the end of the second quarter — and scored three points in his other 35 minutes. Deandre Ayton made five field goals and committed four turnovers.
Vincent was starting in the absence of James, who is out indefinitely with sciatica. Without James, Doncic and Reaves are the Lakers' only real scoring threats. Summer acquisition Jake LaRavia scored five points off the bench. Marcus Smart, another summer addition, had nine points and three turnovers in 23 minutes, plus four fouls and a flagrant.
The bench only managed one assist, from backup center Jaxson Hayes. Smart, ostensibly a point guard, didn't have a single dime, and the former Defensive Player of the Year seemed more devoted to flopping than playing defense in the opener. Smart hit the deck after minimal contact over and over, sometimes on the same play, perhaps a sign that injuries have robbed him of the athleticism to play honest defense.
They call him Buddy Buckets for a reason.
— Golden State Warriors (@warriors) October 22, 2025
SHEESH.
@NBAonNBC pic.twitter.com/HisDjk4w30
Ayton was supposed to provide some additional scoring, but even when the Lakers force-fed him the ball, the results were lackluster, even against a team defending the 7-footer with much shorter players. He also managed only six rebounds, one fewer than 6-foot-4 Brandin Podziemski.
James won't be back until mid-November at the earliest. Maxi Kleber will be re-evaluated in two weeks and rookie Adou Thiero, the No. 36 pick, will also return soon, but neither of those players is a difference-maker on offense.
Until then, the offense is going to depend on Doncic and Reaves. The two did a good job of getting to the foul line, with each player shooting 7-of-10, but the lack of other threats and perhaps their own tired legs from dominating the ball left them shooting 2-of-10 and 1-of-5 from three-point range, respectively.
No matter how fit Doncic is and how well he can score, he's just one player. Unless Ayton and Hachimura specifically can step up, the Lakers team could be digging themselves a big hole early.
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