
Papers: Carrick favourite for Man Utd job amid Iraola links
Michael Carrick is the top choice for Manchester United's manager role, with Andoni Iraola as a close competitor.
The Lakers lead the playoff series against the Rockets 3-2, but recent performances raise concerns about their ability to close it out. LeBron James emphasized the need for better scoring after a lackluster Game 5.
Mentioned in this story

The specific shape of the first-round playoff matchup between the Los Angeles Lakers and Houston Rockets has changed quite a bit from how we initially expected it to look, for a number of reasons â chief among them, Kevin Durantâs ongoing injury woes and a brutal Game 3 collapse that pushed Ime Udokaâs club to the brink of elimination. The fundamental underpinnings of the matchup, though, remain largely the same: The Rockets are a big, athletic, physical, very good defensive team that should be able to impose its collective point-preventing will on a Lakers squad that, without Luka DonÄiÄ and (until Game 5) Austin Reaves, struggles to consistently generate and cash in on good looks.
It didnât seem that way in the early stages of this series, when the Lakers were getting just enough LeBron James low-post playmaking, just enough complementary-piece shot-making, and just enough help from a defense that was holding the Rockets nearly 12 points per 100 possessions below their . But if you scratched the surface on that 3-0 lead, it didnât look as commanding as it seemed â and the Lakers donât look as formidable, now that the Rockets have returned serve with a of that have extended their season, and this series, to Game 6 back in Houston on Friday.
The Lakers currently lead the series 3-2 against the Rockets.
The Lakers are struggling with scoring consistency and have shown vulnerabilities despite their early series lead.
The Rockets secured two consecutive wins, pushing the series to a Game 6 after initially trailing 3-0.
LeBron James noted that the team needs to improve their scoring rate to succeed in the playoffs.

Michael Carrick is the top choice for Manchester United's manager role, with Andoni Iraola as a close competitor.

Unai Emery fuming at VAR for not punishing Anderson's tackle on Watkins

Ildemaro Vargas ties for second longest hit streak to start MLB season at 23 games.
Uncertainty surrounds LIV golfers' potential return to the PGA Tour.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
âAs much as we got to defend, you also got to score in this game, too,â James told reporters after Game 5. âI donât think we did that at a good rate.â
Thatâs the thing, though: They werenât scoring at a particularly good rate in the first three games, either.
Entering Game 4, the Lakers were scoring 112.4 points per 100 non-garbage-time possessions, according to Cleaning the Glass â a rate that wouldâve had them rubbing elbows with the Chicago Bulls and Sacramento Kings in the offensive rankings during the regular season. Over the past two games, that already-bottom-five-caliber output has plunged even deeper into the offensive basement, with L.A. producing just 102.3 points-per-100 in Games 4 and 5.
That 10-point offensive rating gap is massive â the difference between a garden-variety bad offense and some real mid-Process Sixers-level stuff. Some of it stems from Udoka electing to more frequently downshift, leaning into more small-ball, switch-heavy lineups that can deploy Houstonâs collective length and quickness to close up driving gaps and prevent the Lakers from prying open and expanding an advantage.
LeBron James has seen the Lakers' series lead shrink from 3-0 to 3-2. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
(ASSOCIATED PRESS)
âThis is a top-10 defense the entire season,â Lakers head coach JJ Redick told reporters after Game 4. âItâs obviously very challenging without your two leading scorers to generate offense. Weâll take a look at the process again on that end, as well.â
Some of it can be attributed to L.A.âs series-long struggles to hold on to the ball. The Lakers committed 39 turnovers in Games 4 and 5 â including 10 by James, who took the blame for L.A. so frequently coming up empty by kicking away possessions. Twenty-seven of those 39 cough-ups â nearly 70% â were live-ball turnovers, according to PBP Stats. The Rockets made the most of those opportunities, scoring 24 points per game off Laker giveaways â a rate that wouldâve led the league during the regular season.
A lot of it, though, comes down to just converting the chances they get.
âWe just got to make shots,â Marcus Smart told reporters.
After shooting 46.1% from 3-point range through the first three games of the series, the Lakers have made just 12 of their 49 triple tries (24.5%) in the last two. And while the 49 is arguably just as big a problem as the 12, itâs also not out of the ordinary for a team that finished tied for 22nd in the NBA in the share of its shots that came from beyond the arc during the regular season, and that is still missing its highest-volume long-ball generator with DonÄiÄ on the mend.
So: If the Lakers arenât going to suddenly start jacking up a Mazzulla-ball level of long-range shots, they have to cash out on the ones they can create. In the first three games, they did just that. They were still taking a bunch of tough shots, generating the lowest shot quality of any team in the playoff field; they were just making them more frequently and efficiently than youâd expect, with Smart, Luke Kennard and Rui Hachimura all making at least half of their 3-pointers.
Over the last two, though, the Lakersâ long-range luck has evened out:
The Rockets have sold out to limit the looks for the formerly hot-shooting Lakers. All-Defensive Teamer Amen Thompson has cranked up the pressure on Kennard, holding the early-series hero to just one point on two shot attempts with one assist and two turnovers across nearly 60 possessions when they were matched up in Games 4 and 5, according to NBA Advanced Stats. (The just-returned Reaves took Kennardâs place in the starting lineup to begin the second half of Game 5; while Kennard did close the game, he went without a shot attempt in the fourth quarter.)
Shifting the length of Jabari Smith Jr. â 6-foot-11 with a 7-1 wingspan â onto Smart has helped vaporize his clean looks, too. The veteran guard is 6-for-15 from the field and 3-for-9 from 3-point range over the past two games, with 10 turnovers mitigating his seven assists.
âWeâve always been a good defensive team,â Smith Jr. told reporters after Game 5. âItâs just the mental side and where to be, who to close out on and tendencies, follow the game plan. Weâve just been locking in on that the last few games, and I think itâs been working.â
That much is clear. Games 4 and 5 were two of the Lakersâ dozen-worst half-court offensive performances of the campaign, and also represent the first time L.A. has been held under 100 points in consecutive games all season.
Whatâs less clear: Whether the Lakers can turn the tide back in their favor with their complementary pieces misfiring, with LeBron missing two-thirds of his shots outside the restricted area (and all nine of his 3s) since playing 45 minutes to pull out Game 3, with Reaves going 4-for-16 from the floor in his return as he shakes the rust off, with only one day off between Games 5, 6 and, if necessary, 7, and with DonÄiÄ not coming back any time soon.
The Lakers have reason for optimism: the prospect of Reaves finding his footing to provide a jolt to the offense, the continued verve shown in the middle by Deandre Ayton, and the vast libraries of big-game experience that LeBron can bring to bear in finishing off a cornered opponent thatâs threatening to push him to the brink. But theyâve also got reasons to be concerned â the same ones they had two weeks ago, just arrived at in a circuitous fashion.
âWe knew this was going to be a tough series, and itâs turned out to be exactly what we expected,â Smart said after Game 5. âNow the fun begins.â