LOS ANGELES — After sitting out for most of the Lakers’ home win over the Clippers on Friday, starting guard Austin Reaves wasn’t available for Sunday night’s rematch because of a calf injury.

The Lakers ruled out Reaves, along with two-way guard Jordan Goodwin (sprained right ankle), because of a strained right calf.

Reaves left Friday’s game late in the first quarter, heading to the locker room after being subbed out as part of his normal rotation pattern after scoring six points and blocking a shot in nine minutes.

The team said during the second quarter that Reaves would not return because of right calf soreness.

Reaves’ status will be day-to-day after an MRI on the right calf didn’t reveal a serious injury.

“Felt like it was good news in that there wasn’t anything structural or any muscle injury,” Coach JJ Redick said pregame Sunday. “We’ll manage him like we would any other player. When he’s ready to go, he’ll be back.”

Redick added that Goodwin’s sprained ankle is Grade 1 severity — which is considered mild and the least severe sprain.

The Lakers were already without starting forward Rui Hachimura because of left patellar tendinopathy. Hachimura sat out of Friday’s win over the Clippers, leaving during the third quarter of Thursday’s home win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. Redick said on Friday that Hachimura will be reassessed in a week.

Reaves entered Sunday playing in 53 of the Lakers’ 58 games.

He sat out of five games in early December because of a bruised left pelvis.

Reaves is averaging 19.1 points, six assists and 4.2 rebounds this season – one of 15 players to meet the 19 point-six assist-four rebound statistical threshold, along with Lakers teammates Luka Doncic and LeBron James.

Doncic (left calf injury management) and James (left foot injury management) were available for the rematch against the Clippers after entering Sunday as questionable.

MILESTONE TALK

James entered Sunday 18 points away from becoming the first player in NBA history to score 50,000 career points — regular season and playoffs combined.

The four-time MVP already held the records for most points scored in the regular season (41,820) and playoffs (8,162).

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (44,149) is the closest to James in all-time career points scored. Phoenix Suns star Kevin Durant has the second-most career points scored among active players with 35,165 points.

When asked which all-time records stand out the most, Redick pointed to Wilt Chamberlain’s single-game record of 100 points, which he scored in a March 2, 1962, win over the New York Knicks while playing for the Philadelphia Warriors, and Bill Russell’s 11 NBA championships, the most by a player.

“I would say the Wilt game for an individual sort of singular performance probably stands out the most,” Redick said. “And then I think, I don’t think anybody is touching 11 rings. I mean, that’s just, that’s not going to happen again.”