and 11 assists, his fifth straight game with at least 10 assists, matching Magic Johnson as the only other player in franchise history with at least four such streaks.
“When we’re sharing the ball and we’re moving the ball and we have 25-plus assists in the game, we’re a pretty good team,” James said.
Reaves echoed his teammate.
“The quality of shots was high. So we had high confidence that it’s going to go in whoever’s shooting it,” he said. “But yeah, I just thought the ball was moving and we were moving their defense. I think 11 assists for (Doncic and James) was major.”
The Lakers, who won for the fifth time in their past seven games, wasted no time getting their prolific offensive performance started.
Doncic missed a layup to begin the game — as the Clippers scored the game’s first five points thanks to a hook shot and an and-one from center Brook Lopez — but over the next 18 looks from the field, the Lakers made 16 shots, half of which came from 3-point range. James and Reaves funneled in seven points apiece, while Doncic heated up with a 3-pointer over Clippers guards Kris Dunn and Jordan Miller on a double-team attempt, an alley-oop pass to Jaxson Hayes, and a step-back 3-pointer to cap a three-possession clinic.
“We made some shots, but I thought the extra passes and the execution and the way we got to spacing and early offense and just sharing the basketball,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “It was clutter-free, ego-free.”
The Lakers (34-21) led 41-30 after one quarter and Doncic, who had missed the four games before the All-Star break with a mild hamstring strain, had 17 points, including a 4-for-5 showing from behind the arc.
“Chemistry is going to grow and grow,” Doncic said of his on-the-court relationship with James and Reaves.
Kawhi Leonard — who scored 23 points in the Clippers’ 115-114 victory over the Denver Nuggets on Thursday night — had 31 on 11-of-19 shooting Friday before missing the final 5:10 with left ankle soreness for the Clippers (27-29), who missed a chance to get back to .500 after their 6-21 start to the season.
Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said Leonard’s ankle “got stiff on him,” forcing his removal from the game.
Clippers guard Bennedict Mathurin — acquired in the trade deadline deal that sent center Ivica Zubac to the Indiana Pacers — filled up the stat sheet for the second straight night. After matching his career-high with 38 points against Denver, Mathurin had 26 points and seven rebounds against the Lakers before fouling out with 1:49 to play.
Holding a 118-115 lead, Reaves successfully drew a charge against Mathurin, leading Lue to challenge the play to attempt to reverse the sixth foul and bring his guard to the free-throw line instead. Officials deemed Reaves remained set in defensive position and Mathurin watched the remainder of the game from the bench.
“I thought the charge was the play of the game,” Redick said.
Leonard, who had just one basket in the first quarter, answered the Lakers’ strong start with a 19-point second quarter.
The Clippers trailed 72-65 at the break and found themselves down by 16 in the third quarter, but Mathurin scored nine points in the third, sparking a 17-1 run as the visitors erased their deficit and kept the game close the rest of the way.
Mathurin forced his way to the free-throw line often, where he made 11 of 14 shots. Following a 9-0 run, catalyzed by Leonard, Mathurin drove straight at Doncic — landing a floater and drawing a foul.
The Clippers’ new arrival converted the free throw, and helped the Clippers cling to a one-point lead. With 1:50 left in the third quarter, Mathurin drove at Rui Hachimura — drawing another foul and draining a nearly identical shot to creep back to within two points of the Lakers after Doncic replenished a lead with his sixth 3-pointer.
The teams traded clutch 3-pointers from Lakers guard Marcus Smart and Lopez in the fourth quarter, and the Clippers led 109-107 with 6:11 remaining after a 3-pointer from Leonard before Doncic provided a closing flurry. He scored 12 points in the fourth and snapped a 109-all tie with a 3-pointer with 5:11 left to give the Lakers a lead they wouldn’t relinquish.


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