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Kevin Durant Takes the Blame: “I Lost Us the Game”

The Lakers win with defense, throwing Kevin Durant out of rhythm down the stretch. The Rockets star takes responsibility after a difficult second half

The matchup between the Los Angeles Lakers and Houston Rockets had the feel of a postseason preview. In the end, however, the difference wasn’t offense, but a defense that is reshaping the Lakers’ season.

In the 100-92 final, the unexpected protagonist was the Lakers’ defensive system, which completely disrupted Kevin Durant’s rhythm in the decisive moments.

Kevin Durant admits: “I lost us the game”

Durant didn’t hide after the game. In fact, he pointed the finger directly at himself:

I feel like I lost us the game. It’s simple. I am the offense, and defenses are going to throw everything at me to keep me out of rhythm

Kevin Durant

A clear-eyed but harsh assessment. In the second half, No. 7 scored just 2 points, finishing with 7 turnovers, many of them caused by the Lakers’ consistent double teams.

According to Durant, the issue isn’t just execution – it’s structural:

When I bring the ball up and the double comes, everything slows down. It feels like one against five. Maybe I need to get out of the way in some situations

Kevin Durant

The Lakers’ adjustment: targeted doubles and broken rhythm

JJ Redick adjusted his approach after halftime, shifting from aggressive traps to more delayed reads (“fire” instead of blitz). The result was devastating:

  • 12 points scored by the Rockets in the fourth quarter
  • 9 turnovers in the final 12 minutes
  • 4-of-16 shooting

A smart defensive game plan that completely disrupted Houston’s offensive flow.

Luka Doncic summed it up this way:

It’s about effort and communication. Great teams do that – you don’t always shoot well, but you can still win

Luka Doncic

Postgame, LeBron James also highlighted the defensive versatility:

Against someone like Durant, you have to keep changing. You can’t show him the same defense every time

LeBron James

A defensive identity reshaping the season

For much of the year, the Lakers had been a vulnerable defensive team (20th in defensive efficiency). Over the last 10 games, however, that number has changed dramatically:

  • 109.3 points allowed per 100 possessions
  • Top 6 in the NBA during that stretch
  • 9 wins in the last 10 games

This isn’t just statistical improvement – it’s a true identity shift.

Redick made it clear:

We’ve won a lot of games with offense. Now we’re showing we can beat good teams with defense too

JJ Redick

The Rockets issue: too dependent on Durant?

The absence of Alperen Sengun (back injury) simplified the Lakers’ game plan, but the issue seems deeper.

When Durant is double-teamed:

  • the offense stalls
  • the pace slows
  • alternative options are limited

Durant acknowledged it bluntly:

Everything becomes stagnant. I’ve got to find ways to free myself and my teammates

Kevin Durant

This raises a key question: is it a system issue or an individual decision-making problem?

A skeptic might argue that an offense built on isolations and late reads is inevitably vulnerable against organized defenses. Another perspective is that it simply needs more off-ball movement and less centralized creation.

In the end, the takeaway is simple: when the Lakers defend like this, they become a completely different team. On the other side, Houston needs answers quickly – because when it matters most, relying solely on a Durant play isn’t enough.

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