High-flying Lakers starting over
Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -- The points kept coming, faster and more furious as the Los Angeles Lakers looked again and again for their big man.

A monster dunk here, a short bank shot there, and even 13 foul shots, a seldom-reached total for Shaquille O'Neal.

In a coming-of-age game for one of the league's superstars, O'Neal finished with a career-high 61 points and 23 rebounds on his 28th birthday last month, leading the Lakers to another victory.

Yes, it was against the lowly Los Angeles Clippers. But so what? Nobody has been able to stop Shaq's attack this season.

Opponents will try again during the playoffs, starting Sunday with the Sacramento Kings. But if the regular season is any indication, the Lakers might as well already get sized up for rings for their first championship in 12 years.
Phil Jackson
Jackson might be the major difference between last season's disappointments and this year's success

"We've won the regular-season title, that's what you work for when you open the season," first-year Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. "And then you put it behind you and you go into a playoff situation where there's a whole different level of intensity. You bring it up another notch."

The Lakers have failed in the postseason in recent years. They lost twice to Utah and once to San Antonio, earning a reputation as underachievers.

"We've always been the team to beat," said O'Neal, in his fourth year with Los Angeles. "We just have to do what we've been doing, and get sharp on certain things. We'll be all right."

The hiring of Jackson and his staff undoubtedly had a lot to do with the Lakers' 67 regular-season wins, second-best in franchise history and better than any of the Magic Johnson-led Showtime teams of the 1980s.

There are other factors, like the improved health and play of O'Neal, the maturation and development of Kobe Bryant, and the addition of veteran role players Ron Harper, A.C. Green and Brian Shaw.

O'Neal and Bryant have at times been as dominant as Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen when Jackson coached the Chicago Bulls to six championships during the '90s. In addition, the Lakers' defense has been stifling when necessary, and the supporting cast has done its job.

That said, there's nothing to celebrate yet. The Lakers will be the first to admit it.

"Potential doesn't mean anything," said Harper, who joined the Lakers this season after winning three rings in Chicago. "This team had it for the last four or five years, right? We have to go show folks. We have something to prove."

Lakers owner Jerry Buss finally loosened the pursestrings to hire Jackson last summer at a cost of $30 million over five years.

Previous Lakers coaches weren't paid anywhere near that kind of money, but Buss changed direction after watching the turbulence under Del Harris, the coach for a little over four seasons, and Kurt Rambis, interim coach after Harris was fired last season.

"When Phil came in with six world championship rings, he immediately commanded the respect of our team," said 72-year-old assistant Bill Bertka, the lone holdover from the previous regimes. "He has their total attention."

That wasn't always the case under Harris or Rambis, who had on-court differences with players for the world to see.

An example of how Jackson has earned respect is the way he's dealt with Bryant.

On occasion, Jackson has gotten in the 21-year-old All-Star's face during timeouts because he's been out of control on the court. But that type of play has diminished considerably this season as Bryant developed into one of the NBA's top players at both ends of the court.

"He's here to teach, I'm here to learn," Bryant said after one outburst.

More recently, Bryant said, "He just taught me the game of basketball."

When asked the biggest difference in his approach from his first three seasons with the Lakers, Bryant replied, "My approach is I have an approach. Here, we have a system, we know what we're supposed to do."

Bryant referred to the triangle offense Jackson and his staff used in their years with the Bulls and now with the Lakers.
Shaquille O'Neal
O'Neal is a virtual lock for the NBA MVP award

"I think he just has a system they believe in," said Minnesota's Anthony Peeler, a former Laker. "Everybody seems to feel more relaxed with Phil. Del was a guy who dealt more in percentages."

Bryant and O'Neal have had their differences, but they put them aside as the season progressed. O'Neal has taken to referring to the pair as "The Combo."

"This is the first year we've really played together," Bryant said. "In the past, it was Shaq in the post and four guys along the perimeter, which limits his skills and our ability to play together."

O'Neal has been healthy all year, and that hasn't always been the case. He missed a total of 53 games in the 1996-97 and 1997-98 seasons.

"He's healthy, and on top of his game," Bertka said of O'Neal, who won his second scoring championship this season by averaging a career-high 29.7 points and seems a lock to earn his first Most Valuable Player award. "He certainly joins the great big men who have played this game and has the potential at his age to become one of the greatest, as exhibited by his play this year."

O'Neal, who even improved his woeful foul shooting toward the end of the season, has said repeatedly ill health hampered his play in recent years.

"I've always played defense, but the last two years when I had the stomach injuries, I couldn't do a lot right -- especially block shots," he said.

O'Neal greeted Harris, now an assistant coach at Dallas, with a hug when the Lakers and Mavericks played last Tuesday, but has made clear his fondness and respect for Jackson.

"We have an unbelievable coaching staff," O'Neal said. "We're like some bad kids; sometimes we need to be scolded."

Jackson noted recently that O'Neal is the same age Jordan was when the Bulls won their first championship nine years ago against the Lakers -- the last time Los Angeles got to the finals.

"I told Shaq he's a young man until he turns 28," Jackson said. "He reached that pinnacle at some point, didn't he?"

Jackson's smile gave him away. He knows that pinnacle came March 6 -- O'Neal's birthday.
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