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  Friday, Mar. 24 10:30pm ET
Phoenix drops first after losing Kidd
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME FLOW

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Even on a bad night, the Los Angeles Lakers can beat most teams.

The Lakers, outrebounded 48-38 and outhustled at times by the injury-plagued Phoenix Suns, still managed to hold on for a 109-101 victory Friday night.

Shaquille O'Neal scored 40 points, his fourth time reaching that plateau in the last seven games. He had 15 points, including making 6-for-9 from the free-throw line, as the Lakers held the Suns at bay in the final quarter.

Rodney Rogers, Shaquille O'Neal
Stop Shaq? At 6-foot-7, the Suns' Rodney Rogers couldn't do it.

O'Neal, his free-throw shooting better lately, finished 10-of-13 from the line.

"Now that I'm making them (free throws), I don't get to the line like I'm supposed to because the league doesn't want me to average 50 (points). That's all a different story," O'Neal said.

"I just say to myself, `Hit them all and especially hit the ones like you're supposed to in the fourth quarter.' "

The Suns, in their first game since losing Jason Kidd to a season-ending ankle injury, never led and were down 87-75 with 10 minutes remaining.

But they closed to 104-101 on Todd Day's 3-pointer with 41 seconds remaining, before the Lakers' Kobe Bryant hit three of four free throws and Robert Horry made two more free throws for the final margin.

"We want to be a team that executes constantly and flawlessly," said Bryant, who scored 28. "Tonight we had a lot of gaps and execution problems. We didn't have all of our energy in the shootaround today, and it showed in the game. We were a little lethargic. But to be able to hold them off all night long makes it a good win for us, in that sense."

The win was the fifth straight for the Lakers, a mini-streak they began after having their 19-game victory string ended by Washington. The loss ended Phoenix's five-game winning streak.

Penny Hardaway led the Suns with 25 points. Cliff Robinson added 22 and Rodney Rogers had 16 off the bench.

"It was a great effort. I thought we played really hard," Phoenix coach Scott Skiles said. "Every time we got close, it seemed like something just didn't go our way and we just couldn't get over the hump."

Kidd had surgery on his left ankle Thursday after injuring it just before halftime the previous night in a 114-93 win over Sacramento. Phoenix lost another key player, Tom Gugliotta, earlier this month to surgery on his left knee.

"We played the No. 1 team in the league and almost beat them," Hardaway said. "We are not going to give up and we're not going to fall out of the fourth spot (in the Western Conference), either. We're going to stay there and play hard every game.

Kidd's replacement, Randy Livingston, scored eight points, had two assists and one rebound in 25 minutes.

Game notes
When the Suns lost Kidd and Gugliotta, they lost a combined 28 points, 15.1 rebounds and 12.4 assists a game. Kidd was averaging 14.3 points, 7.2 rebounds and an NBA-high 10.1 assists. ... The Lakers have won 12 straight at home and their 31 victories tie Indiana for most home victories.
 


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No Kidd-ing: Suns bring back KJ to offset injury


RECAPS
Philadelphia 117
Boston 115

Charlotte 102
Toronto 84

Minnesota 116
New Jersey 115

New York 95
Atlanta 83

Orlando 112
Houston 96

Miami 99
Milwaukee 87

Chicago 70
Denver 68

Utah 98
Seattle 95

Portland 96
Golden State 83

LA Lakers 109
Phoenix 101

Sacramento 113
Detroit 103