Los Angeles clinched the Pacific Division and a playoff spot, while LeBron James added another record to his career haul and Luka Doncic ripped through Cleveland in a statement win.
Doncic Set The Tone Right Away
Luka Doncic returned from suspension and wasted no time getting back to work, pouring in 42 points and 12 assists as the Lakers beat the Cavaliers 127-113 on Tuesday night.
LeBron James did not need a huge scoring night to make history. He finished with 14 points, five rebounds and six assists, good for his 1,229th combined regular-season and playoff win, moving him past Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the most in league history.
Doncic also reached another milestone of his own, becoming the third-youngest player to hit 15,000 career points. Only LeBron James and Kevin Durant got there sooner.
Lakers Blew It Open After The Break
The game was still within reach at halftime, with the Lakers up 65-53, but that changed in a hurry. Los Angeles exploded for 45 points in the third quarter and turned a competitive matchup into a one-sided finish.
Deandre Ayton chipped in 18 points and nine rebounds, while Austin Reaves added 19. It was also the 100th win for Lakers coach JJ Redick, another nice touch on a night already stuffed with milestones.
Cleveland got 18 points from Jarrett Allen, and James Harden added 17, but Donovan Mitchell never got going and the Cavs could not keep pace once the Lakers found another gear.
Why This Win Matters
The victory pushed Los Angeles to 50-26 and capped off a strong night for the club, which also locked up the Pacific Division title and a playoff berth after Phoenix lost earlier in the evening.
The Lakers have now won 13 of their last 14 games and are sitting third in the Western Conference, two games clear of Denver. With Doncic in this kind of form and LeBron still piling up milestones at 41, this team looks like a real problem heading toward the postseason.
For Cleveland, the loss dropped the Cavs to 47-29 and left them one game behind the Knicks for third place in the East. They are still in solid shape for the playoffs, but this was a reminder that the gap can widen fast against teams already in playoff mode.
What Comes Next
LeBron was already coming off another piece of history before this game, having become the oldest player in NBA history to record a triple-double in the Lakers’ win over Washington earlier in the week. That made Tuesday feel less like a random record night and more like another entry in a season that keeps finding new ways to stretch his legacy.
The Lakers now head into a tougher stretch with a road game against Oklahoma City and another against Dallas, two matchups that should say a lot about whether this late-season surge can carry into the playoffs.
Cleveland, meanwhile, continues its trip with Golden State next before heading home for games against Indiana and Memphis. With the East still tight behind the top seeds, the Cavs do not have much room to drift.

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