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Bryant says team is 'antsy'

LAKERS REPORT

May 03, 2008|Mike Bresnahan, Times Staff Writer

It took several days -- an eternity in the playoffs -- but the Lakers finally know the identity of their next opponent.

The Lakers will play the Utah Jazz in Game 1 of the Western Conference semifinals Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at Staples Center.


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The Lakers will have gone six days between games but are presumably ready to go against someone other than themselves at practice.

"We've been antsy," Kobe Bryant acknowledged Friday afternoon, several hours before the Jazz eliminated Houston in the first round.

Utah is a physical, push-'em-around team that went 1-3 against the Lakers this season.

Lakers assistant coach Frank Hamblen, who was in charge of scouting the Jazz this season, said Utah's players were "bangers" and underscored Carlos Boozer's ability to consistently get 20 points and 10 rebounds, not to mention backup forward Paul Millsap's burly presence.

"I think they were second in the league as far as getting points in the paint," Hamblen said.

Said Bryant recently: "They're a physical bunch . . . they scratch, they claw. Denver was pretty physical too though, but we're used to playing that type of basketball."

The Jazz also has Deron Williams, who is "definitely a top-five point guard, maybe even higher," Hamblen said. "He's their igniter, makes them go," he said. "He's a guy that not only gets the other guys involved, but he can take the ball to the rim and he can knock in threes."

The Lakers managed to knock back Utah in an unusual game in March, winning at Salt Lake City, 106-95, despite playing without injured big men Andrew Bynum and Pau Gasol. Lamar Odom was seemingly everywhere that night -- 21 points, 12 rebounds and six assists -- and the Lakers halted the Jazz's franchise record-tying 19 consecutive home victories.

The Lakers, however, were on the other end of a bizarre decision, posting an embarrassing 120-96 loss in November even though the Jazz played without Boozer and starting center Mehmet Okur. Williams had a career-high 35 points in that game, versatile forward Andrei Kirilenko had a triple-double, and Lakers Coach Phil Jackson said his team was as "soft as Dairy Queen ice cream."

The Lakers, however, fared well in their home games against Utah, collecting a 119-109 victory in November and a 123-109 victory in December.

Utah has one of the top home-court advantages in the NBA, going a league-best 37-4 during the regular season. Jazz fans were already anticipating the matchup against the Lakers, chanting "Beat L.A.!" in the final minutes of Friday's game against Houston.

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