Lakers carry on without Kobe
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INDIANAPOLIS -- Phil Jackson made the decision easy for Kobe Bryant.

He said no.

About an hour after telling reporters it was basically up to Bryant whether or not he played in Game 3 of the NBA Finals, Jackson told the 21-year-old star to sit it out.

Kobe Bryant
Bryant's ankle injury in Game 2 left him on crutches.

And with Bryant on the sidelines because of his sprained left ankle, the Lakers lost to the Indiana Pacers 100-91 on Sunday night, trimming their lead in the best-of-seven series to 2-1.

"Actually, he put his shoes on and came in the coaches' room about 35 minutes before game-time and said, 'I can go,' " Jackson said. "And he said, 'I can try it.'

"I wanted to see him do some lateral slides, and I asked him how it felt. He said, 'It hurts.' I said, 'Well, then, let's save it. We can save this one.' And it was a tough decision, but I think it's better for us actually in the long run. He accepted it."

Bryant wasn't seen during the game; Jackson said he was receiving treatment at that time, and he wasn't seen afterward, either, leaving without speaking with reporters.

"He would have helped us greatly," A.C. Green said. "But he wasn't there, and he might not be there Wednesday. We just have to find a way to get back to our style of basketball and game pace."

Bryant's status for Game 4 is uncertain, but when asked if he thinks Bryant will play, teammate Derek Fisher replied, "It seems like it. I'm not exactly sure how painful it is. We would hate to have him out there and not be Kobe."

After winning twice at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, the Lakers never led in losing Game 3 at Conseco Fieldhouse, where the Pacers went 36-5 during the regular season.

Los Angeles trailed by as many as 18 late in the third quarter before rallying within four points on a twisting layup by Ron Harper with 3:03 left, and three on a 3-pointer by Harper with 14.8 seconds to go.

The Pacers then scored the final six points on free throws.

"We were battling uphill it seemed like the whole time in the second half," said Fisher, who had 10 points and 10 assists. "We couldn't get over the hump."

Bryant's absence was noticeable on both ends of the court as the Lakers were unable to replace his 21.2-point playoff average or his All-NBA first-team defense abilities.

Bryant sprained his ankle late in the first quarter of Game 2 in Los Angeles on Friday night, and didn't return. However, Harper and Glen Rice picked up the slack with 21 points each to support Shaquille O'Neal, who scored 40.

O'Neal had 33 points and 13 rebounds Sunday night, but didn't get nearly as much help from his teammates as Harper scored 14 points, Rice had just seven and others faltered as well, especially on the backboards.

Indiana, the poorest rebounding team in the NBA during the regular season, outrebounded the Lakers 39-33.

O'Neal was the only Los Angeles player to score in double figures until Robert Horry's jumper 35 seconds into the fourth quarter gave him 10 points.

Brian Shaw, who started in Bryant's place, scored only six points on 3-of-10 shooting.

"I think the difference is when you have a key player like Kobe out of the game and you've got another key played like Shaq, you try to ride his back a little too much," Horry said. "I think tonight we went to Shaq a lot. In doing so, we made a lot of dumb errors, which was a lot of turnovers. That killed us."

The Lakers did a terrific job defending Reggie Miller in the first two games, as the Pacers' star shot 8-of-32.

In Game 3, Miller went 11-of-22 in scoring 33 points.

"You knew it was coming, sooner or later," forward Rick Fox said of Miller's offensive production. "The reason we lost tonight is because the Pacers played at a level that we didn't match, first of all. Our defensive and offensive execution was off a hair.

"In a setting like this, where it's the NBA Finals and you're up 2-0 and you come into an opponent's floor where they feel the need to rejuvenate themselves with a win, you can't be a hair off. You have to be just as sharp or sharper."

And the Lakers weren't.
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