LeBron James thinks there is plenty of room for encouragement despite the Los Angeles Lakers producing a 1-2 start to the new NBA season.
De'Aaron Fox shined in regulation and Malik Monk stepped up in overtime as the Sacramento Kings battled to a 132-127 win over the Lakers on Sunday night.
James produced an impressive performance on the 20th anniversary of his NBA debut, putting up 27 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists, more than making up for his eight turnovers.
LeBron, who played in his first pro game on October 29, 2003 - also in Sacramento, converted a layup with 15 seconds to play forced OT for the Lakers, who battled back after trailing by as much as 15 and were still down seven with 90 seconds to go.
Anthony Davis had 30 points and 16 boards with three blocks, giving Los Angeles optimism about bouncing back at home against the Orlando Magic on Monday.
"I like the way [we played]," James – who was 11-for-19 shooting – said after the game, per ESPN.
"We had some moments. We had some really good moments. We just weren't able to pull it out the way we would have liked to.
"It's pretty special I'm still doing it [20 years on] and I'm playing the game that I love."
The Lakers hope to manage James' workload this season, but he ended up playing for 39 minutes after also playing 35 minutes in the win over the Phoenix Suns last week.
"Obviously, I don't want to run Bron into the ground," said coach Darvin Ham.
"I don't want to run [Davis] into the ground too early. Obviously, it was an overtime game and they are both playing at a high level, so you want to leave them out there.
"But it’s just having that balance. We did a lot of great things out there, but definitely, some things we need to work on. Some things I need to tighten up.
"My rotation, we got to really dig into that. Really take a close look and so guys are in rhythm.
"We have a great collection of players. And I played in this league. When you know when you're going in and who you're playing with, that matters. So buckling down on our rotation, I'll start there. That definitely is the main thing that's on my mind."
And Davis has no concerns about the Lakers repeating their awful 2-10 start from last season, saying the wins will start flowing if the team retain the same level of commitment seen in Sacramento.
"We are in a good rhythm collectively," Davis said. "I don't think that's much of an issue.
"It will come. We just got to continue to fight like we did. Obviously, we wanted to win, but got another one [on Monday]. Just put it all together, keep pushing and it will turn for us."