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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

SuperSonics tame Lakers


Seattle's Antonio Daniels, right, eludes Los Angeles' Lamar Odom en route to the basket.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
John Nadel Associated Press

LOS ANGELES – Vladimir Radmanovic has been sick for about a week. Maybe that explains why the Los Angeles Lakers gave him so much room on the perimeter: They didn’t want to catch whatever he has.

They should be so lucky.

Radmanovic scored all but two of his 26 points on eight 3-pointers, and the Seattle SuperSonics took command in the third quarter to beat the Lakers 104-93 Tuesday night.

Radmanovic shot 9 of 17, including 8 of 14 from long range, in coming within one point of his season high and three points of his career best. He made nine of his first 11 shots before missing his last six.

Dale Ellis holds Seattle’s franchise record with nine 3-pointers in a game. Kobe Bryant of the Lakers holds the NBA record with 12 – against the Sonics two years ago.

“Probably the virus that I have is a good basketball virus,” Radmanovic said. “With the medicine I’m taking, hopefully it’s going to go away. I’ve been sick for a while; I’m just trying to play through it.”

Radmanovic was sick to the point that he sat out practice Monday.

“At the beginning of the game, I didn’t have enough energy,” he said. “I was slow motion. Later on, I got warmed up. The rim looked a little bit bigger tonight to me. Those guys weren’t paying attention.”

When asked why he was so open, Radmanovic replied: “You should ask the Lakers.”

Los Angeles’ Caron Butler said players such as Radmanovic and teammate Rashard Lewis, who are both 6-foot-10, and Dallas’ Dirk Nowitzki, who is a 7-footer, have changed the way the game is played.

“(They) are just transforming their position to another level and getting more versatile,” Butler said. “At times, we’d get back in transition off our turnovers and start protecting the paint. But there’s no one particular guy you can just find on the break. On this ball club, you’ve got so many guys who can shoot long distance, it’s tough to cover in any situation.”

Regarding Radmanovic, Butler said: “One time, I think he was in the parking lot and I had my hand right in front of him, but he just pulled up and shot the ball. He had a great night.”

Ray Allen added 25 points and Lewis scored 21 for the Northwest Division-leading Sonics (29-11), who have the third-best record in the NBA.

Danny Fortson had 10 points and nine rebounds, Luke Ridnour added 10 points and seven assists, and Reggie Evans grabbed 13 rebounds to help the Sonics outrebound the Lakers 48-36.

“We have a lot of different weapons,” Allen said. “We have a very deep roster and that makes us very dangerous.”

The Lakers (22-17) missed another opportunity for a season-high, three-game winning streak. They’ve won consecutive games nine times, but failed in each of those situations to win a third straight.

“We’re just trying to win games,” Butler said. “I don’t think we’re putting all the thought on it that everybody else is – talking about getting that third win and getting the monkey off our backs. We’re going to get on a streak. It’s going to happen.”

Lamar Odom led the Lakers with 19 points, 13 rebounds and eight assists. Seldom-used Luke Walton also scored 19 points, a career high, in just 19 minutes. He had 12 of his points while playing the entire fourth quarter.

Jumaine Jones and Chucky Atkins scored 13 each and Butler added 10 for the Lakers.

The Sonics shot 13 of 33 from 3-point range and the Lakers were 8 of 26.

The Lakers have a 3-2 record since Bryant went down with a sprained right ankle.