This was not a clean win. It was not a dominant win. For long stretches it was not even a good win in the making. But the Los Angeles Lakers walked out of Orlando on Saturday night with a 105-104 victory, a nine-game winning streak, and one of the more memorable finishes the NBA has produced this season.
LeBron James played his 1,612th regular-season game, becoming the league’s all-time leader in appearances and surpassing Robert Parish’s mark that had stood since 1997. The Lakers improved to 46-25 and tightened their grip on third place in the Western Conference. And Luke Kennard hit a three-pointer with 0.6 seconds remaining to make all of it possible.
A game that swung in every direction
The Lakers opened the night in control. James converted a first-quarter steal into a fast-break dunk, Doncic pushed the lead to ten with a fadeaway jumper, and a dunk from Austin Reaves extended it to 14. Orlando responded with a 7-0 run to close the first quarter, then followed with a 13-0 burst in the second, capped by a Tristan da Silva floater that gave the Magic a six-point lead. The Lakers went into halftime trailing 65-62.
The third quarter produced more of the same unpredictability. A 12-0 Lakers run, finished by a James layup, pushed Los Angeles back in front 78-70. Orlando answered immediately with a 17-4 run, holding the Lakers to one field goal in the final six minutes of the quarter and entering the fourth with a five-point lead.
The Magic extended that margin to seven early in the fourth before Reaves took over. Six of his points anchored a 10-2 Lakers run that reclaimed the lead with just over six minutes remaining. From that point, the game became a possession-by-possession grind that neither team could pull away from.
Doncic’s first half, his second half, and what comes next
Luka Doncic finished with 33 points and eight assists, numbers that tell only part of the story. The first half was dominant. The second was the worst Doncic has played since joining the Lakers, finishing 2-for-13 from the field after the break and missing all seven of his second-half three-point attempts. The Lakers survived in spite of that collapse rather than because of anything that corrected it.
The evening ended with a further complication. Doncic picked up his 16th technical foul of the season, triggering an automatic one-game suspension under NBA rules. He will not be available when the Lakers travel to Detroit on Monday to face the Pistons. Coach JJ Redick said after the game the team would seek to have the foul rescinded.
Reaves was the most consistent Laker across all 48 minutes, finishing with 26 points on 10-for-20 shooting. Four of the team’s nine fourth-quarter field goals came from him, and his play in the final period kept the Lakers close enough for the ending to matter.
How Orlando lost it
The Magic had every reason to expect a victory. Seven players scored in double figures. Paolo Banchero led with 16, Jalen Suggs added 14, and both Wendell Carter Jr. and Jevon Carter contributed 13. The offensive balance was genuine, and Orlando led 104-102 with three seconds left, holding the ball and a timeout.
What followed was a sequence that collapsed in seconds. Suggs threw the inbound pass away under pressure, leaving the Lakers with one final possession and 4.1 seconds to work with. Coach JJ Redick and assistant Greg St. Jean drew up a play built around misdirection. Marcus Smart inbounded from the baseline. Reaves dragged Suggs toward the corner. Da Silva denied the pass to Doncic. James set a screen and drove hard to the rim, pulling Banchero and Desmond Bane with him.
Kennard drifted to the wing completely unguarded. Smart found him. The shot went in at the buzzer.
Orlando dropped to 38-32, extending a four-game losing streak at a point in the season where every game carries playoff seeding implications.
What LeBron’s record means
James finished with 12 points, six rebounds, four assists, and three steals. He described his preparations as identical to any other night, framing the record as something that arrived naturally rather than something he chased.
Including playoff appearances, James has now taken the court 1,904 times in his NBA career. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar sits second all-time with 1,797 appearances, and Parish is third with 1,795. James is in his 23rd consecutive season and already holds records in points scored, field goals made, field goals attempted, and consecutive games scoring at least ten points.
The Lakers host the Pistons on Monday without their leading scorer. The streak, for now, stands at nine.

