MILWAUKEE -- The Los Angeles Lakers made it 29 games before losing two in a row this season, with Thursday's 111-104 defeat to the Milwaukee Bucks coming on the heels of a loss to the Indiana Pacers earlier in the week.
Now the Lakers are vowing to go another 53 games -- the remainder of the regular season -- without letting it happen again.
"We're resilient. We're going to find ways to win," big man Anthony Davis said after he played the entire second half on a sore right ankle in an attempt to bring L.A. back from a 21-point deficit. "We're going to keep battling. That's our mindset all year. Even though we did lose two in a row, our mindset is still, let's not lose two in a row. Let's not drop another after we lose one, learn from the first one and do what we can to make sure the next one we come out with a victory."
The loss against the Pacers came with Davis on the sideline because of his ankle. The loss to the Bucks was in the final road game of a brutal stretch that saw the Lakers play 12 out of 15 contests away from Staples Center.
The Lakers might have lost their first-place showdown to a Milwaukee team that came into the night with an identical 24-4 record. And they failed in their quest to go all 82 games without back-to-back losses in the process; but the Lakers still were able to take positives away from what that aspiration meant to the group.
"You want to make goals along the process, along the way, along the marathon," LeBron James said. "And for us to play exceptional basketball for the majority of this part of the season, it's commitment of focus, it's a commitment of what we're trying to do: Continue to get better and just be laser sharp for a majority of the process so far. So we're just going to try to continue that."
James registered his seventh triple-double of the season, with 21 points, 12 rebounds and 11 assists. In playing 37 minutes, he passed Kobe Bryant's total of 57,278 for third place on the list of career minutes played (regular season and playoffs combined), leaving only Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Karl Malone ahead of James.
He also passed Gary Payton's total of 8,966 assists to move to ninth on the career list.
"He's breaking all type of records," Lakers guard Rajon Rondo said of James. "Seems like every other game it's a new thing he's doing. It's not like the same [records]. It's not just all points. There's so many things he's able to do throughout the entire game of basketball.
"It's really amazing what he's able to accomplish and still continue to play at a high level. It doesn't look like he's going to slow down in the next three or four years, either. We'll be talking about him breaking records until he's done playing."
The Lakers hope they can get back to stringing wins together without letting consecutive opponents break them.
"Just because it happened this one time doesn't mean that we can't keep it going the rest of the season," guard Danny Green said. "Obviously facing two tough teams, but it doesn't mean that we can just forget about it and think that it's OK to continue to lose two in a row.
"From here on out, we want to continue to get back in the winning column, get a win streak and not lose two in a row ever again. And hopefully we're playing our best basketball going into April, May and June."