Lakers lose Game 4 115-96 to Rockets, force Game 5

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The warning signs were there from the opening tip. 

You could see it in the body language. In the heavy legs. In the passes that drifted too low. In the shots that fell short on the rim. In the compounding mental mistakes. 

Fatigue isn’t an excuse, but it is a diagnosis.

And Sunday night in Houston, the Lakers didn’t have the cure.  

LeBron James and Head Coach JJ Redick of the Los Angeles Lakers high five during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

Their 115-96 loss to the Rockets in Game 4 wasn’t just about missed shots or sloppy turnovers. The reality is that it was about an older team staring down the cost of everything that preceded them to get there. 

Less than 48 hours earlier, the Lakers emptied the tanks in their shocking 112-108 overtime victory that felt like a series-ending haymaker. But when it came time to lace up the sneakers again, the energy just wasn’t there. 

The veteran-laden Lakers put a lot of mileage on the tires in Game 3. 

At 41 years old, LeBron James dragged himself through nearly 46 minutes. He hasn’t logged that many minutes in three years. Luke Kennard also flirted with 46 minutes of his own. Marcus Smart logged 40. Rui Hachimura pushed past 43 grueling minutes. The Lakers were in survival mode in Game 3 and it worked, but the body always keeps score. 

Both teams got five days of rest before the end of the regular season and the start of Game 1.They got two days off between Games 2 and 3. However, for the first time all series, there was only one day of rest before Game 4. The timing couldn’t have been any worse for the Lakers.

“My recovery was the same as it always is,” said James. “Sleep. Cold tub, ice tub. Nothing changed for me.” 

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Four on April 26, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

Only what changed was how many punishing minutes he played with only one day of recovery in between instead of two. James will never admit fatigue played a factor in Game 4. That’s part of the mythology of his greatness he’s built over two decades.

But the game told a different story. 

For long stretches, James looked taxed. He was 1-for-8 from the field and 0-for-3 from deep. Midway through the fourth quarter, he had the same amount of turnovers as he did points with eight. He didn’t reach double figures until a late layup that kept his streak of 143 playoff games with 10 or more points intact. 

But LeBron wasn’t the only one who looked physically and mentally drained. 

The Lakers turned the ball over 23 times, many of them the kind that make coaches wince because they weren’t forced. Lazy entry passes. Mishandled dribbles. Balls bouncing off shins. That’s not schematic. That’s exhaustion in disguise. 

“We were lackadaisical,” said Marcus Smart, admitting there was both mental and physical fatigue on Sunday. “We’ve been playing our asses off these first three games. We were dropping passes. I was throwing normal passes that we make on a regular basis to guys’ legs.”

Marcus Smart of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles the ball during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

In this series, the Lakers’ biggest strength—their experience—became their greatest vulnerability in Game 4. 

That experience is built on years played in the league. At 29.8 years old on average, they are the fourth oldest team in the NBA. 

Meanwhile the Rockets, when you remove veterans like Kevin Durant, Jeff Green, Steven Adams, and Fred Van Fleet—all four didn’t play in the game—they have an average age of 25.6 years. They are functionally younger, faster, and more forgiving when the game turns into a sprint. 

Houston didn’t outsmart the Lakers in Game 4. They simply recovered faster and outlasted them.

And this is not just a story that’s unique to basketball.

During the 2025 World Series, the Dodgers dragged themselves through an 18-inning marathon in Game 3 of the series. After nearly seven hours of baseball, Freddie Freeman once again hit a walk-off home run in the Fall Classic.

But it left them physically and mentally drained.

They dropped the next two games at home. Players talked about the fatigue of Game 3.

After a rare day off to reset when the series shifted back to Toronto, the Dodgers won the next two games and salvaged the series. 

LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers plays defense during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) NBAE via Getty Images

The Lakers felt all of it Sunday night. The heavy legs. The slow closeouts. The uncharacteristic sloppiness. This wasn’t a team that forgot how to play. It was a team that couldn’t quite get its body to follow its mind.

The good news for the Lakers is they still hold a 3-1 series lead and the calendar is in their favor. They once again will get two days off before Game 5 back in Los Angeles. An extra day to reset. To recharge. And to remember what their legs feel like when they’re more fresh and not carrying the weight of an entire series.


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