LeBron James stuns Rockets as Lakers rally in Game 3 and win over Houston crowd at Toyota Center

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The most telling moment of Friday’s Game 3 between the Los Angeles Lakers and Houston Rockets didn’t come in overtime. It came before the ball even went up. 

The Toyota Center in downtown Houston sat half-full at tipoff, a quiet indictment of a Rockets team already down 0-2 in the series and playing without superstar Kevin Durant. 


LeBron James in a yellow Lakers jersey with the number 23 dribbles the ball.
LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets. NBAE via Getty Images

Lakers players wondered out loud in the visiting locker room how the arena could be so empty for a playoff game. Maybe some fans chose to watch baseball down the street, where the New York Yankees were in town. Others simply chose not to believe in their team. 

But by the end of the night, belief wasn’t the problem. Loyalty was. 

Because what unfolded inside that building wasn’t just a shocking Lakers win in overtime 112-108 to take a commanding 3-0 lead in the series. It was a full-scale takeover of an opposing arena.

Purple and gold colors bled through the lower bowl from the opening quarter. LeBron James and Luka Doncic jerseys were scattered like confetti across the crowd. And when Bronny James finished off the first ever father-to-son alley oop in NBA Playoff history, even the Rockets fans stood and cheered. That’s how undeniable greatness works. 

“You could definitely hear all the Lakers fans in here tonight,” Lakers’ center Jaxson Hayes said afterward. “You could see all the purple and gold jerseys… they drowned out the Houston fans.”


LeBron James giving a post-game interview.
James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers talks to the media after the game against the Houston Rockets. NBAE via Getty Images

It only got louder.

Hayes detonated a one-handed lob from Luke Kennard. The crowd erupted — not for the home team, but for the show. By the fourth quarter, the lines had blurred. By the final minute, they were gone.

Up six with 25 seconds left, Houston had the ball and control of the outcome. Hold the ball and the game would take care of itself. Instead they threw an ill-advised pass that turned into three free throws from Marcus Smart. Panic. And then the defining sequence of the game: LeBron stalking rookie Reed Sheppard in the backcourt. He knocked the ball loose, eventually reclaimed possession, and buried the game-tying three that sucked the oxygen out of the Rockets’ fans and sent the Lakers fans into a frenzy. 

In that moment, the Rockets didn’t just lose the game. They lost the room. 

By the time overtime came the outcome felt inevitable. The Lakers closed out Game 3 with authority, but the damage had already been done. Houston’s crowd had flipped and they all stood in awe of the 41-year-old James, still bending the game to his will in his 23rd season. 

The Lakers didn’t just steal a game on the road. It was a full on heist.


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