Luka lit up Miami with a 60-point masterpiece, while LeBron’s triple-double and late shot-making helped the Lakers survive a fast-paced shootout.
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LAL | 29 | 30 | 38 | 37 | 134 |
| MIA | 42 | 23 | 23 | 38 | 126 |
Luka takes over, and Miami never quite finds the answer
Luka Dončić doesn’t just score big in this one — he owns the game. The Lakers’ star pours in 60 points on 60% shooting, adds 9 threes and 5 steals, and turns a high-scoring night in Miami into his personal showcase. The Lakers leave with a 134-126 win in a game that never really slows down, with both teams trading buckets and momentum swings from the opening quarter to the final minute.
Miami comes out flying and actually punches first. The Heat build a 15-point lead and drop 42 in the opening quarter, using a 9-0 run to set the tone early — starting with S. Fontecchio’s running finger roll layup off a Bam Adebayo assist. That burst forces the Lakers to chase immediately, and for a stretch, it looks like Miami might control the tempo on its home floor. But even as the Heat score in bunches, Dončić starts stacking answers, and the game quickly shifts from Heat control to a star-driven shootout.
The Lakers begin carving into the deficit in the second and third quarters, leaning on Dončić’s shot creation and LeBron James’ all-around playmaking. Miami keeps fighting back behind Bam Adebayo’s 28 points and 10 rebounds, plus Tyler Herro’s 21 points, 8 boards and 5 assists, but the Lakers’ offense stays just a step ahead. The key stretch comes in the third, when Los Angeles strings together a 12-point run to flip the game from 77-79 to 77-89, capped by Dončić knocking down a free throw for his 34th point. That’s the turning point: Miami had been hanging around, but that surge gives the Lakers the cushion they need to control the late stages.
From there, the game becomes a rhythm battle between elite shot-makers. Miami keeps answering, and the Heat are still within striking distance when the fourth quarter opens. Norman Powell attacks downhill with a driving layup at 3:28 to trim it to 112-119, and Herro follows with a turnaround fadeaway at 2:45 and a 12-foot pull-up at 2:18 to keep the building buzzing. But every Miami push runs into Dončić. He drills a 24-foot three at 1:59 to push the Lakers back up, then later buries a 24-foot three-point fadeaway at 1:01 that feels like the knockout punch. The Heat get one last lift from Herro’s 26-foot pull-up three at 0:55.2, but Los Angeles answers every time, and the Lakers close it out with enough composure to avoid a late collapse.
LeBron James quietly puts together a monster all-around night too: 19 points, 15 rebounds, and 10 assists. He’s not the headline, but he’s the stabilizer — especially late, when he finishes a driving layup at 1:37 after Marcus Smart finds him. Miami has its own bright spots, especially from Adebayo in the paint and Herro as a shot creator, but the difference is simple: no one on the Heat can match Dončić’s ceiling. When he gets rolling like this, the Lakers can survive just about any pace.
The numbers tell the story, but the feel of the game matters too. This was a shot-for-shot road win, not a grind-it-out escape. Los Angeles goes to its superstar, gets a 60-point eruption, and pairs it with LeBron’s triple-double to take down a Heat team that was dangerous all night. The result should matter in the standings and in any future matchup discussion too: if the Lakers can generate this level of offensive firepower while getting that kind of secondary production from LeBron, they’re built to win almost any scoring race.
Turning Point
Lakers’ 12-0 third-quarter burst, capped by Dončić’s free throw for his 34th point, flips a tight game into Los Angeles control.
Key Performers
He turns the game into a one-man scoring clinic, burying threes, drawing pressure, and delivering the late daggers.
He controls the glass and the offense, giving the Lakers the steadying force they needed in a track meet.
He powers Miami’s interior attack and keeps the Heat within striking distance with a strong double-double.
He keeps answering every Lakers punch with tough shot-making, especially late in the fourth.
He provides timely downhill scoring and helps fuel Miami’s fourth-quarter push.
Box Score Leaders
| Player | PTS | REB | AST | 3PM | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luka Dončić | 60 | 7 | 3 | 9 | 60 PTS9 3PM5 STL60% FG |
| Bam Adebayo | 28 | 10 | 2 | 3 | DOUBLE-DOUBLE |
| Tyler Herro | 21 | 8 | 5 | 4 |
How Our Predictions Held Up
We finished at 59-for-104 overall, a 56.7% hit rate, so there was room for improvement but plenty of solid reads. The best calls landed on Bam Adebayo’s rebounding and Deandre Ayton’s under looks, while the biggest misses were a few high-confidence edges that didn’t cooperate, including Bam’s points-rebounds under. Overall, the model was competitive but not dominant on a high-variance game led by superstar scoring.