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  Wednesday, Jan. 12 8:00pm ET
Lakers win sweet 16th straight
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME FLOW

MILWAUKEE (AP) -- As the Los Angeles Lakers streak toward history, they're trying to keep their focus on the court and off the record books.

Shaquille O'Neal had 27 points and 10 rebounds as the Lakers extended their winning streak to 16 games, tying the second-longest streak in team history, by defeating Milwaukee 103-94 Wednesday night.

Shaquille O'Neal, Scott Williams
Shaquille O'Neal, left, and Milwaukee's Scott Williams battled all night, nearly tussling at one point.

The win matched the Lakers' 16-game string in 1990-91 but still left them 17 short of the NBA-record 33 games the Lakers won in 1971-72 -- a streak that ended against the Bucks.

Can the Lakers reach that lofty mark? Can anyone? Coach Phil Jackson isn't sure.

"It seems completely outside a normal mindset," said Jackson, who has won 31 of his first 36 games with the Lakers. "As a coach, 10 games is about as much as you will allow yourself. To think someone could do that for 2½ months is amazing."

The Lakers haven't lost in 36 days. Milwaukee, which had its six-game home winning streak snapped, is the ninth team with a winning record that the Lakers have beaten during the streak.

O'Neal said the Lakers don't even think about their remarkable run.

"Phil doesn't talk about it. We don't talk about it at practice," O'Neal said. "We just go out and win -- and win, and win, and win."

The Lakers beat the Bucks at their own game, bombarding Milwaukee with outside shots from Glen Rice, Kobe Bryant and Ron Harper during the second half. Rice had 20 points and Bryant added 22, including three show-stopping dunks. Harper had 16 points and seven rebounds.

O'Neal, who picked up a technical foul for retaliating after a hard foul by Scott Williams in the first half, shook off a slow start and eventually manhandled the Bucks' big men. He capped his evening with a vicious alley-oop dunk on a pass from Harper with 2:03 to play.

"We have a lot of weapons on this team," O'Neal said. "If my guys are taking wide-open shots, I don't worry about not getting the ball."

The Lakers are two wins away from joining five other teams in league history with 18-game streaks. Only three teams, including the 1970-71 Bucks and the 1971-72 Lakers, have won more than 18 straight games.

"As far as 33 in a row, we'll worry about it at the end," Bryant said. "People are talking about it every day, but we're not."

In January 1972, the Lakers' 33-game streak was derailed by the Bucks in Milwaukee. This time, the Bucks fell behind early and were knocked out during a 21-6 Lakers run spanning the third and fourth quarters.

"There was a stretch in the third quarter where I thought we lost our rhythm and confidence," Milwaukee coach George Karl said.

The Bucks' Big Three -- Glenn Robinson, Ray Allen and Sam Cassell -- combined for 71 points, but all three shot below 50 percent and their teammates could manage just 23 points among them. Cassell had 24 points and 13 assists, while Allen had 25. Robinson was 9-of-20 and had 22 points.

Milwaukee, which passed the ball fluidly during a 50-point trouncing of the Hornets on Monday, looked skittish against the Lakers' defense and often settled for bad shots. J.R. Reid, facing the team he left as a free agent during the offseason, went 1-of-7 from the field for Milwaukee.

"Two nights ago, we were the best we've ever been, and tonight we were stopped by a damn good basketball team," Karl said.

Los Angeles' 87-66 lead after three was sabotaged by eight Lakers turnovers in the fourth quarter. Milwaukee cut its deficit to 89-79 with four minutes to play and 99-90 with a minute left, but Bryant and O'Neal, who was 7-of-10 from the free-throw line, hit big shots to put it away.

The Bucks went 28-of-28 from the free-throw line, including 10-of-10 by Allen and 8-of-8 by Cassell.

Game notes
Lakers forward Robert Horry broke his nose in a collision under the basket late in the fourth quarter. He is listed as day-to-day. ... The Lakers have beaten the Bucks eight straight times. ... Los Angeles plays at Indiana on Friday and at Minnesota on Saturday. ... The Bradley Center observed a moment of silence for Charlotte guard Bobby Phills, who was killed in a car accident on Wednesday. Phills scored eight points against the Bucks on Monday in his final game. ... As in any NBA city they visit, the Lakers had a sizeable contingent of fans at the Bradley Center. Los Angeles was playing in a sold-out road arena for the seventh straight time.
 


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RECAPS
Boston 95
LA Clippers 88

Indiana 117
Washington 102

Toronto 108
Orlando 102

Chicago 0
Charlotte 0

Detroit 114
New York 108

LA Lakers 103
Milwaukee 94

Seattle 103
Denver 93

Portland 95
Cleveland 75

Phoenix 95
Vancouver 92