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Kobe Bryant finishes 6-10 in Christmas games after Clippers defeat Lakers

Lakers guard Kobe Bryant tries to split the defense of Clippers guards J.J. Redick, left, and Chris Paul during a drive in the second quarter of a game on Dec. 25.

Lakers guard Kobe Bryant tries to split the defense of Clippers guards J.J. Redick, left, and Chris Paul during a drive in the second quarter of a game on Dec. 25.

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)
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First came the good news for Kobe Bryant on the NBA’s favorite holiday.

He made it this far, his 20th and final Christmas Day with the Lakers. He had 12 points Friday, made a handful of shots and didn’t get injured.

Now for the bad stuff — pretty much everything else that’s happened to his team.

Despite a fourth-quarter rally, the Lakers lost to the Clippers an eighth straight time, 94-84, in a designated Lakers home game at Staples Center.

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Bryant’s name was chanted late in the game but, symbolic of the times, he stayed on the bench while the second-stringers tried to cap a comeback from a 28-point deficit.

It didn’t happen. The Lakers are now 5-25.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver was in the building, and you had to wonder about his thoughts on the nose-dive. Silver’s predecessor, after all, once proclaimed that his dream NBA Finals matchup would be “the Lakers versus the Lakers.”

That was a long time ago, when Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal were teammates and championships were being earned.

For all of Bryant’s achievements, personally and teamwise, Dec. 25 was often unkind to him on the court. He finished with a 6-10 record in his Christmas career after making four of 10 shots Friday and adding three assists.

The Clippers (17-13) needed to face the Lakers, badly.

They dropped close games to two of the NBA’s elite — San Antonio and Oklahoma City — and also fell to underachieving Houston.

“It was as close to a must-win as you can have in the regular season,” said Clippers guard J.J. Redick, who had 14 points.

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Chris Paul ran free with 23 points and six assists and DeAndre Jordan did his usual thing — nine points and 14 rebounds.

The Clippers’ starters, ticketed to sit out the fourth quarter after building an 85-57 lead, rushed back into the game after backup Lakers guards D’Angelo Russell and Marcelo Huertas made a late impact.

You could say Clippers Coach Doc Rivers was unhappy with his reserves.

“Their defense sucked. They fouled every possession or they let the other team score or the other team got an offensive rebound,” Rivers said. “So now you’re playing halfcourt basketball with your second unit, which you don’t want to do.”

Some would call this progress for the Lakers. Over the previous eight days, they lost by 40 to Oklahoma City, by 35 in the rematch and by 20 to Houston. The obvious outlier was a four-point victory over depleted Denver.

But there were enough plays Friday to show the Lakers were inexperienced and, indeed, now 20 games under .500.

Rookie Larry Nance Jr. jumped high for a defensive rebound near the free-throw line but somehow batted the ball in a perfect arc into the Clippers’ basket. Jordan was credited with two points. “That was kind of indicative of how this season has gone,” Coach Byron Scott said.

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Also, Russell led a four-on-one fastbreak and was called for a double dribble after trying to get too creative with a behind-the-back move.

The Lakers had no second-chance points and no fastbreak points in the first half. Was it any wonder they trailed, 60-44?

It actually got loud in the fourth quarter. Russell finished with 16 points. Julius Randle had 11 points and eight rebounds.

Bryant did not reenter after leaving midway through the third quarter. He had been sitting too long, Scott said.

Bryant received a nice gift when the NBA announced he comfortably led all players so far in All-Star voting, including Stephen Curry and LeBron James.

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“I was like, what the hell? ‘Shocked’ doesn’t do it justice,” Bryant said.

mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

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