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Julius Randle’s production has tailed off since demotion to a Lakers reserve

Lakers forward Julius Randle (30) shoots over Raptors defenders Patrick Patterson, right, and Kyle Lowry (7) during the second half.

Lakers forward Julius Randle (30) shoots over Raptors defenders Patrick Patterson, right, and Kyle Lowry (7) during the second half.

(Chris Young / Associated Press)
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Julius Randle and D’Angelo Russell were not excited to lose their starting jobs, Randle in particular unable to hide his feelings by saying very little.

“It is what it is,” he kept repeating to reporters when Coach Byron Scott made the decision three games ago to drop them to reserve status.

Randle wouldn’t be very happy if he looked in-depth at his stats the last two games since the demotion. It’s a small sample size, but he missed 15 of 20 shots and averaged only 5.5 points.

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“Keep attacking,” said a subdued Randle after going three-for-11 Saturday in the Lakers’ 126-97 loss to Houston. “Even though the shots aren’t [getting] made so many times, I’m not really worried about it. They’re just not going in right now.”

It wasn’t long before he was asked about his new role. It’s safe to say he feels as if he’s going through an adjustment period. He obviously misses being a starter.

“You sit nine or 10 minutes and then you get in and try to figure out the flow of the game,” he said. “Playing with a different unit and different guys, you’re just trying to get used to it. It’s a completely different feeling.”

After handing out the new job assignments, Scott said he would reevaluate everything after 10 games. Russell, coincidentally, rejoined the starters for two games and played fairly well after Jordan Clarkson was sidelined by a sprained ankle.

Randle, on the other hand, missed his first four shots against Houston before scoring on a fastbreak dunk after a nice drop-off pass by Marcelo Huertas. Then, tellingly, his shot was blocked by Terrence Jones a few possessions later.

“He just hasn’t played well the last couple of games, period. His energy hasn’t been the same,” Scott said.

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Randle has 10 double-doubles, which leads all players from the 2014 draft class. If he doesn’t start scoring, he won’t be the head of that stat for long.

Randle’s outside touch is severely lacking, his 42.6% accuracy way too low for a power forward who doesn’t take three-point shots. He also needs to work on using his right hand to develop counter moves in the post.

Despite all the missed shots, Scott seemed to have a bigger problem with Randle’s defense.

“He’s just not ready to guard,” Scott said. “He kind of waits until the guy catches the ball and then he wants to guard. It’s the old saying, you’ve got to do your work early.

“I was taught in high school, if you don’t want your guy to score, don’t let him catch it. Sometimes our guys wait and let him catch it and then they want to guard him. That’s not the way to play. Not in this league.”

Randle, to his credit, seemed amenable to improving. His work ethic is near the top on the team.

“That’s something I’ll go on the film and look at. It’s hard to tell when you’re in the game,” he said.

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Will Bryant play?

There’s really only one bonus for the Lakers after returning from a 1-7 trip — a lot more home games (34) than road (24) left on their schedule.

It’s one thing for Kobe Bryant to want to play in Philadelphia, New York and, later this month, Boston. Will he really suit up for every home game remaining, even random ones such as Tuesday against Milwaukee?

“Once he made the [retirement] announcement, he said, ‘Coach, I want to play every game possible,’ ” Scott said. “I think he will try everything in his power to be able to play every game that’s left on the schedule.”

Bryant’s stats have improved the last four games, specifically his shooting. He’s averaged 17.3 points on 47.4% accuracy over the span and said Saturday his legs felt stronger than any point this season.

Lakers sent down

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Tarik Black, Ryan Kelly and rookie Anthony Brown were sent down to the Los Angeles D-Fenders, the Lakers’ Development League affiliate, to play Sunday against the Austin Spurs.

All three have played sparingly at best this season, with Brown and Kelly each averaging 3.8 points in only eight games. Brown, the Lakers’ second-round draft pick last July, has five points in five games.

mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

Twitter: @Mike_Bresnahan

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