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Lakers win a grudge match

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Times Staff Writer

SALT LAKE CITY -- Well, well, well.

Right about the time the Lakers were supposed to be sinking toward the lower part of the Western Conference playoff race -- no Pau Gasol + no Andrew Bynum = nothing but trouble, allegedly -- they unfurled yet another victory, on the road, in front of a keyed-up crowd.

All they did was beat the Utah Jazz, owner of the league’s best home record, with a spirited and efficient endeavor that gave them a richly deserved 106-95 victory Thursday at Energy Solutions Arena.

An added surprise, one of many on a four-game road trip that was supposed to crumble after Gasol sustained a sprained ankle early in the first game, was their position in the West after all was said and done: 47-21, good for sole possession of first place, half a game ahead of New Orleans.

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The Lakers managed to go 2-2 on the trip, their last long foray away from home, and capped it off with victories over Dallas and Utah, assumed to be contenders in the West.

Then there’s this: Injuries or not, 11 of their final 14 games are at Staples Center, including a designated road game against the Clippers.

Lamar Odom was seemingly everywhere -- 21 points, 12 rebounds and six assists -- and the Lakers shot with startling accuracy (52.5%), not to mention the unyielding defense they threw at the Jazz, which had won a franchise record-tying 19 consecutive home games and was 29-3 in its own arena before Thursday.

“When we get things going, we feel there’s not a game that we can’t win,” Odom said. “We’ve got to keep winning so we can stiff-arm these teams a little bit.”

The Lakers didn’t fare so well in their last visit here, posting an embarrassing 120-96 loss in November even though the Jazz played without starters Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur.

Deron Williams had a career-high 35 points in that game, Andrei Kirilenko had a triple-double, and Phil Jackson said the Lakers were “soft as Dairy Queen ice cream.”

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Consider them more hardened this time around.

Williams had 26 points and 12 assists, but the rest of the Jazz shot 42.2%.

The Lakers led by as many as 24 in the second quarter, lost half of it by the time the fourth quarter began, but never let the Jazz take the lead.

Sasha Vujacic and Jordan Farmar hit some key fourth-quarter shots, finishing with 11 points each. Vladimir Radmanovic dunked, twice, and scored 13 points after contributing 21 points Tuesday in the Lakers’ 102-100 victory over Dallas.

There were even cheers for Derek Fisher when he was introduced, although they quickly turned to boos the first few times he touched the ball. Then again, there were a lot of boos the rest of the way from Jazz fans, directed at the referees, Utah’s uninspired play or successful possessions by the Lakers.

Fisher had three points on one-for-eight shooting here in November, but had 11 points Thursday.

Kobe Bryant had 27 points, eight rebounds and seven assists, and said the Lakers were motivated by Fisher’s rude reception the last time they were here.

“It was personal,” he said. “We took it personally, absolutely.”

Odom was all over the court in the first quarter, driving past Okur for a reverse lay-up, taking a feed from Ronny Turiaf for a dunk, hitting a three-pointer and totaling 10 points in the first 12 minutes as the Lakers took a 38-18 lead into the second quarter.

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The Lakers’ edge fell to 60-45 at halftime.

But the Jazz never led and never came closer than eight the rest of the way, Bryant answering a four-point play by Williams with a dunk and a feed to Luke Walton for a fastbreak layup and 100-88 lead with 2:54 to play.

As has become somewhat of a ritual, even in hostile milieus, Bryant’s name was chanted by Lakers fans as the game wound to a close.

It was that kind of a night in an arena that hadn’t been kind to visitors, much less the Lakers.

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mike.bresnahan@latimes.com

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