Advertisement

How Beverley bullied 'weak' Lonzo Ball on NBA debut

Before Lonzo Ball's NBA debut, Los Angeles Lakers coach Luke Walton told reporters that L.A. Clippers guard Patrick Beverley "hounding him all over the floor is going to be a great learning experience for him."

Beverley did not disappoint, taking Ball to (home)school in the Clippers' season-opening win.

GLITCH IN THE MATRIX: Crazy NBA moment goes viral

Starting Clippers point guard Milos Teodosic is a more evolved offensive version of the oldest Ball brother, minus the upside. Teodosic threaded silky passes through passing lanes, but shot only 2-of-9 from the field.

Thanks to Beverley’s defensive effort on Ball, Teodosic still outscored Lonzo (1-of-6 from the field, nine rebounds, four assists), whose only points came courtesy of a second-quarter three.

We should've seen this coming. Father LaVar spent the summer talking his son Lonzo into hardwood battles he wasn't prepared for. What began as another fantasy LaVar was spouting caught the ear of Beverley.

Steph will probably shower 3-pointers on Lonzo when the time comes, but that’s a more welcoming showdown. Fast-paced offense is Ball’s natural habitat.

Beverley takes his defensive assignments personally. And this was extra special. Beverley's introduction to L.A. under the bright opening-night lights of Staples Center against a media darling was bound to elicit a special performance.

Four minutes into the game, Beverley knocked Ball to the floor in retaliation for a forearm the latter used to separate himself.

Beverley was stuck to Ball on the ensuing inbounds pass. It obviously got into the rookie’s head, as Ball immediately committed a backcourt violation.

A few minutes before halftime, Beverley plucked the ball from Lonzo as he attempted a crossover dribble, and when he got a chance to flex on offense, he didn't hesitate. Nothing was sacred.

After draining a third-quarter 3 in the right corner, Beverley taunted Lonzo on his way back down the floor.

Following the win, Beverley was still sounding off. He could be heard outside the locker room screaming, "Weak a** mother****ers. Don't put that mother f***er on me," per ESPN's Arash Markazi.

Ball's high school squad was the country's highest-scoring prep team on their way to a national championship. UCLA was the highest-scoring team in college hoops during his freshman campaign.

Beverley represents the antithesis of Lonzo. He developed his physical game in Chicago playgrounds. Lonzo is a pass-first, -second and -third McDonald's All-American raised in the Chino Hills suburbs in LaVar's supercharged pace-and-space offensive system.

Beverley left Arkansas a score-first point guard amidst an academic scandal before taking up residence in a Ukrainian professional league. He returned to the NBA a hardened defensive specialist on a 55-win Houston Rockets team.

The Lakers drafted Beverley in the second round before trading his rights to the Miami Heat. He didn't find solid footing until after bouncing between the NBA and European leagues for several years.

Since being drafted second overall, Lonzo has been heralded as the catalyst of L.A.'s return to Showtime.

Hot takes and flash judgments will be abound, but Ball drew a tough matchup for his debut after missing most of a shortened preseason.

Keep in mind he responded to a subpar 5-5-4 line in his first summer league game by dropping nearly three triple-doubles and earning MVP honors in Las Vegas.

Beverley’s ongoing rivalry with another L.A. native, Russell Westbrook, is the best depiction of the veteran guard's internal fire, but the Fresh Prince of L.A. is his new whipping boy — for now.