SAN DIEGO — LeBron James rubbed his hands in chalk powder at the scorer's table, yelled "Yes!" to ecstatic fans in the first few rows and the Los Angeles Lakers' new era was underway.
Playing in the same arena where Magic Johnson made his regular-season debut for Los Angeles 39 years ago, James captivated the crowd from the start of the Lakers' exhibition opener Sunday night (Monday Manila time), a 124-107 loss to the Denver Nuggets.
The opening tip came James' way and he tapped it to fellow newcomer Rajon Rondo, who threw an alley-oop pass to JaVale McGee for the game's first score.
James missed his first shot, a turnaround fadeaway, but then made a no-look bounce pass from about 27 feet out to Brandon Ingram for a dunk. A minute later, James hit a long 3-pointer.
He finished with nine points, three rebounds and four assists in just more than 15 minutes.
Lakers fans hope James' arrival will turn things around after the worst half-decade in the franchise's lengthy history.
He left the Cleveland Cavaliers for a four-year, $153.3 million free-agent deal with the Lakers.
He, Rondo and fellow veterans McGee, Lance Stephenson and Michael Beasley signed to team with the Lakers' talented young core.
James was the focus on and off the court Sunday night.
He was cheered from the minute he ran onto the court with his new teammates for warmups. He played the first eight minutes before being subbed out.
When he came back in midway through the second quarter, he was greeted by cheers.
As he stood near the scorer's table during a video review, a fan yelled: "LeBron, we love you!" and the superstar responded with a hang-loose sign.
Asked before the game what stands out about James, coach Luke Walton said, "His intelligence. He sees everything. He knows even before drills. He knows where he's going. His work ethic. He's out there pre-practice with the guys, post-practice with the guys. Taking care of his body in the weight room.
"He's the ultimate professional."
The Lakers' regular-season opener is October 18 at Portland. Their home opener is two nights later against Houston.
This was another big night for an L.A. basketball team at San Diego's sports arena.
In 1975, John Wooden coached his final game here, leading UCLA to its 10th NCAA title in 12 seasons. In 1979, Johnson made his NBA debut when Los Angeles beat the then-San Diego Clippers in the season opener. After Kareem Abdul-Jabbar made a buzzer-beating sky hook, Johnson hugged the center like they'd just won the championship. Seven months later, they did win the NBA title.
Johnson is now the Lakers' president of basketball operations and James was the prized acquisition of an offseason roster revamp.
As a kid, Walton used to watch his father, Bill, play for the Clippers, although the Hall of Famer's years in his hometown were largely marred by injuries.
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