Some nights inside Crypto.com Arena, it can feel like the home crowd is divided. Los Angeles is a city of transplants, and many of them show up in droves to support their teams that visit the Lakers throughout the season.
Then there are nights like Saturday, when you can feel the electricity in the walls. The kind of energy that usually doesn’t arrive until late April when the NBA playoffs devour the calendar.
But this was March, and it was just another regular-season game between the Lakers and the Nuggets.
But everyone inside the sold-out arena knew better.
Nineteen thousand fans packed the building shoulder-to-shoulder with a who’s who of celebrities sitting courtside.
Eddie Murphy, Maria Sharapova, Joe Burrow, Bijan Robinson, Jason Sudeikis, Andy Garcia, Flea of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, and even internet phenomenon The Rizzler all leaned forward like anxious teenagers watching a buzzer-beater in their driveway.
NBAE via Getty Images
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NBAE via Getty Images

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The stars were everywhere.
And somehow, they still weren’t the main attraction.
Because the real stars inside the building was the collision of three of the best basketball players on the planet — Luka Doncic, LeBron James and Nikola Jokic — in a game that felt less like March basketball and more like a dress rehearsal for the Western Conference playoffs.
The Lakers jumped out early, surging ahead by 17 points in the first half as the crowd roared like it had been waiting all winter to exhale. Then came the inevitable Denver response. The Nuggets began raining 3s in the second half, the kind that suck the oxygen out of a building and make a crowd anxious enough to chew their fingernails.
With 3:49 remaining, Denver had flipped the game and built a seven-point lead.
And that’s when something beautifully ridiculous happened.
During a timeout, the Lakers’ in-game crew did its usual “Fan of the Game” routine. Normally it’s a harmless piece of arena fluff — a quick cheer, a polite clap, back to basketball.
Not this time.
The camera landed on a kid wearing an oversized Shaquille O’Neal jersey that swallowed him like a blanket. When he realized he was on the jumbotron, the kid exploded — screaming, flexing, bouncing like someone had injected 10 pounds of sugar straight into his bloodstream.
I asked LeBron James about the atmosphere inside the arena tonight and he said this little kid here who won the “fan of the game” award was the reason the lakers won tonight. https://t.co/Y6HpjMwkgS
— Michael J. Duarte (@michaeljduarte) March 15, 2026The building lost its mind.
Fans jumped to their feet. Players on the Lakers’ bench started laughing and pointing. Suddenly the arena sounded like a playoff cauldron instead of a regular-season crowd.
“That little kid on the jumbotron definitely gave us the energy we needed. He’s the reason why we won tonight,” LeBron James joked afterward. “It was a great atmosphere. The fans gave us the energy we needed, especially in that extra five minutes.”
He wasn’t entirely kidding.
Because from that moment forward the building felt alive.
You could see it ripple through the team.
The Lakers clawed back possession by possession until Austin Reaves produced one of the strangest and most clutch sequences of the NBA season — missing a free throw, grabbing his own rebound and laying it in to tie the game with seconds left.
And once overtime arrived, Doncic took over the night the way great players tend to do when the stage finally feels worthy of them.
But before the dagger, there was another unmistakable presence in the arena.
A cluster of fans wearing Luka Doncic jerseys and waving Slovenian flags.
Dozens of fans had traveled across an ocean to see their prodigal son play basketball in Los Angeles. They waved signs. They shouted encouragement in Slovene. They turned a corner of Crypto.com Arena into a miniature Ljubljana.
Doncic noticed.
“I think it’s great,” he said afterward. “I saw them myself, too. Over these last four, six or seven games at home, I saw there were a lot of Slovenians here. I just want to say to them, thank you very much. I know it’s a long way to come, so I really appreciate that.”
Moments later, he gave them something worth the trip.
With the game tied in overtime and the clock bleeding toward zero, Doncic danced along the baseline, stepped back and buried the jumper that sealed a 127-125 Lakers victory.
The arena erupted like it had been waiting all night to explode.
That’s the thing about Saturday night.
It wasn’t just a great game.
It was a potential playoff preview.
And the preview was spectacular.
“I felt like this was the best atmosphere since I joined the Lakers,” Doncic said. “The whole crowd was behind us. It was so special to witness that. I got goosebumps. It was amazing to see,” said Doncic of the atmosphere.
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