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Lakers ‘celebrate’ end of arena’s Staples Center era

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Lakers center Dwight Howard warms up during a pregame presentation before their game against the San Antonio Spurs on Thursday night at Staples Center. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Davis Gaines sings the national anthem before Thursday’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs at Staples Center. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Davis Gaines sings the national anthem before Thursday’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs at Staples Center. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Davis Gaines sings the national anthem before Thursday’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs at Staples Center. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Former Lakers Metta Sandiford-Artest smiles while seated courtside during a game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs on Thursday night at Staples Center. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

Lakers championship trophies are displayed during a ceremony to say farewell to the Staples Center name during Thursday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs. The Lakers did a number of things to celebrate their first 22 years in the venue, which will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

The Lakers championship trophies are displayed during a ceremony to say farewell to the Staples Center name during Thursday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs. The Lakers did a number of things to celebrate their first 22 years in the venue, which will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

From left, former Lakers Robert Horry, Metta Sandiford-Artest, Luke Walton, Byron Scott and Gary Payton pose for photos during a ceremony to say farewell to the Staples Center name during Thursday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs. The Lakers did a number of things to celebrate their first 22 years in the venue, which will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

A Crypto.com Arena sign hangs outside Staples Center before Thursday night’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs. The venue will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

A Crypto.com Arena sign hangs outside Staples Center before Thursday night’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs. The venue will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

A Crypto.com Arena sign hangs outside Staples Center before Thursday night’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs. The venue will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

A Crypto.com Arena sign hangs outside Staples Center before Thursday night’s game between the Lakers and the San Antonio Spurs. The venue will officially be renamed Crypto.com Arena on Christmas Day. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

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LOS ANGELES — It is curious to see what can become beloved once enough time has passed.

The foundations of Staples Center are not going anywhere – not the concrete, not the bleachers, not the hardwood floor. The actual red letters, “S-T-A-P-L-E-S C-E-N-T-E-R” plastered for two decades atop the home arena of the Lakers, Clippers, Kings and Sparks were removed and hauled off weeks ago. But there’s something to be said, apparently, for the only name this building has ever known.

On Thursday night – the last night of the “Staples Center” name – sentimentality for a corporate sponsorship was enough to bring together a crew of big names from some of the best teams of the last 22 years of Lakers basketball: Gary Payton, Byron Scott, Metta Sandiford-Artest and Robert Horry. They posed alongside the spoils that the Lakers secured during the last two decades at midcourt, a moment to look back on a home court that won’t actually change all that much.

The Lakers also welcomed back Luke Walton, a role player from the 2009-2010 teams who was honored for the first time as a Laker since being fired as head coach in 2019. On the way off of the court, Lakers team owner Jeanie Buss stopped Walton for a hug.

The passing of time makes everything a little smoother around the edges, names included.

While team officials recognized that little will “change” about the home arena aside from its forthcoming Crypto.com Arena name (which becomes official on Christmas Day), they wished to give fans a sense of closure for the Staples Center brand, which gained support with the memories it housed over 22 years.

When the name sponsorship was unveiled more than two decades ago – a $120 million deal – a Lakers official distinctly remembered it being mocked. The home of one of the winningest franchises in NBA history would be associated with an office supply store? The Staples brand of printers, copiers and plain white paper didn’t exactly register with “Showtime” and the legendary after-hours exploits of the Forum Club.

But within a few short years, Staples Center was synonymous with winning – and the Lakers had a lot to do with that.

They were the first tenant to win a championship in the building, taking out the Sacramento Kings and the Phoenix Suns before tussling with the Portland Trail Blazers for seven games. The clinching basket of that final game, an alley-oop from Kobe Bryant to Shaquille O’Neal, announced the arrival of a dynasty – even before they cleared out the Indiana Pacers in six games in the NBA Finals. Both of those series-clinchers took place at Staples Center, quickly granted status as the Versailles of ascending basketball royalty.

Over the next decade, the Lakers would total five championships, with many memorable nights along the way. Some standouts include Robert Horry’s Game 4 winner over the Kings in the 2002 Western Conference Finals, or Bryant leaping up on the scorer’s table after they eliminated the Boston Celtics in seven games in 2010, completing a back-to-back run out of Shaq’s shadow.

The Staples Center era is also indelibly intertwined with the career of Bryant, who played 17 of his 20 seasons in the building. After working out his awkward teenage years at the Great Western Forum, Bryant came into his own when the Lakers moved downtown, ascending into the 18-time All-Star. During his 2007-08 league MVP season, he concocted an unforgettable Staples Center memory by scoring 81 points in a Sunday night victory over the Toronto Raptors, the second-highest mark in NBA history.

Bryant provided the game’s ultimate curtain call in his final game in 2016, scoring 60 points in a sendoff against the Utah Jazz when teammates kept feeding him the ball. Speaking to the arena crowd after the win, he left the court for the last time as a player with a sign-off, “Mamba out.” Just four too-short years later when he died in a helicopter crash in Calabasas, he and his daughter Gianna Bryant were celebrated with a star-studded, emotional tribute within those same walls.

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The current Lakers have experienced minimal postseason success as Lakers in Staples Center: LeBron James, Anthony Davis and Talen Horton-Tucker won the 2020 championship in the NBA bubble in Orlando, robbed by the pandemic of the chance to win the title in front of a home crowd, and stripped of the chance to have a parade into downtown themselves. It was a bitter irony that the one player on the current roster who was part of a Lakers championship run in Staples Center – Trevor Ariza – was confined within the NBA’s COVID-19 protocols Thursday and wasn’t permitted to attend the game.

But another sellout of nearly 19,000 fans got plenty to take home, including an “I Love LA!” T-shirt that was a replica of a giveaway for Game 7 of the 2000 Western Conference finals. Fans also got a novelty game ticket for posterity.

The Staples Center brought back Davis Gaines, the man who sang the first national anthem at a Lakers game in 1999, to take on the same role again on Thursday night. A special Staples Center-themed curtain drop played Lakers scenes at the iconic venue propped up by Randy Newman’s “I Love L.A.,” the song that accompanies every home win with streamers.

Here’s to our favorite stories, and to the ones yet to be written. pic.twitter.com/mqzBfyxRLA

— Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) December 24, 2021

What are the Top 10 #LakeShow moments at STAPLES Center? Here’s our 10 through 6 pic.twitter.com/lAZu3xUQmY

— Spectrum SportsNet (@SpectrumSN) December 24, 2021

These are our Top 5 #LakeShow moments at STAPLES.

Any we miss? pic.twitter.com/7SScXjV1nL

— Spectrum SportsNet (@SpectrumSN) December 24, 2021

22 Years of Lakers History at STAPLES Center. pic.twitter.com/st0h570eBM

— Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) December 23, 2021

pic.twitter.com/J2lNPJfK1n

— Los Angeles Lakers (@Lakers) December 24, 2021

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