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Andre Drummond's Lakers debut cut short with toe injury in loss to Bucks

Lakers Andre Drummond (2) drives to the basket against Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Andre Drummond touched the ball, spun it onto the court and dribbled out towards his new team – everyone in warmups and the Lakers’ newest player so excited that he had ditched the sweats and was already in his jersey.

It’s having a 6-foot-10 human wrapped in purple and gold blocking shots at the rim that make you think twice. It’s having him park in the lane like a semi-truck in front of a bay window, impossible for the defense to ignore.

Even when he wasn’t on his own Wednesday, sartorially speaking, Drummond was easy to notice. The basketball folks call it a “presence.”

But like so much for the Lakers this season, it was temporary, taken from them in a blink.

Early in the second half of the Lakers’ 112-97 loss to the Bucks, Drummond limped back to the locker room, his right Nike off his foot and in his hand. Team trainers and doctors followed. General manager Rob Pelinka did too.

He had been stepped on in the first half by the Bucks’ Brook Lopez. At halftime, he noticed the nail from his big toe was gone. He tried to play, but he couldn’t.

“I couldn’t even put shoes on,” he said after the game.

Lakers Andre Drummond tries to dunk over Milwaukee Bucks center Brook Lopez.
Lakers Andre Drummond tries to dunk over Milwaukee Bucks center Brook Lopez in the second half at Staples Center on Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Wrong steps, rotten luck or the cost of a shortened offseason, or in Drummond’s case, more than a month absent from the court, always leading to the same — the Lakers left a little weaker than when they started.

Like Drummond’s size, you can’t ignore that either.

Anthony Davis was courtside, in a fire-truck red jacket and some black shorts. LeBron James was home, wondering why Spectrum SportsNet wasn’t showing the score. And the Lakers were left to fight against the Bucks, a team as credible of a contender as any other, according to Lakers coach Frank Vogel, on Drummond’s first night in that jersey.

It went well for a little, the team hitting shots and getting stops, but even with Drummond on the floor, the Bucks, with Giannis Antetokounmpo and Jrue Holiday, were too good for a team doing its best to try to weather the storms it keeps finding itself in.

Drummond gave the Lakers four points, one for each of his four fouls, to go with two assists and one rebound. But the plan with him, at least listening to people since Drummond signed Sunday, was always more big picture.

The optimism is based a lot of projection, projection that relies on Drummond being available to play, in shape and healthy. It’s why Vogel anointed Drummond as the team’s starter after his very first practice with the team.

“I’m eager to get him a week, two weeks, three weeks, a month, a couple months into our system. I think the more he learns my defensive principles and angles and reads and all those types of things, I think he can be a monster defensively for us,” Vogel said before the game. “I just think that there’s a lot to work with there. But it’s just gonna take time to get him up to speed with what’s going on in our system, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Even Drummond has talked about how envisioned the future.

“I think our defense is gonna be really crazy when those guys come back and I’m looking forward to it,” Drummond said earlier this week.

If those are the long-term hopes, they have to be a factor for the Lakers in the short term too. The Lakers don’t have the offensive talent to hang with the Bucks if Milwaukee is having a good night. So it’s on the Lakers’ defense to make sure they’re not.

Offensively, the Lakers remained a mess — hitting eight of 12 three-pointers in the first quarter before making only two of their next 24 attempts. Wednesday was the sixth time in their last seven games where they scored 101 points or fewer.

A shootaround before the Lakers hosted Cleveland last week triggered a pair of strong defensive performances in wins, the team correcting two glaring areas of slippage.

“Execution and effort in all areas. We had three or four straight games with a poor defensive rating, and they were all losses,” Vogel said of his emphasis in that court time. “So, we had a spirited shootaround where we got to work, and just got into our drill work and built some of our habits back up and raised the accountability piece.”

Lakers Andre Drummond drives to the basket against Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo.
Lakers Andre Drummond drives to the basket against Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo in the first half at Staples Center on Wednesday. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

In Drummond’s first shift with the Lakers, his new team outscored the Bucks by seven. He blocked Donte DiVincenzo after jumping to challenge another shot.

And while he struggled with plenty of rust in and around the rim, his physicality inside was a stark contrast to what the Lakers have gotten from their prior starting center Marc Gasol, who spent offensive possessions around the three-point line providing spacing and some occasional quarterbacking. You could see that in a big screen set on Holiday to get Dennis Schroder an open 10-foot jumper.

But as the third quarter began, trouble appeared.

Drummond wasn’t on the floor when the second half started, the team being called for a delay of game as Montrezl Harrell quickly tried to shed his warmups and take Drummond’s place.

Then after a few minutes of limping on the sideline and signaling to someone in the crowd while pointing down at his right foot, Drummond went back to the

scorer’s table to check in. Less than two minutes later, he signaled to the bench before hopping off into the tunnel, another signal of hope lost into the darkness of Staples Center.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.