Los Angeles Lakers
Series Flow
4
Wins
3
Losses
Regular Season
62–20
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
15–3
Win–Loss
Finals
4–3
vs Detroit Pistons
Finals MVP
Worthy
James
Los Angeles Lakers
62–20Detroit Pistons
54–28The Bad Boys were one year ahead of their time. They would win back-to-back in 1989-90. Here they pushed the greatest offensive machine in NBA history to seven games — with Isiah Thomas playing one of those games on a badly sprained ankle.

Finals MVP
James Worthy
#42 · Forward
22.0
PPG
7.4
RPG
4.4
APG
1.7
SPG
Triple-double in Game 7 (36 pts, 16 reb, 10 ast) — the most complete Finals performance of his career.
Game 7 triple-double is one of the greatest individual performances in a deciding Finals game
"Big Game James" cemented his legacy with the greatest game of his career when it mattered most
93
LAL
105
DET
The Bad Boys came ready. Isiah Thomas and Joe Dumars combined to neutralize Magic while the Pistons' physical defense disrupted Showtime's rhythm.
Los Angeles Lakers
James Worthy
24 ptsThe one Laker who fought back with consistent scoring.
DET
Isiah Thomas
19 pts · 10 astThe Bad Boys' leader set the tone — physical, aggressive, and unafraid.
108
LAL
96
DET
Worthy (28 pts) and Magic (23 pts, 14 ast) ignited Showtime. The Great Western Forum was electric.
Los Angeles Lakers
James Worthy
28 pts · 8 reb"Big Game James" took over and didn't look back.
Magic Johnson
23 pts · 14 astShowtime was back — no-look passes, fast breaks, pure joy.
99
LAL
86
DET
On the road against Detroit's intense crowd, the Lakers won behind Worthy's consistent excellence and Magic's orchestration.
Los Angeles Lakers
James Worthy
26 pts · 6 rebCouldn't be stopped — the ideal player for a hostile road game.
DET
Adrian Dantley
24 ptsDetroit's offensive weapon — gave the Lakers problems without enough support.
86
LAL
111
DET
Detroit's physical defense overwhelmed the Lakers. Rick Mahorn, Dennis Rodman, and Bill Laimbeer combined to make life miserable for everyone in purple and gold.
Los Angeles Lakers
Magic Johnson
20 pts · 11 astGot his numbers but LA couldn't generate enough good looks.
DET
Bill Laimbeer
14 pts · 12 rebAnchor of the "Bad Boys" defense — physical, combative, and effective.
94
LAL
88
DET
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar showed he still had championship mettle at 41, contributing 20 key points while Magic directed the offense flawlessly.
Los Angeles Lakers
Magic Johnson
24 pts · 14 astMagic at his transcendent best — makes every player around him better.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
20 pts · 7 rebShowed at 41 that the skyhook was still unanswerable.
103
LAL
108
DET
Isiah Thomas scored 25 first-half points on a badly sprained ankle — one of the bravest performances in Finals history — to force Game 7.
DET
Isiah Thomas
43 pts (25 in first half on a sprained ankle)One of the most courageous individual performances in Finals history — forced Game 7 on one leg.
Joe Dumars
21 ptsConsistent scoring kept Detroit competitive whenever Isiah needed rest.
108
LAL
105
DET
James Worthy's triple-double (36 pts, 16 reb, 10 ast) — one of the greatest Games 7 performances in NBA history — gave the Lakers Showtime's last championship.
Los Angeles Lakers
James Worthy
36 pts · 16 reb · 10 ast"Big Game James." His greatest moment — a triple-double in a deciding Finals game.
Magic Johnson
22 pts · 19 ast · 8 reb19 assists in Game 7 of the Finals. Magic at his most magical.
DET
Isiah Thomas
29 ptsStill playing on a bad ankle — gave everything and nearly stole a championship.
The Bad Boys were one year ahead of their time. They would win back-to-back in 1989-90. Here they pushed the greatest offensive machine in NBA history to seven games — with Isiah Thomas playing one of those games on a badly sprained ankle.

19.7
PPG
8.6
APG
4.4
RPG
His 43-point Game 6 on a sprained ankle is one of the bravest performances in Finals history. A champion the year after.

16.7
PPG
43.5%
3PT%
Provided consistent scoring and tough defense throughout — laid the groundwork for his back-to-back titles with the Pistons.
Los Angeles Lakers
11th NBA Championship — back-to-back titles (1987-88)
James Worthy
Finals MVP — cemented "Big Game James" legacy with the greatest performance of his career
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
Won his 6th and final championship at age 41 — one of the greatest careers in NBA history concludes with a ring
Pat Riley
4th championship as Laker head coach — final title before his departure to the Knicks
Isiah Thomas
Scored 43 points in Game 6 on a badly sprained ankle — one of the most heroic individual Finals performances ever
The 1988 Finals was a clash of basketball eras. The Lakers' Showtime — fast, artistic, and joyful — against the Pistons' Bad Boys — physical, aggressive, and mean. The future would belong to Detroit, but in 1988, the Lakers had one last dance.
James Worthy's Game 7 triple-double (36-16-10) stands as one of the defining individual performances in Finals history. Kareem won his 6th title at 41. Magic recorded 19 assists in Game 7. And Isiah Thomas played one of the bravest games anyone has ever played in an NBA Finals — on one leg, forcing the series to its limit.
Five Laker championships in nine years. Showtime. The most watchable team in the history of professional basketball. In 1988, it ended perfectly — seven games, a hero's moment for James Worthy, and one last ring for Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at 41.
The Detroit Pistons pushed Showtime to the absolute limit. Isiah Thomas played Game 6 on a sprained ankle and scored 43 points. The series needed every game to resolve itself. When James Worthy posted 36, 16, and 10 in the deciding game, he created one of the greatest individual Finals moments in NBA history.
Showtime was over. But it ended in gold.
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