Lakers forward LeBron James posts up against Suns forward Royce O’Neale during the first half Friday. (Eric Thayer/Associated Press)

Fans stood and roared with excitement during the third quarter Friday as if they had just seen LeBron James slam the ball through the basket with rim-shaking force, or Anthony Davis reject a Phoenix Suns dunk attempt.

Neither actually happened.

The multi-taskers in the building had just watched Freddie Freeman’s perfect left-handed swing send a baseball over the Dodger Stadium wall, the World Series Game 1 walk-off getting Crypto.com Arena as loud as it had been all night.

Then, it was the Lakers turn to ignite that excitement.

As he did in the season opener, Davis played like the best player on the court, the fans chanting “MVP” for him in the fourth quarter as he just took Nestor Cortes of the New York Yankees deep. Davis dominated the Suns, outplaying Kevin Durant and Devin Booker, helping his Lakers come back from 22 points down in 123-116 win.

It is the first time the Lakers have opened the season with back-to-back wins since the 2010-11 season. Davis scored 36 points after scoring 35 in the opener against the Minnesota Timberwolves, back-to-back dominant games against two of the Western Conference favorites.

Unlike the opener, the Lakers gave Davis air help from the outside, making 14 of 27 shots from three-point range, including 13 for 22 after the first quarter. They withstood the Suns’ hot shooting early to begin their climb back into the game starting late in the second.

Davis’ blocked shot just before halftime gave the Lakers momentum in the third quarter as James and Reaves got hot from deep and opened up the inside for Davis.

James helped seal the game late with two assists — one to Gabe Vincent for a layup and one to Rui Hachimura for a three — to get the crowd going again.

The Lakers host the Sacramento Kings on Saturday night.

Unlike the Dodgers, three more wins won’t do the job. But as far as starts go, it would be hard to ask for more.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.



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