Calif. (AP) -- The Lakers wrote an inglorious ending to the 32-year-old Forum, where the last of their six NBA championships came 11 long years ago. San Antonio completed a four-game sweep of Los Angeles today with a 118-107 victory in the Western Conference semifinals. Last year, the Lakers were swept in the conference finals by Utah. ``We'll leave all our sweep demons over here,'' forward Robert Horry said. The Lakers will play two exhibition games in the Forum next season before moving to the new Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles. They'll share the arena with the Clippers and the NHL's Kings. ``It's history,'' Kobe Bryant said. ``The Forum and (New York's Madison Square) Garden are it. I feel very honored I had the opportunity to play here.'' Many in the sellout crowd of 17,505 began hitting the exits with five minutes left and the Lakers trailing by 13 points. They had cheered lustily when rookie coach Kurt Rambis inserted rookie Tyronn Lue six minutes into the game. The guard listed at 6 feet, although he hardly looks it, lived up to his reputation as a fearless flyer by repeatedly driving to the basket against the much taller and heavier Spurs. Lue provided a temporary spark for the struggling Lakers, but they couldn't capitalize against 7-footers Tim Duncan and David Robinson. ``I was kind of rusty, but it was good to get an opportunity,'' said Lue, who had 12 points, six assists and four turnovers in 29 minutes. Lue's driving layup with 25 seconds remaining was the final basket scored in the Forum's regular season history. ``Ty has a proven career. He's a young, talented player,'' said veteran guard Derek Harper, who was passed over Sunday in favor of Lue. ``He's shown he can produce.'' Glen Rice thought he could, too. But the sharpshooter who arrived via a February trade with Charlotte was just 4-of-10 shooting for 11 points despite playing all but three minutes. ``It's frustrating to go out there time after time and to be forgotten,'' he said. ``It boiled down to teamwork. A lot of times there wasn't a lot of teamwork out there. We weren't together out there on either end.'' Rice had complained in the season's waning weeks about being left out of the offense. The player whose shooting relies on teammates setting screens often found himself buried on the perimeter. ``I need to think about a lot of things this summer,'' he said of his future with the Lakers. ``Right now, I don't know.'' Rambis faces an uncertain future. He stepped up from assistant to head coach after Del Harris was fired the same February day that Dennis Rodman temporarily became a Laker. ``We feel he's done a terrific job under the most difficult circumstances,'' Lakers executive vice president Jerry West said. ``He was thrown into a situation that was the most difficult I've ever seen.'' The Lakers finished with a 31-20 record. They beat Houston 3-1 in a first-round series, but were undone by late miscues in each of the games against the Spurs. ``It's not like we didn't win a lot of games. We did,'' West said. ``We don't have a terrible team, we have a talented team.'' Jack Nicholson, the Lakers' No. 1 fan, admitted feeling nostalgic at the thought of attending the final NBA non-exhibition game at the Forum. ``It's a perfect basketball arena,'' he said. ``There's very few of them.'' Hall of Fame baseball player Frank Robinson is ready to leave the circular building with its orange and yellow seats behind. He's been a regular since the Forum opened in 1967. ``This has had its day,'' he said. ``Maybe the new building has got some championships in it. This one doesn't have any more.'' -=-=- 