The Clippers’ roster is loaded with players who are versatile but not by nature vociferous. But as the losing continued, which included losses to Philadelphia and Utah on consecutive nights that dropped the preseason championship contender into the play-in tournament tier of the Western Conference standings, coach Tyronn Lue wanted one of the NBA’s oldest rosters to find answers among themselves. Guard Norman Powell, wing Paul George and forward Marcus Morris Sr. were the most vocal, said people familiar with the locker-room discussions.
“Guys were like, ‘OK, it’s getting ridiculous, we got to win some games,’” center Ivica Zubac said. “We were talking about that Utah game: We can go on a win streak. We just got to lock in, we got to stick to our plan.”
What a difference a week makes.
Despite a litany of defensive mistakes, the Clippers held off San Antonio last Friday. They started a win two days later behind what Lue called the team’s best defensive performance to date against Luka Doncic. By not allowing their double-digit lead against the Lakers to disappear Tuesday, even in the face of a career-best shooting night from LeBron James, they felt they’d showed a composure they had lacked.
On Thursday the Clippers closed the week that has, for now, revived their season by beating San Antonio again, 138-100 to improve to 27-24. As Kawhi Leonard scored 12 of his 27 points in the first quarter, and George scored 10 of his 35, the team’s execution that had once looked scattershot turned methodical, and a once-disjointed roster appeared dangerous.
They turned the ball over only five times. They never ceded their lead.
“Things, they feel different,” Lue said. “We still got a long ways to go, like I keep saying, but things do feel different.
“When you win, it changes a lot of things, but we are getting better in certain areas, especially offensively. I think we’re turning the corner in that regard. And defensively just gotta play a full 48 [minutes].”
Significant caveats apply: San Antonio’s defense is the NBA’s worst by a Texas-sized margin. And the Spurs were playing on a second consecutive night, and are now 2-9 when playing with less rest than their opponent.
But Thursday brought or continued developments they gladly welcomed: another more focused defensive effort, the season’s first four-game winning streak — not a coincidence it also marked the first stretch of four straight games with both Leonard and George available — and the return of guard Luke Kennard after being sidelined by nine games with a calf injury.
A week after San Antonio back-cut its way to 72 points by halftime, the Spurs didn’t score that many until four minutes remained in the third quarter. By that point the Clippers had scored 100 points, and the win improved them to 18-2 when crossing the triple-digit barrier first. This, George said, was a team that hadn’t broken amid its bruising losing skid.
“We were having tough nights,” he said. “But I think every one understood at some point we were going to be healthy.”
Kennard scored five points in 17 minutes and didn’t experience any discomfort. He’d last played Jan. 6, and as the Clippers shook up which guards played and how often during his nine-game absence, Lue said the “plan” he had in mind for his preferred rotation wouldn’t be able to be put in place until Kennard returned.
Of course, this being a Clippers season riddled by injury, that plan still wasn’t able to be implemented despite Kennard’s return because the roster still is not whole. Backup guard John Wall missed his seventh consecutive game with an abdominal injury and starting forward Morris was sidelined by a bruised rib suffered Tuesday. Instead, Lue went with a different plan — starting Kennard in place of Morris for the season’s 19th starting lineup.
Even with the new wrinkle of Kennard’s start, Lue, midway through the first quarter, used what has recently become a familiar lineup featuring Powell as the lead guard surrounded by four wings, without a center. By removing Kennard for Powell, Lue opted against pairing up smaller guards, a lineup construction that the coach has acknowledged makes the Clippers’ life defensively more difficult.
It is why one of the most anticipated elements of Lue’s future rotation plan centers on which combinations of smaller guards Lue chooses to play together, and how often. The logjam could be eased before the Feb. 9 trade deadline if the team’s front office can find ways to pare down the backcourt depth chart.
Forward Nicolas Batum had told teammates last week, after a loss in Utah, that they would win five in a row. After their most cohesive week of basketball this season, they will begin a six-game road trip Saturday, attempting to turn that vision into reality.