After trading for James Harden, the Clippers went through a rough patch while adjusting to incorporating another ball-dominant player. Star wing Paul George said that it’s a growing pain plenty of teams with several All-Stars have historically experienced.
“They all went through some sort of adversity, regardless of the talent,” George said. “It’s going to take some time because you got to find how to be yourself when your usage rate isn’t going to be as high as it used to be [or] the possessions you were going to have.”
Now, Los Angeles has flipped its fortunes. The team holds the NBA’s longest active win streak (five games entering Thursday) and has won 10 of its last 13. Janis Carr of The Orange County Register says the Clippers are finding the “new you” in themselves by re-imagining their games and playing freely.
“I mean that’s it. Just all of us just combining into the defensive end and just wanting to get things going on that end first and then letting, whatever the offense, take care of itself since we got so many scorers,” said star forward Kawhi Leonard.
Harden made headlines earlier in the season, saying that he didn’t feel like the Sixers let him play like himself, a problem he isn’t having in coach Tyronn Lue‘s system.
“[Lue] allows me to just be free, be who I am and, like I said previously, that’s not just scoring, but just me reading defenses, seeing the different game and putting Kawhi and PG in better positions or in the pick-and-roll with [Ivica Zubac] getting easy layups or [Daniel Theis] getting easy layups,” Harden said. “It is everything that I thought it would be. It’s taken a little time, but as far as me playing and the chemistry on the court … it’s getting where it needs to be.”
We have more from the Pacific Division:
- George sat out the second half of the Clippers‘ Tuesday win over the Kings with a sore left groin. According to ESPN’s Ohm Youngmisuk, Lue said George could have come back in and played if needed. However, he was ruled out before L.A’s Thursday game against the Warriors with hip soreness (Twitter link via Los Angeles Times’ Andrew Greif). He’s considered day-to-day, according to Youngmisuk.
- Lakers guard Gabe Vincent is ramping up during the team’s three-game road trip, with coach Darvin Ham saying “everything is going according to plan,” The Orange County Register’s Khobi Price writes. Vincent hasn’t played since Oct. 30 due to a left knee effusion. The Athletic’s Shams Charania reported Monday that Vincent was targeting a Dec. 18 return to play. He’s averaging 6.0 points and 3.0 assists this season.
- Even after taking a hit to the face from Warriors forward Draymond Green that led to Green being suspended indefinitely, Suns center Jusuf Nurkic still holds the four-time All-Star in a high regard, according to Duane Rankin of the Arizona Republic. “I have a lot of respect for him, obviously, even before this,” Nurkic said Wednesday. “I still have it. I don’t know what people go through. It’s not our problem, but he’s an NBA champion for me, Hall of Famer still.“
- Suns star forward Kevin Durant also reacted to the altercation on Wednesday, expressing well wishes to Green. “I hope he gets the help he needs,” Durant said (Twitter link via Rankin). Durant and Green played on the Warriors from 2016-19, winning two championships together. “[The altercation] was insane to see,” Durant said. “Glad Nurk is alright. Never seen that on the basketball court in an NBA game.“
Only person that can help draymond is draymond
He should be required to attend therapy sessions once or twice a week until his playing days are done. Missing said therapy sessions should be an auto 1 game suspension trigger.
Dude needs serious mental help. Although I highly doubt draymond will take it seriously and will do bare minimum to get reinstated. Which defeats the whole purpose of him getting help if he quits getting help once he’s back to playing
2 days ago you went on and on…, AND ON… about how there was no way therapy sessions would help Draymond Green?
Why are you suggesting, in your opinion, he wastes his time going through counseling?
Or, perhaps you’ve changed your mind and redacted your previous statements regarding therapy and the possibility it could help someone, even a knucklehead like Draymond Green? That’s cool too.
By current NBA standards, the entire 90’s Detroit “Bad Boys” team should have been in counseling.
You say that like you are trying to make it an insult. Very revealing.
Your reading comprehension is off the charts.
@WillDS You either get or you you don’t. Guess which category you are in?
I didn’t like the Detroit “Bad Boys”, but I never saw any of them sucker punch (sucker slap?) another player like Draymond did on Tuesday.
Then you didn’t watch basketball in the ’80s.
I did and I’ve also seen dozens of YouTube videos of some of the stuff they pulled back then.
I think they had the punching and slapping and windmills, but definitely not Draymond’s Stomp or crotch kicks. He’s in his own league with those LOL