Hoodoo gurus: Why Kawhi has the perfect offsider to finally end curse of the Clippers - and it's not Harden

By Paul Suttor / Expert

There is no logical reason to believe in curses. Unless you are an LA Clippers fan. 

Coming up to 10 years since the end of the infamous Donald Sterling era when their former owner was removed due to his racial bigotry, the Clippers are still searching for their first NBA championship. 

They still haven’t even made it to the big dance with their Western Conference finals appearance in 2021 their high watermark. 

But with star forward Kawhi Leonard shrugging off his injury management rigmarole, the James Harden gamble paying dividends and Paul George staying on the court to be a two-way threat, the Clippers have been the hottest team in the NBA for much of the season. 

After a slow start while they adjusted to Harden running the point following his trade from Philadelphia on the eve of the season, the Clippers have gone 27-8 to be just two games back of Minnesota (39-16) in the West with a 36-17 record. 

Russel Westbrook has accepted and thrived in his role as a bench energy booster and with depth at every position, there’s every reason to believe this squad is capable of making a deep run in the playoffs. 

Unless of course you think the weight of history and the stigma that hovers over this franchise will be insurmountable for even this talented roster which is clicking into top gear. 

Kawhi Leonard dunks. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

The Clippers’ destiny rests in the hands of Leonard and coach Tyronn Lue. 

Whether Harden continues his trend of post-season disappearing acts is not the be-all and end-all for this team. 

Clearly they need him at their best if they’re going to negotiate their way through the Western gauntlet of Denver, the improved Timberwolves, rapidly rising OKC and star-studded Phoenix. 

But it’s on Leonard’s shoulders that their hopes rest. 

When he’s playing regularly, the talented forward can do anything on the floor at both ends. 

Scoring inside and out, setting up teammates and defending the opposition’s best player, whether that’s a speedy guard on the perimeter or a big body in the paint. 

Apart from a slight groin injury which has sidelined him for the past few games, Leonard has been uncharacteristically durable this season. Rarely resting, playing back to back fixtures and stepping up when his team needs impact on either side of the ball. 

Lue is an under-rated coach. For someone who has a championship ring, he is sometimes overlooked when the conversation turns to listing the truly elite coaches who are difference makers. 

He was parachuted into the Cleveland coach’s hot seat during LeBron James’s prime midway through the 2015-16 season and achieved the improbable by guiding the Cavaliers to their historic championship over Golden State. 

Lue was chosen in large part because he had the persona of someone who would stand up to LeBron and tell him what he needed to hear, not what he wanted. 

Still only 46, he was underestimated as a player due to his small stature and unfairly remembered for an incident when Allen Iverson stepped over him after sending him to the floor with fancy footwork. 

But he has defied the odds again as a coach to take the Cavs to two more NBA Finals and then navigating his way through four years of the Clippers’ annual dramas which have mainly revolved around Leonard and George getting injured at inopportune times. 

His lack of size doesn’t mean he’s a pushover. Lue was fined $35,000 on Saturday for abusing referee James Williams after a controversial loss to Golden State. 

“Where the refs at now? Cheating. That’s all they be doing. Where James at? The referee. I want to kick him in the mouth.”

Teams reflect the personality of their coaches and the Clippers have plenty of mongrel about them. 

With the Timberwolves and Thunder getting their first real taste of title contention, as it stands, the Clippers appear to be the main threats to champions Denver in the West. 

A lack of sizeable options to throw at dual MVP Nikola Jokic could prove the Clippers’ Achilles heel. 

They have big boppers in Ivica Zubac, Mason Plumlee and Daniel Theis but none of them would be causing The Joker any lost sleep. 

Their best hope in that scenario may be putting Leonard on the Nuggets centre and banking on his defensive prowess making up for the height disadvantage. 

There’s a long way to go before the Clippers even have to start worrying about such a match-up but with experienced rivals like the Lakers and Warriors dropping off, this season is shaping as their best chance to go deep in the playoffs and possibly ending their 53-year title drought which has followed them from Buffalo to San Diego and LA. 

If Lue can pull that off it would be an even bigger achievement than breaking Cleveland’s 46-year wait for a title. 

And for Leonard it would be more remarkable than his effort to step up for San Antonio in their 2014 Finals success or his charmed hit-and-run mission five years later with Toronto. 

The Crowd Says:

2024-02-19T03:11:22+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


The 2 man game between Murray and Jokic is just lethal

2024-02-19T03:08:41+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


PJ Tucker would be cheap and useful.

2024-02-19T03:06:46+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


I’d have a lash at Bobby Portis, he’d be a beautiful fit with Chet. The Bucks would like to get younger and more athletic. It’d probably cost 3 or 4 picks for OKC, but he would give them toughness, veteran physicality, rebounding, defence and shooting.

2024-02-19T02:53:13+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Yeah it sure is a nice group. A very athletic PF to complement Jokic, who can dunk plus pass and shoot 3s. A tall and athletic SF who can shoot, a support guard and a massively underrated guard. I think they win because they have the best 2-man game in the league, and just fall back onto that in the 4th qtr when games are tight. Another backup player or two wouldn't hurt though.

2024-02-19T02:51:37+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Yeah see below. Heaps of guards and SFs, need a starting PF to play D and rebound and ideally shoot a bit too. And a better backup big, hey, just trade for Jock Landale!

2024-02-19T02:50:37+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Yeah fair enough. Maybe they spoke to him and he was non-committal. They can look for free agents, or like Brett said, trade at least some of those draft picks. For this year they have: - Houston's, protected 1-4, so probably around 9-10 - Utah's, protected 1-10, tight but will probably be 11-13, unless they tank to keep it, like the Mavs did last season, and got Lively (so it was worth it) The Clippers This is a team that got Jalen Williams at 12 and Cason Wallace at about 10. Plus, in the Paul George trade they got SGA and 4 unprotected 1st round picks, + one protected, plus 2 swaps. So far the Thunder have Tre Mann (since traded) and Jalen Williams from that trade. The trade looks silly because SGA is better than Paul George now. Surely they will be looking for a serious forward, and another big. They start with 4 guards essentially, then bring on 3 more in Wallace, Joe and Wiggins. I always thought a big shouldered forward who can also shoot and play D. Look at Markkanen in the off season. They like guys with positional size and basketball IQ. Unlikely to get Jabari Smith Jr, Houston have a nicely developing young group.

2024-02-18T21:24:14+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


It’s not like Sam Presti is running out of draft picks anytime soon. He’s got them coming out of the wazoo. Hes gotta start spending them at some point.

2024-02-18T21:21:24+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


Yeah, their time is not yet, and SGA has to show he can do it in June. But they are talented. Denver have had injuries, but they have the classic relaxed look of a first time defending champion. They KNOW they have the extra gear when it’s needed. Their starting five is virtually perfect in its complimentarity.

AUTHOR

2024-02-18T20:26:29+00:00

Paul Suttor

Expert


They're keeping their powder dry for a big name free agent ... if they need 1. They probably didn't get an indication that Siakam would stick around long term so they didnt bother throwing draft picks to Toronto for him

2024-02-18T11:13:20+00:00

jameswm

Roar Guru


Nuggets do look like they're coasting through the regular season, but we'll see. Would love for OKC to do well but with 1st and 2nd year guys as their 2nd and 3rd best players, it'll be tough. A deep run to give them a taste, and show them what they're lacking would help. I thought they needed a rugged PF who can score, defend and rebound, like Siakam. Anyway.

2024-02-18T05:02:58+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


Kawhi aside, this is a team of career losers. What has Harden, Westbrook & PG done in their careers except stuff the stat sheet. Second round fodder at best.

Read more at The Roar