Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Clippers won’t be judged until playoffs

- HELENE ELLIOTT

LOS ANGELES — At times on Tuesday, Paul George was spectacula­r.

“Unstoppabl­e,” new Coach Tyronn Lue said of George’s 26-point spree in the second half of the Los Angeles Clippers’ season opener against the Lakers.

At times, the Clippers played with poise and cohesion. Yes, the Clippers — who, when last seen in a meaningful game were stumbling and fumbling and surrenderi­ng a 3-1 series lead over Denver in the second round of the playoffs — were smart and resilient in earning a 116-109 victory over the newly diamond-studded Lakers at Staples Center.

The Clippers’ lead peaked at 22 points and they bent but never broke when the Lakers, only 72 days removed from having beaten Miami to earn those shiny championsh­ip rings, pulled even in the third quarter.

The Clippers never trailed, staying calm while they figured out what was going wrong and found ways to fix it.

“Teams are always going to make runs. It’s part of basketball,” George said. “It’s no secret. It’s no surprise. We kept playing. Really what it came down to, we kept playing.”

No panic, no tantrums. No one rebelled against the team ethic or Lue’s game plan and tried to win the game by himself. They set up George for good shots, and he made them in an efficient 13-for-18 effort that added up to 33 points, including 12 straight late in the third quarter and into the fourth quarter.

So, should we be excited that the remodeled Clippers looked like the formidable team they were supposed to be but never became last season, when they wasted their best shot at making a historic first trip to the conference finals?

No. A little skepticism is appropriat­e here. A lot of skepticism, really, at least until they prove they can get past the second round of the playoffs.

This is the season the Clippers must stop talking about championsh­ip aspiration­s and finally win a title. All of their excuses are gone.

They’ve been projected to compete for the West title again along with the Lakers, Dallas, Denver and, maybe, Utah. The Lakers have had short rest, leading Coach Frank Vogel to hold LeBron James to just over 28 minutes and Anthony Davis to just under 31 minutes of play on Tuesday.

James made only 7 of 17 shots and Davis had no offensive rebounds while logging minus-16 in the plus/minus rating for the game, rare ugly numbers for them. Remember, too, the Clippers opened last season with a solid victory over the Lakers, who promptly went on a 17-1 tear that gave them a strangleho­ld on the No. 1 spot in the West and launched them toward the franchise’s 17th title.

Kawhi Leonard rated the Clippers’ performanc­e Tuesday as “good” and said they weren’t motivated by the sour memories of their self-immolation against Denver.

“I’m not thinking about last year. This is a different team,” he said. “I’m just happy that we kept playing basketball the right way pretty much. … We turned around. We stayed positive. We kept playing our basketball pretty much.”

Lue didn’t go out to the court to see the Lakers get their rings Tuesday, but he knows what that’s like, having earned rings as a player with the Lakers and as coach of the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2016. That was the Lakers’ moment. Lue was busy working toward giving the Clippers their own championsh­ip moment.

“The Lakers, they deserved that ring. They won the championsh­ip, had a great team, had a great year last year. You can’t take nothing away from them,” he said. “Our main focus was coming into this season, starting tonight, and trying to establish who we are and what we want to do going forward.

“Our focus wasn’t really on the Lakers getting their rings. Like I said, they deserve it. They were the best team last year. Congratula­tions to them, again, but now we’re moving on.”

How far will they go? They have the talent to overcome their lamentable postseason history, but they were talented last season, too, but lacked strong leadership.

Fans should enjoy the journey and their effort but save the excitement for the playoffs.

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