Los Angeles Times

Speights finds scoring touch behind the arc

- By Mike DiGiovanna mike.digiovanna@latimes.com Twitter: @MikeDiGiov­anna

Marreese Speights attempted 141 three-point shots in 571 games during his first seven NBA seasons, making 43 of them for a 30.5% accuracy rate.

In 44 games in his first season with the Clippers, the 6-foot-10 reserve forward has shot more threes (156) than he did in the previous seven years combined, making 61 of them for a 39.1% accuracy rate.

“I always had a soft touch and would always shoot threes by myself in practice, but I never had the confidence to shoot it in a game because I knew if I missed, I might come out,” Speights said. “That changed at the All-Star break last year.”

Speights said Golden State Coach Steve Kerr “gave me the green light to shoot it,” and shoot he did. After making eight of 23 threes in 43 games before the break, he made 16 of 39 threes in 29 games after it.

His confidence grew with extensive off-season work and encouragem­ent from Clippers Coach Doc Rivers, who said Speights “was already on his way to being a three-point shooting big at Golden State, so we’ve just taken advantage of his growth.”

Speights made three of seven three-pointers and scored a season-high 23 points in Monday’s win over Oklahoma City. He’s averaging 10.2 points and 5.0 rebounds in 16.5 minutes, the highest scoring mark of any player averaging less then 20 minutes a game in the NBA.

Having a big man with a long-range shot adds a dimension to the offense the Clippers don’t have with starting center DeAndre Jordan, the dunk-master who has not attempted a three-pointer in nine seasons. Not only can Speights pick-and-roll to the basket, he can pick-and-pop to the three-point arc.

“When Mo mixes up rolling with his jump shot, it puts a lot of pressure on the defense,” Rivers said. “You can see a lot of game plans for him to pop for the three, and then when he rolls, it really messes their defense up. … Everyone is used to guarding fours that can shoot. The league is still catching up to fives who can make threes. That’s the new thing.”

On the mend

Blake Griffin could be back as soon as next week. The power forward, sidelined since right-knee surgery on Dec. 20, underwent stress tests and sprinted at full speed Thursday and was scheduled to “do some contact work,” according to Rivers, on Friday.

Asked whether there was a chance that Griffin, who averaged a team-high 21.2 points and 8.8 rebounds in 26 games, could play on the next trip, a five-game trek that begins in Denver on Saturday, Rivers said, “Yeah, there is.”

Taking aim

Jamal Crawford’s slump continued when the guard made three of 14 shots and scored seven points in Thursday night’s 104-101 loss to Minnesota. Crawford has scored 29 points for a 4.8 average in his last six games, making 12 of 59 shots (20.3%) and one of 16 three-pointers (6.3%).

But Rivers saw hope in Crawford’s difficult onehanded runner from 14 feet out as the shot clock expired to give the Clippers a 101-98 lead with 1 minute 28 seconds left Thursday night.

“He’s trying to fight his way through it,” Rivers said. “What I did like is he was aggressive . ... You can see him slowly finding his way out of this.”

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