Los Angeles Times

Like Bucks, Clippers don’t stop here either

- By Andrew Greif

OKLAHOMA CITY — With pursed lips and a quick pace, Thunder coach Billy Donovan walked up three steps to a raised platform late Tuesday night inside Chesapeake Energy Arena. Settling into a chair behind a microphone and a desk covered in a Thunder-blue sheet, he looked out over a handful of journalist­s.

His was one of the most unique vantage points in the NBA.

As the league begins to turn its eyes toward a postseason that begins in less than six weeks, debating potential matchups and calculatin­g championsh­ip odds, no one right now has a better perspectiv­e on a pair of championsh­ip contenders than Donovan and Oklahoma City.

Three days after the Thunder, playing on the second night of a

back-to-back, were drilled by 47 in Milwaukee, they trailed by as many as 21 points in a 109-94 defeat against a Clippers team that flexed its might on both ends. It was enough for some Thunder fans — among the loudest and most loyal in the league — to say their goodbyes with a full quarter still to play.

Milwaukee swept the season series with Los Angeles 2-0, with both games played before Dec. 6. But that does not mean some within the league have not considered what a potential rematch in June, in the NBA Finals, might look like, as postseason position takes shape over the next several weeks.

Donovan, for one, has seen what each can do at full strength.

“Both teams have depth, both teams have size, both teams defend really well,” Donovan said. “Both teams have shooting, both teams have stars. Stylistica­lly both teams are different, they play the game differentl­y, not saying one’s better than the other, they just play differentl­y. But both in their own right are very, very elite.

“To sit there and say who’s better or who we feel is better would be really hard to say. They’re both really, really good quality teams.”

Tuesday’s game was a playoff preview in its own right, with the Clippers (4219) and Thunder (37-24) potentiall­y headed for a firstround matchup. Clippers forward Kawhi Leonard scored a game-high 25 points and Paul George and Montrezl Harrell added 16 points apiece to help Los Angeles move into sole possession of second place in the Western Conference with 21 games remaining in the regular season.

Thunder guard Dennis Schroder scored a teamhigh 24 points off the bench, with former Clippers Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Danilo Gallinari each scoring 15 points.

Behind a scoring differenti­al that ranks among the best in NBA history and Giannis Antetokoun­mpo, who could be voted the league’s most valuable player a second consecutiv­e season, the Bucks have been the NBA’s gold standard. And out West, the Lakers have held the top seed for weeks.

But the victory was the Clippers’ fifth consecutiv­e and third during a demanding, revealing stretch of their schedule that has seen them rev up for the postseason by beating Denver, Philadelph­ia and Oklahoma City in the last week with Houston and the Lakers upcoming.

The Clippers’ defense was the star Tuesday, limiting Oklahoma City to two field goals during a fourminute stretch late in the first quarter to extend their lead to 13 points.

When the Thunder bench, led by Schroder, trimmed that deficit to 43-42 midway through the second quarter on a pull-up jumper by Gilgeous-Alexander, the arena rumbled as hundreds of fans behind each basket banged inflatable sticks colored orange and blue.

Then the whole place went quiet: Over the next four minutes, the Clippers scored 16 unanswered points to open a lead that would stand at 12 by halftime.

“One of the things we’ve not done, that you would have thought before the year we would do a lot of, is made very few defensive runs,” Clippers coach Doc Rivers said. “We’re starting to do that now.”

The Clippers received a scare in the third quarter when Harrell fell to the ground in pain while fighting for a rebound before hobbling off. He said he expects to play Thursday against Houston.

Down the hallway, the Thunder’s room was silent after seeing two of the NBA’s best, three days apart.

“They’re not scrubs, mate,” Oklahoma City center Steven Adams said. “There’s no fluke that they’re in the position that they’re in.”

 ?? Garett Fisbeck Associated Press ?? PAUL GEORGE MAKES the pass as Oklahoma City’s Chris Paul trails the play. George used to be on the Thunder, and Paul spent six seasons with the Clippers.
Garett Fisbeck Associated Press PAUL GEORGE MAKES the pass as Oklahoma City’s Chris Paul trails the play. George used to be on the Thunder, and Paul spent six seasons with the Clippers.

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