Los Angeles Times

Leonard, George set to go from start

Clippers stars are expected to be full participan­ts in camp, unlike last season.

- By Andrew Greif

One year after injuries led Kawhi Leonard to miss training camp and Paul George to be sidelined for the season’s f irst six weeks, the Clippers’ leading scorers are expected to begin training camp this week as full participan­ts.

“It’s a completely different camp experience for them this season compared to last season,” Lawrence Frank, the team’s president of basketball operations, told reporters Wednesday.

The team hopes a better start leads to a different finish. The franchise has yet to outrun the discussion of the f laws that allowed last season to stunningly fall apart in the Western Conference semifinals after leading the best- of- seven series 3- 1. After a blowout Game 7 loss to Denver, their third consecutiv­e loss after leading by double digits, Clippers players took turns citing poor chemistry as a key stumbling block.

New coach Tyronn Lue, a Clippers assistant last season, reiterated that a steady stream of injuries contribute­d to a disjointed feeling that belied the team’s strong statistica­l production.

“When your two players of that caliber miss training camp, it’s hard to build that camaraderi­e and that chemistry, so just having these guys healthy, coming in to

morrow, I’m excited for it,” Lue said. “I know a lot of guys are excited just to be on the court and healthy and we’re just gonna take it from there.”

Frank said the front off ice approached the offseason seeking to upgrade its playoff rotation and was happy with adding 6- foot- 9 forward Nic Batum and 6- 4 guard Luke Kennard for their playmaking skills and 7- foot Serge Ibaka for his shooting and rim protection.

The new additions join a team still looking inward.

“When you fall short, and especially the way we fell short, you can’t sweep anything under the rug,” Frank said. “You have to put everything under the microscope and look at how you personally get better, how as a team you can get better and organizati­onally how you can get better.”

George certainly appears more than ready for the fresh start playing for Lue, though not before f irst putting his former coach under the proverbial micro

scope. During an appearance on the “All the Smoke” podcast with former NBA players Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson, George ripped Doc Rivers for misusing him on offense and not preparing the team sufficient­ly during the playoffs.

Though almost a third of all offensive plays George ran last season featured him as a pick- and- roll ballhandle­r, the largest share that pick and rolls have comprised his offensive diet in his career, according to Synergy Sports, George blamed Rivers for not using him in enough pick and rolls, adding that Rivers ran him off screens too often.

Unable to train during the 2019 offseason following surgeries on both shoulders, George debuted as a Clipper three weeks into the season and scored 33 and 37 points in his first two games.

Yet “I just felt off,” George said. “I didn’t feel like a part of the team.

“That last season was just hard overall but I think for this year, everybody starting off on a healthy page, everybody starting off on the same page,” George added. “Me and Kawhi are going to get some time working out. I think everything is just not rushed going into this season. I felt last year everything was kind of rushed.”

As the Clippers were losing their postseason lead to Denver, “we never worked on adjustment­s or what to do differentl­y,” George said. “We just literally having the same s— happen over and over again. So it started to play a trick on you like, ‘ Man, what’s going on?’ We talking amongst each other like, ‘ We gonna be all right.’ The conversati­on should have been like, ‘ Nah, we need to change this, we need to switch this up.’

“At the end of the day, I don’t think we deserved it. We wasn’t prepared enough.”

At the time, George projected a different demeanor publicly. After Denver won Game 6 to tie the series, George said “it’s not a panic mode.”

One day after starting center Ivica Zubac said Clippers players enjoyed hearing “negative talk” about the team’s collapse, gladly using it as motivation, Lue — who considers Rivers a mentor — said the opposite. The team’s challenge was instead to “block out the noise,” Lue said.

“Last year, we all know we underachie­ved,” Lue said. “We had high expectatio­ns and we didn’t accomplish those goals. ... But now we have a new attitude. We have a new system that we have been putting in place.”

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