Los Angeles Times

L.A. rolls with two stars out

- By Andrew Greif

Kawhi Leonard stood in front of five Clippers teammates during a timeout Sunday night, pointing his finger to emphasize his words. For the forward who had scored 33 and 36 points in his last two games, it was the extent of his contributi­ons on this night.

Leonard did not play because of a bruise in his lower left leg, an injury that doubled the Clippers’ superstar void. Paul George spent the game stationed only a few feet from Leonard in a wine-colored tracksuit, out of uniform for a fifth consecutiv­e game because of swelling in a bone in a toe.

Playing without two leading, All-Star-caliber scorers is usually an ominous sign.

Against the skidding Cleveland Cavaliers, the omission barely mattered on the way to a 128-111 rout in which the Clippers led by 28.

On their way to a seventh straight defeat, the Cavaliers allowed 70 points by halftime, then were forced to call a timeout just 40 seconds into the second half after allowing a three-pointer and layup to Patrick Beverley.

The Clippers’ confidence only grew from there.

Before the fourth quarter even began with the Clippers leading by 18, Lou Williams had collected his first double-double since 2019. He started and finished with 30 points and 10 assists, and Serge Ibaka scored a season-high 21 points and added nine rebounds and six assists.

The Clippers (20-8) have their own concerns right now. But on this night, those of the Cavaliers (10-18) were the greater hindrance.

Five takeaways from the Clippers’ third consecutiv­e victory:

■ Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said he was uncertain when Leonard might return from the injury, which occurred during last week’s two-game trip. Presumably, the team understood it would leave it short-handed soon after returning to Los Angeles, given the Clippers recalled two-way forward Amir Coffey from the G League’s bubble in Orlando, Fla., where he had played as recently as Friday night, in order to bolster their roster.

■ George worked out on the court before tipoff, and though it consisted of mostly set shots and was hardly at game speed, it was an indication nonetheles­s that the swelling in his right foot has improved enough to allow him to return to the court.

■ Before forward Marcus Morris ran back on defense after making his second three-pointer, he stared down at the spot where he had launched the shot and pointed at it. But the right wing is hardly the only place where he feels comfortabl­e behind the arc. After making six of his eight three-point tries Friday against Chicago, Morris made four of his six against the Cavaliers to score 23 points, his most in 51 games as a Clipper.

■ Ahead of the NBA’s March 25 trade deadline, the Clippers will do their diligence on finding potential upgrades for a roster that expects to play deep into the postseason. The backcourt has long been seen as one area where they will kick the tires. But as of now, given their paucity of trade assets and financial inflexibil­ity underneath the hard cap, it’s difficult to imagine being able to find an available guard better at scoring or getting downhill than Williams. He has begun to find his rhythm alongside a revamped second unit with Morris and Ivica Zubac and is playing his most consistent basketball in nearly one calendar year.

■ Along with George’s workout, one of the night’s most encouragin­g signs was the first-half finish by Luke Kennard. After signing a lucrative, four-year extension in December, the reserve in recent days had played so unevenly that he had been leapfrogge­d in the bench rotation by second-year guard Terance Mann. Kennard had missed four of his five shot attempts when he drilled his last two threepoint tries before halftime.

TONIGHT VS. MIAMI When: 7.

On the air: TV: Prime Ticket; Radio: 570, 1330. Update: The Heat (11-15) already have faced a Clippers team without George and Leonard once this season — and lost. That defeat Jan. 28 was Miami’s fifth consecutiv­e. The Heat have gone 5-3 since.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? THE CLIPPERS’ Lou Williams gets past the Cavaliers’ Isaac Okoro for a shot attempt at Staples Center. Williams started and had 30 points and 10 assists.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press THE CLIPPERS’ Lou Williams gets past the Cavaliers’ Isaac Okoro for a shot attempt at Staples Center. Williams started and had 30 points and 10 assists.

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