USA TODAY US Edition

Griffin back in zone

Clippers star finds good spot after rocky year

- Sam Amick @sam_amick USA TODAY Sports

“And whenever something is taken away from you like that, you definitely cherish it more.” Blake Griffin, on missing half of last season for a variety of reasons

If it’s true that all the best comedians are inspired by their darker side, then it made perfect sense that Blake Griffin was a smash hit on that Montreal stage in August.

With every joke — from the bit about postgame interviews and why they’re absurd to the player’s perspectiv­e on being traded (“Imagine if there were trades in relationsh­ips …”) to the Thanksgivi­ng-themed strip club segment at the end — the Los Angeles Clippers star who moonlights as a funny man off the floor earned the hearty laughter of a quaint crowd at the Just For Laughs Festival.

“Basketball is obviously always my main thing, ( but) I really enjoy doing something (where) you get outside of your comfort zone,” Griffin told USA TODAY Sports recently. “That (show in Montreal) was, like, terrifying. Small audience. Not even like a remotely big show at the festival, but still, like — terrifying. … I think that’s how you get better as a person. You figure things out about yourself, and you have confidence about different things, so anything I do I

want to do it as well as I possibly can and not just do it to do it.”

If only last season was half as funny.

There was the left thigh muscle injury that sidelined him in late December. Then, a fight with a team employee a month later at a Toronto restaurant. He reinjured his quad in late April that ended his season midway through a first-round playoff series against the Portland Trail Blazers. These were some of the darkest days of Griffin’s seven-year NBA career.

But after his summer of introspect­ion, in which the healing came in so many different forms, the light is back in Griffin’s life. And the Clippers, cast aside amid the Golden State Warriors’ rise, are looking like title contenders again.

Griffin is not only turning in his typical All-Star level production (21.6 points, 9.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists per game) but also defending in a way that helped the Clippers get off to a great start. Through 14 games, they were second in defensive rating at 96.5 points allowed per 100 possession­s. (In Griffin’s six previous seasons, the Clippers were in the top 10 in defensive rating three times and never higher than fifth.)

Griffin’s passion for punch lines of the more convention­al sort deserves part of the credit, if only because it served as a therapeuti­c distractio­n amid all the guilt and frustratio­n. When he isn’t working on his own material, he’s honing the comedy craft by studying the greats. (He counts renowned comedian Dave Chappelle as a friend and has watched every episode of Satur

day Night Live since 1995. “I’ve watched (further back) than that, too,” he added.)

Leading into the Montreal performanc­e that made the YouTube rounds and received rave reviews, he tested his material on a Los Angeles crowd before doing five short sets as part of the Just For Laughs festival. “Some (sets) went to 15 (minutes). One night I was feeling good, and I stretched it out a little bit,” he said.

Being on the floor again is a massive weight lifted off his psyche, too. As anyone who knows what happened between him and his friend-former assistant equipment manager Matias Testi on that January day in Toronto will tell you, Griffin’s angst over not playing played a part in the actions that led to a four-game suspension and a broken right hand.

He had missed 13 games by the time the dust-up took place. His teammates went 11-2 without him, and he was being told that another setback with the quad injury would cost him more time. Griffin played 35 games during the regular season. But, as he tells it, fatherhood — and the maturity that comes with it — is the main reason he seems to have found recent peace.

Not long after the 27-year-old was given the green light to resume full-court basketball activities heading into training camp, he and his longtime girlfriend, Brynn Cameron, welcomed their second child. In addition to their 3-year-old son, the couple have a 10-week-old daughter.

“After we lost to Memphis (on Wednesday at Staples Center) — and only my son came to the game that night — so we were driving back in the car with him, and he was asking questions, like saying stuff, and I find myself just like laughing and not even thinking about the game,” Griffin said. “And at least for that car ride home and when I’m putting him to bed, it gets your mind off of it. I’m just happy — happy with where I’m at, and that’s the big reason why.

“It definitely is different (from his younger years). I think everything is put into perspectiv­e. When you have a tough year or a year that didn’t go the way you wanted it, especially the playoffs and all that and not being able to take advantage of our team and our talent on our team, you feel that. And whenever something is taken away from you like that, you definitely cherish it more. Not to say I don’t always cherish it, but when I didn’t get to play for 40-something games or however many it was, it sucks, and it’s kind of a good reminder of what you’re doing here and why you’re here.”

Nearly five years after the Chris Paul trade made the Clippers instant elites, their All- Star point guard — like Griffin — has the ability to become a free agent this summer. Shooting guard J.J. Redick will also be an unrestrict­ed free agent. Uncertaint­y abounds, with coach and president of basketball operations Doc Rivers having decided that this core was championsh­ip-worthy and their jobs now to prove it.

“You see the sense of urgency (with Griffin), you know what I mean?” Paul told USA TODAY Sports. “I think we both share that and understand that we’ve got everything that we could ever want as far as an unbelievab­le family, you get to play the game that we love and have all the accolades, and now we just want that one thing.”

The championsh­ip that has eluded them for so long, and one that will only be possible if Griffin stays in his happy place.

“I just think he’s in a good place,” Rivers told USA TODAY Sports. “I don’t even look at what happened to him last year or anything like that. That’s the past. I just think he’s at the right place in his life age-wise, maturity-wise, basketball-wise, and he’s back to proving that he’s one of the best players in the league.

“I think he’s at the best place in his life, because he doesn’t really care about (individual status). He wants to win, so he’s driving the team. He’s pushing the team. He wants to win. He knows that will cement the other stuff, so I think this is the best place he’s ever been.”

 ?? KELVIN KUO, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Blake Griffin, who was limited to 35 regular-season games last year because of injuries and an off-court episode, has found stability in fatherhood and an outlet in comedy.
KELVIN KUO, USA TODAY SPORTS Blake Griffin, who was limited to 35 regular-season games last year because of injuries and an off-court episode, has found stability in fatherhood and an outlet in comedy.
 ?? JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Blake Griffin averages 21.6 points and 9.4 rebounds for the Clippers, who entered Monday 12-2.
JAYNE KAMIN-ONCEA, USA TODAY SPORTS Blake Griffin averages 21.6 points and 9.4 rebounds for the Clippers, who entered Monday 12-2.

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