Vancouver Sun

The Board Man comes to town with his new team

Leonard to lead Clippers tonight against promising young Mavs at Rogers Arena

- J.J. ADAMS WELCOME BACK, KAWHI REBRANDED CLIPPERS DON’T FORGET DALLAS FREE SPEECH jadams@postmedia.com twitter.com/TheRealJJA­dams

The Los Angeles Clippers and the Dallas Mavericks play their pre-season finales today at Rogers Arena (7:30 p.m. TSN2), their final dress rehearsals before the NBA season tips off next week. Here are five things to watch:

There’s no avoiding this storyline. It will be Kawhi Leonard’s first game back in Canada since opting to leave the Toronto Raptors for the L.A. Clippers after leading the Canadian club to its first NBA title.

Leonard was the subject of a shameless and frequently awkward months-long campaign by Torontonia­ns imploring him to stay in the 6ix.

But whatever he was thought of before — quiet, soft-spoken, focused and intense — he also proved himself to be a shrewd businessma­n, luring Paul George away from the Oklahoma City Thunder to join him in L.A., shaking up the league’s power structure.

The two-time NBA Finals MVP, a.k.a. The Board Man, has changed the narrative surroundin­g him.

There is a long history of losing in Clippervil­le, and most of the time, they weren’t even that lovable.

In the 27 seasons since moving to L.A. from San Diego, the highest they finished in the Pacific Division was sixth, one of just four times they made the post-season. That changed in the era of Chris Paul, Blake Griffin and DeAndre Jordan, and despite having the NBA’s third-best record from 2012-13 to 2016-17 and making the post-season six straight years, the nucleus was broken up.

It provided the skeleton for the future. The Clippers traded Paul to the Houston Rockets for seven players, a first-round pick and cash, a lopsided deal that’s come to be known as “The Paul Haul” in L.A. It brought Patrick Beverly, Montrezl Harrell and Lou Williams into the fold.

Beverly is one of the top defensive players in the NBA; Harrell and Williams are super-subs, with Williams becoming the highest-scoring bench player in NBA history last season.

Add in Leonard and George, (who will not play Thursday), and the balance of power has shifted in the Western Conference.

The litmus test comes next Tuesday, when they “host” fellow Staples Centre tenant LeBron James and the L.A. Lakers to open the season.

REBRANDED CLIPPERS, PART II

The team isn’t the only thing that’s been overhauled.

With a move to Inglewood in the near future — 2024 is the target date for a new stadium — the Clippers have been busy rebadging the franchise. On Tuesday, they appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrate­d in their new uniforms, which set Twitter ablaze.

The white-and-black jerseys simply have “Los Angeles” inscribed on the chest in an old English script that invokes the spirit of Grand Theft Auto.

With all the attention on L.A., their opposition today almost seems to be an afterthoug­ht. But the Mavs boast two of the best young players on the planet in Kristaps Porzingis (a.k.a. The Unicorn, thanks to Kevin Durant) and reigning rookie-of-the-year Luka Doncic. Both are European products, showing just how far the internatio­nal game has come in the past decade.

Both are young — 24 and 20, respective­ly — but form the core of a team that should return to the glory days of Dirk Nowitzki.

Dallas begins its regular season next Wednesday when it hosts the Washington Wizards.

(Fuel) Vancouver is home to one

■ of the largest Chinese population­s in North America.

(Fire) The massive clashes

■ between protesters and police in Hong Kong, which have now stretched into their 18th week.

(Hot air) The NBA wading into

■ the controvers­y thanks to Rockets GM Daryl Morey’s Twitter feed.

Those factors are explosive. How big the conflagrat­ion gets today is a question mark. The NBA has tamped down on its players and coaches talking about the issue, after Morey drew the league into the fray with a Free Hong Kong tweet that enraged China, its largest market by population.

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