Los Angeles Times

Ailing Clippers can’t get it going

Minus Williams and without Gallinari for most of the game, they are no match.

- By Jorge Castillo

GOLDEN STATE 112 CLIPPERS 94

Doc Rivers strolled into the room abnormally crammed with reporters Friday evening and could not resist.

“What the hell is going on with all these people?” Rivers said with a grin as he surveyed the group before taking his pregame questions.

He knew. Most of those people were not in attendance for the coach or his Clippers. They were there for the league’s top storyline: The Golden State Warriors, the two-time defending NBA champions, were adding DeMarcus Cousins, the gifted All-Star big man, to their already loaded starting lineup for the first time at Staples Center on Friday night just as they were hitting their stride.

It was an untimely test for the sputtering Clippers. Costly injuries are bubbling and defensive woes had produced their longest losing streak of the season, one that reached five games Friday with a 112-94 defeat to the overwhelmi­ng visitors.

While the Warriors (32-14) were celebratin­g adding a prolific scorer to the NBA’s top offense, injuries diminished the Clippers’ firepower. First, Lou Williams, the team’s third-leading scorer, didn’t suit up because of a sore right hamstring. Then Danilo Gallinari, their second-leading scorer, exited after eight minutes with back spasms and didn’t return.

“We didn’t have a lot of scoring out on the floor tonight,” Rivers said.

After the game, Rivers said Williams, who suffered his injury Wednesday

against the Utah Jazz, is likely to miss the next couple of games. Gallinari hurt his back early in the game. His status moving forward is unclear.

Their absences left Tobias Harris to assume a greater offensive load. He responded with 20 first-half points as the Clippers (24-21) trailed by one at halftime. But the lack of playmakers plagued them in the second half. The Warriors mounted a 14-2 run to begin the third quarter and an 11-0 blitz to begin the fourth. Harris finished with 28 points. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander tied a career-high with 24. They were the Clippers’ only double-digit scorers as they shot 36.5% from the field, went four of 25 from three-point range and collected 11 assists to 18 turnovers.

“It was tough on me because in the third quarter, second half, we needed that extra scoring threat,” Harris said.

Scoring, as expected, was not a problem for Golden State. Cousins had 14 points and six rebounds in 15 minutes before fouling out in the fourth quarter. Stephen Curry paced the Warriors with 28 points while Kevin Durant contribute­d 24 on 13 shots.

The Warriors shot 48.8% from the field and had 31 assists.

Cousins’s debut — nearly a year after tearing his Achilles tendon as a member of the New Orleans Pelicans — was a timely reminder of the vast gap existing between the Clippers and the NBA’s title favorites. While the Clippers patiently wait to acquire a franchise cornerston­e to bolster their foundation, Cousins gives the Warriors perhaps the most talented starting five in NBA history.

Unleashing Cousins on this stacked Warriors roster past the season’s halfway point presents a fascinatin­g and unpreceden­ted basketball experiment. Will his demeanor — notoriousl­y irritable and unstable — resurface to create chemistry snags or will he bury it for the next few months? Are there enough shots to keep him satisfied? How long will it take for Cousins to assimilate to the Warriors’ machine? The consensus is the Warriors will figure it out in time to compete for another championsh­ip, but questions about the process linger.

The Warriors immediatel­y fed Cousins on Friday. Their first possession ended with Cousins throwing up a wild reverse layup off a post-up. The next time down the floor, Cousins and Durant executed a flawless pick-and-roll. Cousins completed it, rumbling down the lane for a one-handed tomahawk dunk. A couple of minutes later he was walking to the bench after committing his second foul.

Cousins returned to convert three three-pointers and commit four more fouls. His sixth foul ended his night with 8:51 left. He exited to an ovation.

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? THE WARRIORS’ Kevin Durant splits Clippers defenders Marcin Gortat, left, and Danilo Gallinari during Friday’s game at Staples Center. Durant had 24 points as the Warriors won 112-94.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press THE WARRIORS’ Kevin Durant splits Clippers defenders Marcin Gortat, left, and Danilo Gallinari during Friday’s game at Staples Center. Durant had 24 points as the Warriors won 112-94.

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