Los Angeles Times

Defenseles­s Clippers done in by whom?

Pelicans center Valanciuna­s hits first seven three-pointers as L.A. falls apart.

- By Andrew Greif

A day after they were undone by the greatest shooter in NBA history, the Clippers’ attempts to get back on track Monday were thwarted by an even more dangerous offensive weapon. Jonas Valanciuna­s? The New Orleans center made one three-pointer in his first five seasons before blooming into a capable, if not prolific, deep shooter amid the last half of his career but against the Clippers this season, and Monday in particular, he made Stephen Curry’s second-half show from one day earlier inside Staples Center look positively inefficien­t.

Less than two weeks after making a then-career high five three-pointers in a win over the Clippers, Valanciuna­s made his first seven three-pointers Monday to riddle the league’s secondrank­ed defense on his way to 39 points, 15 rebounds and a 123-104 Pelicans win.

He is the only player in NBA history to finish with at least seven three-pointers and seven offensive rebounds in the same game. In a 66-second stretch in the first half, Valanciuna­s made three three-pointers to induce groans inside the arena while pushing the Pelicans’ lead to 21.

It was a jarring finish to a first half that began with so much promise for the Clippers — just as this team began November with seven consecutiv­e wins, only to finish it with six losses in its last nine games.

In those rocky two weeks, the Clippers (11-10) have averaged 18 fewer points per game than during their streak, while shooting eight percentage points worse.

Clippers star Paul George, who scored 27 points, cited the team’s attrition and lack of practice time for its recent lack of polish. The Clippers played without Nicolas Batum, who missed his fifth game while in the NBA’s coronaviru­s-related health and safety protocols, and Marcus Morris Sr., who was rested on the second night of a back-toback in what coach Tyronn Lue called a precaution against playing him too many minutes too soon after returning from a balky knee.

But some of what George called their “kryptonite” continues to happen, despite a veteran-laden team full of returners from last season. They’ve been punished on the defensive glass and by their own turnovers.

“It’s not time to panic,” George said. “We know we’re not playing well but all of it is self-inflicted with our turnovers, starting with me. We clean that up, we give ourselves a chance.”

The Clippers scored on their first five possession­s and the night’s most promising developmen­t was reserve center Serge Ibaka’s strongest performanc­e since returning from the G League last week, as he made three of his first four three-pointers for 13 points. The Clippers shot 51% overall, their best shooting night since Nov. 13, and 38% from behind the three-point arc, but there were ominous

signs when New Orleans (617) matched them shot for shot, making seven of their first eight field goals, and didn’t slow down behind Valanciuna­s’ offensive outburst.

“We were due for a bad defensive game,” Lue said.

The Clippers were outscored by 14 on secondchan­ce points, by 16 in transition and by 34 in the paint while turning the ball over 15 times.

Entering Monday, a team had committed 20 or more turnovers in one game 43 times this season. The Clippers owned four of those performanc­es; only Minnesota had more. Only the severely rebuilding Houston Rockets have turned the ball over more consistent­ly than the Clippers in November.

“Offensivel­y they had the right intent to move the basketball and play the right way,” Lue said. “We just

couldn’t stop them.”

Reggie Jackson scored 19 after being held scoreless Sunday. The Clippers cut their deficit to nine at the end of the third, the first time they’d trailed by single digits since four minutes remained in the first quarter, only to see Pelicans reserve Garrett Temple sink a threepoint­er at the third quarter’s buzzer. Clippers wing Terance Mann walked back to his huddle clutching his head, yelling an expletive.

On a free throw, jumper and three-pointer by George, the Clippers pulled within eight three times late, but a rally was never sustained. The game all but ended with four minutes to play on a most fitting play, when Eric Bledsoe carelessly threw an errant pass into his own backcourt. The turnover was scooped up by Valanciuna­s, who rumbled ahead for a dunk.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? CLIPPERS guard Paul George drives on New Orleans Pelicans center Jonas Valanciuna­s, who scored 39 points and 15 rebounds, during first-half action.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times CLIPPERS guard Paul George drives on New Orleans Pelicans center Jonas Valanciuna­s, who scored 39 points and 15 rebounds, during first-half action.

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