Los Angeles Times

More than a cup of Coffey

He’s growing his NBA role, tying his high of 21 points as Clippers end three-game skid.

- By Andrew Greif

Since Amir Coffey entered the NBA in 2019, his career has revolved around always saying yes.

If the Clippers need minutes at shooting guard, small forward or even power forward, Coffey has happily obliged. Shuttling between his third G League season and the NBA? He’ll jump on the next bus to Ontario. Such dependabil­ity and versatilit­y made him the closest thing to the Clippers’ Swiss Army knife — if it was 6 feet 7 and made in Minnesota.

By flashing another tool in his skill set amid a badly needed Clippers victory over Atlanta, the usually understate­d Coffey made a different kind of statement Sunday. To any questions of whether he could continue to make a difference, expanding his game in his third season, his teammates and coach offered a resounding answer to both: Yes.

Coffey’s 21 points and five three-pointers tied career highs and his rare usage as a ballhandle­r early on, probing weak spots in Atlanta’s porous defense, propelled the Clippers to a 106-93 win to break a three-game losing streak and a five-game skid at Crypto.com Arena.

“Playing the way he has just shows that he is ready for a deal, he is ready for a contract, and now he’s becoming a starter and playing the way he has, I’m just happy for him,” coach Tyronn Lue said. “That’s all the work he’s put in.”

This win combined elements that were missing amid a loss to Memphis only 24 hours earlier: the scoring of Eric Bledsoe, the presence of Serge Ibaka and the physicalit­y of a team challenged at shootaroun­d by Lue after lacking it Saturday.

Ibaka had 16 points while Bledsoe contribute­d 12 points and seven assists to steady the team’s guard play on a day when Reggie Jackson was yanked after a pair of mistakes and didn’t play in the fourth quarter, and Ivica Zubac finished with eight points and 13 rebounds. The Clippers won the first and third quarters by a combined 15 points to lead by as many as 19, and their rebounding advantage held Atlanta to 78 field-goal attempts after allowing 100 to Memphis.

It all began with Coffey taking charge during a 10point first quarter by making his first four shots to power the offense when its usual engines, Jackson and Marcus Morris Sr., combined to make one of six .

“Amir is one of the few players on the team that compete at a high level each and every game and he was being aggressive,” Bledsoe said. “And we need him to be aggressive, especially being that we need, you know, people to score. And he did a great job on both ends of playing great defense and looking for his shot.”

The undrafted Coffey signing a two-way contract during Summer League in 2019 was largely lost amid the team’s other additions that week — trading for Paul George and signing Kawhi Leonard. Now, after Coffey was not re-signed on a twoway deal until days before training camp, his patience and progress have paid off while his opportunit­ies have flourished as George and Leonard recover from injuries and other absences continue to pile up. Justise Winslow joined Luke Kennard in health and safety protocols Sunday.

Last month, as 10-day hardship contracts flooded the NBA, Coffey dubbed this a “stay-ready year.” Within the Clippers, perhaps no one has lived up to that label as much as the 24-year-old.

He had appeared in nine consecutiv­e games entering Sunday, averaging 26 minutes while making 37% of his three-point tries and shooting 46% overall. Inspiratio­n for his do-everything role, he said, has come from watching his older sister, Nia, play the same way for the Sparks.

“He can help us win and he’s doing that right now and I’m proud of him,” Bledsoe said.

Coffey’s rangy size has allowed coaches to use him as a versatile defender. He fell to the court in Sunday’s first half to deflect a Hawk’s dribble out of bounds and secure a Clippers possession. After halftime, he twice induced misses by 6-9 John Collins near the basket with physical contests.

Coffey’s shooting improved last season, from 31% on three-pointers as a rookie to 41%. What is new is his increasing comfort acting as a playmaker, including in pick-and-rolls. Instead of dribbling into a clear lane to the rim, he instead skipped a pass to an open Nicolas Batum for a three-pointer and a 22-19 lead. His three assists led to nine points.

“Shooting the basketball as well as he did kind of opened the game up for us, but also attacking and getting to the basket and making some good passes, as well. And I thought offensivel­y that’s the best we played in a while,” Lue said.

 ?? Jae C. Hong Associated Press ?? AMIR COFFEY, pressed into a starting role again, tied career highs with five three-pointers and 21 points to give the short-handed Clippers a lift when their most consistent offensive contributo­rs struggled to score.
Jae C. Hong Associated Press AMIR COFFEY, pressed into a starting role again, tied career highs with five three-pointers and 21 points to give the short-handed Clippers a lift when their most consistent offensive contributo­rs struggled to score.

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