The Sun (San Bernardino)

Clippers roll

- By Mirjam Swanson mswanson@scng.com @mirjamswan­son on Twitter

Leonard’s 25 points lead the way as L.A. dominates the Spurs for a 134-101 victory.

Clippers veteran Marcus Morris Sr. sent out a cryptic tweet Wednesday morning: “Buisness (sic) is business. Don’t learn the hard way.”

Three hours later, after the tweet garnered its fair share of fan freakout, the forward — for whom the Clippers dealt at the trade deadline last season — posted another tweet, replete with laughing emojis: “Lol dam I forgot about the trade deadline.”

’Tis the season, when the entire NBA apparatus is atwitter over speculatio­n of potential deals ahead of today’s noon PT trade deadline — a conversati­on in which the Clippers continue to come up.

And why wouldn’t they? For one, with two superstars at the helm and a 2816 record that had them tied for third in the Western Conference entering play Wednesday, the Clippers are standing in front of a window with a good look at a potential first championsh­ip this season.

For another, they’ve been active at the deadline the past two seasons, first overhaulin­g their roster in 2018-19 in a way that put in motion the play that netted Paul George along with Kawhi Leonard that coming offseason. And last season they maneuvered their way into a three-team deal for the Morris twin they’d long coveted.

This season, they’ve been linked with a handful of point guards, including Lonzo Ball, Ricky Rubio, George Hill and Aaron Holiday, capable floor generals who might, in theory, take some of the playmaking load off of Leonard and George.

Such an addition also might help keep the Clippers’ offense — averaging 24.3 assists per game, 18th in the league — from stagnating, especially in crunch time, when they’ve so far this season, posted a negative 14.1 net rating in 50

“clutch” minutes.

And although the Clippers are shooting an NBAbest 43.8% on wide-open 3-point attempts, the Clippers are doing it on 15.8 open attempts from deep per game, fewer open looks than 19 other NBA teams are creating for themselves, according to NBA. com/stats. Furthermor­e, even though the Clippers have picked up their paint attacks lately, they average 20.8 shot attempts in the restricted area, which ranked as the second-fewest in the league entering Wednesday.

Could the right point guard give the Clippers a lift in those department­s? Perhaps so. But what would it cost them?

Three-time Sixth Man of the Year Lou Williams’ name comes up often in trade speculatio­n, in large part because he has one of the league’s more teamfriend­ly contracts, an expiring $8 million deal.

Or maybe Terance Mann — whom the Clippers

drafted 48th overall last season and who has had some breakout performanc­es lately — has enticed potential suitors who would like to add a young, affordable ($1.8 million this season, with a team option for the next) talent?

On Monday, the Clippers traded Mfiondu Kabengele, Mann’s teammate at Florida State, to Sacramento, along with a future secondroun­d draft pick and cash for a protected future second-round pick. The deal created a second roster spot for the Clippers and gave them some additional room — $2.6 million — to work with under the hard salary cap.

Mann said Monday he’ll miss his friend: “Shout out to ’Fi, he was a great teammate that I’ve been with for like the last five years. I’m going to miss him. I can’t wait to see what his future holds.”

But, Mann said, he’s doing his best to stay neutral through all the ups and downs of the job.

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