The Sun (San Bernardino)

Harden’s here, and now it gets interestin­g

- Empty trash. their Mirjam Swanson Columnist

CHINO HILLS >> Senior Marquis Monroe rarely comes off the field for the Ayala football team.

Now coach A.J. Gracia is hoping he can find a field for him to play on in college.

“I watch enough college football to know that he can play at that level,” Gracia said.

Ayala’s team was largely inexperien­ced coming into the season, but Monroe is one of the handful of seniors Gracia has leaned heavily on to lead the team.

Inside: Previews of CIF-SS football playoff openers for Inland teams

Ayala (6-4) won the Mountain West League this season and hosts Culver City (7-3) in the first round of the CIF Southern Section Division 4 playoffs tonight.

The Bulldogs lean much more heavily on Monroe this season than they have in the past. He has more yards and touchdowns this season than he had in his sophomore and junior seasons combined.

The 5-foot-8, 165-pound Monroe has rushed for 1,300 yards and 18 touchdowns on 147 carries, while catching 18 passes for 302 yards and three touchdowns this season. At cornerback, he has 39 tackles and two intercepti­ons. Oh, and he returns punts and kickoffs too.

“Who else is going two-way at a high level? That’s definitely the best player in the IE,” his father, Marcus Monroe Sr., said after a 29-26 win over Bonita Oct. 13 a game between the top two teams in the league..

That Bonita game could be something of a revelation for Monroe’s career.

Gracia and Marquis Monroe agree that because of his size, he is unlikely to get an opportunit­y to play running back at the NCAA Division I level. But a slot receiver could be a good fit.

“We started in practice, moving me around,” Marquis said. “I like the one-on-one matchups and being able to go down the field. I can protect my body more in the slot.”

Gracia said that they started moving Monroe around more because teams were focusing on defending the run when Monroe would line up in the backfield.

PLAYA VISTA >> Finally, the Clippers can take that misguided and maligned “Streetligh­ts over Spotlights” slogan, drag it down off their desktop and into the trash.

With the slowmotion acquisitio­n of James Harden complete, they’re finally ready for their closeup, for

spotlight.

And in time for the opening of the Intuit Dome next season, it’s what the Clippers owe their season ticket-holding fans if they’re going to ask them to pay, in some cases, $8,000 or $9,000 more per seat next season: A show.

These aren’t anyone’s gutty little Clippers. They’re not playing their part as the irrelevant other team, either.

These are your potentiall­y combustibl­e Clippers. They’re about to be the heavily scrutinize­d Clippers. They’re the brand of intriguing that will actually get people’s attention in a crowded and often antagonist­ic L.A. market.

That’s why coach Tyronn Lue’s pregame news conference on Wednesday was even more packed than it was for Victor Wembenyama’s first visit to L.A., and for any of those he held in the previous 11 times his

The Lakers’ LeBron James drives to the basket against the Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard during the teams’ overtime battle Wednesday night.

Clippers faced the Lakers.

It’s probably why Russell Westbrook, smarting too after the loss to his former teammates on the Lakers, got bristly for the first time Wednesday with the Clippers beat writers. They kept asking him about his fit with Harden this time, their third on the same team after shared stops in Oklahoma City and Houston. Because it stands to figure: A new point guard will likely affect the role of the point guard already there.

“I’m not the GM, the owner,” Westbrook said. “I’m a player here on the team like everybody else and I’m going to figure it

out, do the best I can. I’m going to compete every night, do my part. I can’t control what other people do, how it mesh. I don’t really know. I don’t have that answer. I’m going to just try my hardest to make it as comfortabl­e for everybody like I’ve done since I’ve been here.”

Those unknowns are why 40-plus media members crammed into the team’s modest, galleyshap­ed interview space at their facility after practice on Thursday, waiting for an hour to hear Harden speak as a Clipper for the first time: “I’m not a system player, I am a system.”

The man is a 10-time All-Star, former league MVP and a superior slogan writer, too.

So it could work, on the court as well as at the box

office.

Harden is a divisive figure who has become so well known as a successful architect of his own trades — from Houston, Brooklyn and, now, Philadelph­ia — that it’s as though people forget that he’s almost as good a basketball player.

But ESPN’s analytics has the Clippers’ chances to win the NBA title jumping from 8% to 12%, while giving them a 22% chance to reach the NBA Finals — the best among Western Conference teams.

Harden could help because he’s a big guard, an elite distributo­r (his 10.7 assists per game led the NBA last season) and a dependable marksman. Exactly who All-Stars Kawhi Leonard and Paul George have been clamoring for.

And Harden was excelling

beside Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving on the Brooklyn Nets early on, remember? He was averaging 24.2 points, 11.7 assists, 8.2 rebounds and shooting 50% in his first month with that squad before that experiment was derailed by injuries and Irving’s unwillingn­ess to get vaccinated so he could play.

Yes, the Clippers traded their redundanci­es on the wing for redundanci­es at guard, but it could be worth it: In the final season of his $36 million contract, Harden will be playing for his next payday and plenty motivated to prove “that I’m very elite as an individual and I can fit in and make a championsh­ip run work.”

There’s winning with a reticent superstar like Leonard, his underappre­ciated

co-star George and a cast of quality contributo­rs. And then there’s winning with a couple of larger-than-life characters like Harden and Westbrook, A-listers who have armies of fans line up to defend and support them on social media.

Harden chose to greet his new and new-again teammates in the Clippers’ locker room on Tuesday night in full view, during the half-hour before tipoff when the media is allowed in. Conversely, Leonard once insisted reporters stop recording him as he was shooting free throws.

Harden can be the ceiling raiser the Clippers are claiming he is, or he could be the reason the floor falls out from beneath them.

That tightrope tension

and potential tripwires are going to get people to pay attention in L.A., where we’re addicted to drama, or at least the possibilit­y thereof.

Start with stars and winning, but give us a good soap opera, too.

The Lakers are 17-time NBA champions, 12 of them coming in L.A. How they cornered the market on high-functionin­g palace intrigue always made them so incredibly riveting.

So it was a strange thing that happened on my commute Wednesday to Crypto.com Arena to see the Lakers beat the Clippers, 130-125, in an overtime game dominated by stars on both sides. It hit me: The story wasn’t the Lakers this time; it was Harden-to-the-Clippers.

 ?? KEITH BIRMINGHAM – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
KEITH BIRMINGHAM – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States