USA TODAY US Edition

Clippers make NBA playoffs worth watching

Martin Rogers: Historic comeback shows how little they care about Golden State’s seeming invincibil­ity.

- MONTREZL HARRELL BY USA TODAY SPORTS

Just in case you needed reminding, there’s a second team in the first-round playoff series involving the defending NBA champion Warriors.

They’re known as the Clippers, and they’re the best thing to happen to this NBA postseason.

Monday night’s stunning re-DeMarcus verse in a game in which the Warriors were so far in front they thought they could cruise over the finish line, sip a cold one and wipe their mouths with the checkered flag, has spawned many things.

However, in a reflection of the way we view sporting celebrity, they have all been Warriors-related. Twitter went berserk with numeracy jokes, pointing out the 31-point comeback contained the same figures as Golden State’s 3-1 Finals lead over the Cavaliers in 2016.

Cousins’ quadriceps injury was a topic of conversati­on.

So, too, was the Warriors’ level of motivation and whether they could rebound from this. Had they been too lethargic? Were they taking things seriously enough?

Yet it’s worth rememberin­g at this point that while blowing such a mammoth lead requires some level of culpabilit­y from the losing party, it also needs some rare and spectacula­r things from the team that found itself so far behind.

Fortunatel­y for the Clippers, those things — resiliency, fighting spirit and a refusal to accept common basketball thinking — are the personalit­y traits upon which they have quietly built an outstandin­g season.

They’re a collection of players who care little for the Warriors’ apparent cloak of invincibil­ity, nor for the superstar standing of their op

ponent’s starting lineup.

They showed fearlessne­ss Monday because they’ve shown it all season and have no interest in dwelling on the statistica­l weight of evidence that makes gloomy reading for lower-seeded playoff teams.

Early in the season, Clippers head coach Doc Rivers relaxed in his office at the team’s training facility and reflected that his squad, which had performed unexpected­ly well in the opening weeks, had the ability to upturn a lot of popular NBA thinking.

“We have got something with this group,” Rivers told USA TODAY. “Only time will tell what they can do. There will come a time when they need to battle for each other, and if they do, we will see what happens.”

The Clippers are commonly viewed as one of the league’s hardest-working teams, which is a pleasant compliment but also comes with some kind of veiled knock on their talent.

But the reality is as much as Rivers enjoys and fosters the reputation and mentality of a blue-collar group, Los Angeles didn’t get to this point by earnest toil alone. The fearsome bench duo of Lou Williams and Montrezl Harrell were outstandin­g again at Golden State’s home stadium, Oracle Arena in Oakland; Danilo Gallinari has pieced together a mostly healthy and consistent­ly productive season; and Patrick Beverley’s penchant for intensity (with an added shot of agitation) makes him the trickiest kind of playoff foe.

So here are the Clippers, an eight seed with a pulse, tied at 1-1, getting ready to come back to a city where they live in the shadow of a failing neighbor, to try to make more magic happen.

While the role of the scrappy underdog fits so neatly, it might not last long. The Clippers have kept their roster superstar-free by design, even shipping arguably their best player, Tobias Harris, off to the 76ers via trade. Spoiler alert: It’s not because they don’t like superstars. It’s because they’re playing the long game and trying to land themselves a big one.

Owner Steve Ballmer has grand ambitions less than 15 months after the Lob City era formally ended with the trade of Blake Griffin to Detroit. The Clippers have somehow rebuilt without going through a rebuild.

While the personal peculiarit­ies of the NBA’s elite players remain something of a mystery, there are a couple of things we know about many. They like to be the big man on campus. They like to live in trendy cities. And they like to win.

More than anywhere else in the league, the Clippers now offer that opportunit­y. Kawhi Leonard, Kyrie Irving, even Kevin Durant would find in free agency a team that knows how to compete while offering unconteste­d firstline placement on the billboard.

Maybe the Clippers’ moment in the playoff sun this year will be short-lived. Monday might have been a blip and nothing more. Perhaps the Warriors will remember the inconvenie­nt truth that you actually need to finish games. Whichever way, by delivering an embarrassi­ng shock to the biggest team in the sport, the Clippers have invigorate­d these playoffs, and potentiall­y set themselves up for a gleaming future.

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 ??  ?? Clippers forward Montrezl Harrell, shooting between Andre Iguodala and Jonas Jerebko, scored 25 Monday.
Clippers forward Montrezl Harrell, shooting between Andre Iguodala and Jonas Jerebko, scored 25 Monday.
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 ?? KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins walks off the court Monday with what was confirmed Tuesday as a torn left quadriceps muscle that will keep him out indefinite­ly, the team said.
KYLE TERADA/USA TODAY SPORTS Warriors center DeMarcus Cousins walks off the court Monday with what was confirmed Tuesday as a torn left quadriceps muscle that will keep him out indefinite­ly, the team said.

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