2019–20 Los Angeles Clippers season

The 2019–20 Los Angeles Clippers season was the 50th season of the franchise in the National Basketball Association (NBA), their 42nd season in Southern California, and their 36th season in Los Angeles.

2019–20 Los Angeles Clippers season
Head coachDoc Rivers
General managerMichael Winger
OwnersSteve Ballmer
ArenaStaples Center
Results
Record49–23 (.681)
PlaceDivision: 2nd (Pacific)
Conference: 2nd (Western)
Playoff finishConference semifinals
(lost to Nuggets 3–4)

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionKCOP-TV
Fox Sports West and Prime Ticket
RadioKLAC
< 2018–19 2020–21 >

On July 5, 2019, 2-time NBA champion, Finals MVP, and Defensive Player of the Year Kawhi Leonard agreed to join the Clippers, on the condition that the team trade for 6-time NBA All-Star Paul George from the Oklahoma City Thunder. Also during the offseason, they re-signed two-time NBA All-Defensive Team selection Patrick Beverley and three-time Sixth Man of the Year award winner Lou Williams.[1][2] Entering the season, many analysts expected the Clippers to contend for an NBA championship.[3][4]

Despite a nagging shoulder injury and "load management" policy that caused stars Paul George and Kawhi Leonard, respectively, to sit out multiple games, the Clippers were consistently at the top of the Western Conference standings. The Clippers improved on their 48–34 record last year after making the 8th seed in the Western Conference standings, finishing with a record of 49–23 (the equivalent of 56–26 in a full season) as the 2nd seed in the Western Conference, their highest seeded placement in franchise history. Kawhi Leonard was named a starter for the 2020 NBA All-Star Game by fans, current players, and media, and was later named the game's MVP.[5] Montrezl Harrell won the 2019-20 NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award, joining Jamal Crawford and teammate Lou Williams as one of three players to win the award as members of the Clippers.[6]

The season was suspended by the league officials following the games of March 11[7] after it was reported that Rudy Gobert tested positive for COVID-19.[8] On July 5, the NBA announced a return of the season which would involve 22 teams playing in the NBA Bubble at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at the Walt Disney World Resort in Florida.[9] Each of the remaining 22 teams played eight seeding games to determine positioning for the NBA playoffs.[9] Play resumed on July 30.[10]

The Clippers had a 5–3 record for their bubble seeding games to earn the 2nd seed in the Western Conference and then faced off against the Dallas Mavericks in the first round of the playoffs. It was the first ever meeting between the two teams in the playoffs. The Clippers defeated the Mavericks in six games to win their first playoff series since 2015, advancing to the semifinals. In Game 5 of the series, the Clippers set a franchise record for scoring 154 points in the NBA Playoffs. The 154-point mark was the third most of any team in NBA playoff history.[11] In the conference semifinals against the 3rd-seeded Denver Nuggets, the Clippers took a 3–1 series lead before ultimately losing in 7 games. The Clippers failed to hold double-digit leads in all three potential closeout games. Their elimination extends their drought of failing to reach the conference finals to 50 years, the longest amongst the four major professional sports leagues.

Following the Clippers' elimination from the playoffs, the team was roundly mocked on social media for their failure to win the championship.[12] The 2019–20 Clippers team has since been viewed as having one of the greatest postseason collapses in NBA history.[13][14][15]

The ensuing fallout from the Nuggets series caused Rivers to lose his position as head coach on September 28.[16]

Draft edit

RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalityCollege
248Terance MannSF  United StatesFlorida State
256Jaylen HandsPG  United StatesUCLA

The Clippers hold no first-round picks but holds two second-round picks. The 56th pick was traded to the Brooklyn Nets along with a 2020 second round draft pick for Mfiondu Kabengele.[17]

Roster edit

2019–20 Los Angeles Clippers roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.NameHeightWeightDOBFrom
G21Beverley, Patrick6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)180 lb (82 kg)1988–07–12Arkansas
G/F7Coffey, Amir (TW)6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)210 lb (95 kg)1997–06–17Minnesota
G13George, Paul6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)220 lb (100 kg)1990–05–02Fresno State
F4Green, JaMychal6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)227 lb (103 kg)1990–06–21Alabama
F5Harrell, Montrezl6 ft 8 in (2.03 m)240 lb (109 kg)1994–01–26Louisville
G1Jackson, Reggie6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)208 lb (94 kg)1990–04–16Boston College
C25Kabengele, Mfiondu6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)250 lb (113 kg)1997–08–14Florida State
F2Leonard, Kawhi6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)230 lb (104 kg)1991–06–29San Diego State
G/F14Mann, Terance6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)215 lb (98 kg)1996–10–18Florida State
G19McGruder, Rodney6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)205 lb (93 kg)1991–07–29Kansas State
F31Morris, Marcus6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)235 lb (107 kg)1989–09–02Kansas
F15Motley, Johnathan (TW)6 ft 10 in (2.08 m)230 lb (104 kg)1995–05–04Baylor
C55Noah, Joakim6 ft 11 in (2.11 m)232 lb (105 kg)1985–02–25Florida
F54Patterson, Patrick6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)235 lb (107 kg)1989–03–14Kentucky
G20Shamet, Landry6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)190 lb (86 kg)1997–03–13Wichita State
G23Williams, Lou6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)175 lb (79 kg)1986–10–27South Gwinnett HS (GA)
C40Zubac, Ivica7 ft 1 in (2.16 m)240 lb (109 kg)1997–03–18Croatia
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (GL) On assignment to G League affiliate
  • (TW) Two-way affiliate player
  • Injured

Roster
Last transaction: 2020–03–09

Standings edit

Division edit

Pacific DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
cLos Angeles Lakers5219.73225‍–‍1027‍–‍910–371
xLos Angeles Clippers4923.6813.527‍–‍922‍–‍148–672
Phoenix Suns3439.46619.017‍–‍2217‍–‍176–973
Sacramento Kings3141.43121.516‍–‍1915‍–‍228–572
Golden State Warriors1550.23134.08‍–‍267‍–‍242–1165

Conference edit

Western Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1cLos Angeles Lakers *5219.73271
2xLos Angeles Clippers4923.6813.572
3yDenver Nuggets *4627.6307.073
4yHouston Rockets *4428.6118.572
5xOklahoma City Thunder4428.6118.572
6xUtah Jazz4428.6118.572
7xDallas Mavericks4332.57311.075
8xPortland Trail Blazers3539.47318.574
9piMemphis Grizzlies3439.46619.073
10Phoenix Suns3439.46619.073
11San Antonio Spurs3239.45120.071
12Sacramento Kings3141.43121.572
13New Orleans Pelicans3042.41722.572
14Minnesota Timberwolves1945.29729.564
15Golden State Warriors1550.23134.065

Game log edit

Preseason edit

Regular season edit

2019–20 game log
Total: 49–23 (home: 27–9; road: 22–14)
October: 4–2 (home: 3–0; road: 1–2)
November: 10–4 (home: 8–1; road: 2–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
7November 3UtahW 105–94 Kawhi Leonard (30)Zubac, Beverley (9)Leonard, L.Williams, Beverley (3)Staples Center
19,068
5–2
8November 6MilwaukeeL 124–129 Harrell, L.Williams (34)Montrezl Harrell (13)Lou Williams (11)Staples Center
19,068
5–3
9November 7PortlandW 107–101 Kawhi Leonard (27)Leonard, Zubac (13)Lou Williams (8)Staples Center
19,068
6–3
10November 11TorontoW 98–88 Lou Williams (21)Green, Beverley (12)Kawhi Leonard (9)Staples Center
19,068
7–3
11November 13@ HoustonL 93–102 Kawhi Leonard (26)JaMychal Green (14)Kawhi Leonard (7)Toyota Center
18,055
7–4
12November 14@ New OrleansL 127–132 Paul George (33)Paul George (9)Lou Williams (9)Smoothie King Center
17,147
7–5
13November 16AtlantaW 150–101 Paul George (37)Green, Zubac (9)Terance Mann (8)Staples Center
19,068
8–5
14November 18Oklahoma CityW 90–88 Montrezl Harrell (28)Montrezl Harrell (12)Lou Williams (9)Staples Center
19,068
9–5
15November 20BostonW 107–104 (OT)Lou Williams (27)Patrick Beverley (16)Paul George (8)Staples Center
19,068
10–5
16November 22HoustonW 122–119 Lou Williams (26)JaMychal Green (9)Lou Williams (8)Staples Center
19,068
11–5
17November 24New OrleansW 134–109 Montrezl Harrell (34)Montrezl Harrell (12)Kawhi Leonard (6)Staples Center
19,068
12–5
18November 26@ DallasW 114–99 Kawhi Leonard (28)Leonard, Green (8)Lou Williams (6)American Airlines Center
20,407
13–5
19November 27@ MemphisW 121–119 Harrell, L.Williams (24)Montrezl Harrell (10)Lou Williams (13)FedExForum
16,721
14–5
20November 29@ San AntonioL 97–107 Kawhi Leonard (19)George, Green (8)Leonard, L.Williams (7)AT&T Center
18,354
14–6
December: 10–5 (home: 3–2; road: 7–3)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
21December 1WashingtonW 150–125 Kawhi Leonard (34)Montrezl Harrell (15)Lou Williams (8)Staples Center
19,068
15–6
22December 3PortlandW 117–97 Montrezl Harrell (26)Leonard, Harrell (9)Lou Williams (7)Staples Center
19,068
16–6
23December 6@ MilwaukeeL 91–119 Kawhi Leonard (17)Ivica Zubac (12)Kawhi Leonard (4)Fiserv Forum
17,732
16–7
24December 8@ WashingtonW 135–119 Kawhi Leonard (34)Kawhi Leonard (11)George, L.Williams (6)Capital One Arena
15,946
17–7
25December 9@ IndianaW 110–99 Paul George (36)Maurice Harkless (14)Lou Williams (6)Bankers Life Fieldhouse
14,644
18–7
26December 11@ TorontoW 112–92 Kawhi Leonard (23)Ivica Zubac (8)Lou Williams (8)Scotiabank Arena
20,144
19–7
27December 13@ MinnesotaW 124–117 Paul George (46)Kawhi Leonard (11)Paul George (7)Target Center
17,585
20–7
28December 14@ ChicagoL 106–109 Montrezl Harrell (30)Montrezl Harrell (7)Paul George (6)United Center
18,426
20–8
29December 17PhoenixW 120–99 Paul George (24)Rodney McGruder (11)Lou Williams (8)Staples Center
19,068
21–8
30December 19HoustonL 117–122 Paul George (34)George, Leonard (9)Patrick Beverley (7)Staples Center
19,068
21–9
31December 21@ San AntonioW 134–109 Kawhi Leonard (26)Montrezl Harrell (8)Kawhi Leonard (9)AT&T Center
18,354
22–9
32December 22@ Oklahoma CityL 112–118 Lou Williams (22)Harrell, Zubac (8)Lou Williams (7)Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
22–10
33December 25@ L. A. LakersW 111–106 Kawhi Leonard (35)Kawhi Leonard (12)Lou Williams (7)Staples Center
18,997
23–10
34December 28UtahL 107–120 Paul George (20)Ivica Zubac (12)Lou Williams (9)Staples Center
19,068
23–11
35December 31@ SacramentoW 105–87 Kawhi Leonard (24)Ivica Zubac (13)Paul George (9)Golden 1 Center
16,231
24–11
January: 9–4 (home: 5–2; road: 4–2)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
36January 2DetroitW 126–112 Montrezl Harrell (23)JaMychal Green (11)Shamet, Leonard, L.Williams (5)Staples Center
19,068
25–11
37January 4MemphisL 114–140 Montrezl Harrell (28)Ivica Zubac (11)Lou Williams (7)Staples Center
19,068
25–12
38January 5New YorkW 135–132 Montrezl Harrell (34)JaMychal Green (10)Lou Williams (9)Staples Center
19,068
26–12
39January 10Golden StateW 109–100 Kawhi Leonard (36)Patrick Beverley (11)Patrick Beverley (9)Staples Center
19,068
27–12
40January 12@ DenverL 104–114 Kawhi Leonard (30)Ivica Zubac (9)Patrick Beverley (7)Pepsi Center
19,520
27–13
41January 14ClevelandW 128–103 Kawhi Leonard (43)Maurice Harkless (11)Patrick Beverley (9)Staples Center
19,068
28–13
42January 16OrlandoW 122–95 Kawhi Leonard (32)JaMychal Green (13)Patrick Beverley (7)Staples Center
19,068
29–13
43January 18@ New OrleansW 133–130 Kawhi Leonard (39)Leonard, Beverley (6)Leonard, Beverley (6)Smoothie King Center
17,959
30–13
44January 21@ DallasW 110–107 Kawhi Leonard (36)Kawhi Leonard (11)L.Williams, Beverley (4)American Airlines Center
19,783
31–13
45January 22@ AtlantaL 95–102 Montrezl Harrell (30)Montrezl Harrell (7)Lou Williams (7)State Farm Arena
14,338
31–14
46January 24@ MiamiW 122–117 Kawhi Leonard (33)Montrezl Harrell (11)Kawhi Leonard (10)American Airlines Arena
19,632
32–14
47January 26@ OrlandoW 112–97 Kawhi Leonard (31)Kawhi Leonard (14)Kawhi Leonard (7)Amway Center
15,427
33–14
January 28@ LA LakersPostponed due to the Death of Kobe Bryant. Makeup date July 30 (Originally April 9).[18][19]
48January 30SacramentoL 103–124 Lou Williams (22)Ivica Zubac (10)Lou Williams (6)Staples Center
19,068
33–15
February: 7–4 (home: 5–1; road: 2–3)
March: 4–1 (home: 1–1; road: 3–0)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
60March 1PhiladelphiaW 136–130 Kawhi Leonard (30)Montrezl Harrell (9)Lou Williams (8)Staples Center
19,068
41–19
61March 3@ Oklahoma CityW 109–94 Kawhi Leonard (25)Kawhi Leonard (8)Lou Williams (4)Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
42–19
62March 5@ HoustonW 120–105 Kawhi Leonard (25)Ivica Zubac (12)Paul George (7)Toyota Center
18,055
43–19
63March 8L. A. LakersL 103–112 Paul George (31)Montrezl Harrell (8)George, Williams (3)Staples Center
19,068
43–20
64March 10@ Golden StateW 131–107 Kawhi Leonard (23)Ivica Zubac (12)Leonard, George, Shamet (5)Chase Center
18,064
44–20
Seeding games: 5–3 (home: 2–2; road: 3–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
65July 30@ L. A. LakersL 101–103 Paul George (30)Reggie Jackson (6)Jackson, Leonard (4)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
44–21
66August 1New OrleansW 126–103 Paul George (28)Ivica Zubac (9)Kawhi Leonard (5)HP Field House
No In-Person Attendance
45–21
67August 4PhoenixL 115–117 Kawhi Leonard (27)Ivica Zubac (12)Lou Williams (6)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
45–22
68August 6@ DallasW 126–111 Kawhi Leonard (29)Ivica Zubac (15)Paul George (6)HP Field House
No In-Person Attendance
46–22
69August 8@ PortlandW 122–117 Paul George (21)Ivica Zubac (12)Reggie Jackson (5)HP Field House
No In-Person Attendance
47–22
70August 9BrooklynL 120–129 Kawhi Leonard (39)Ivica Zubac (15)Kawhi Leonard (6)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
47–23
71August 12@ DenverW 124–111 Paul George (27)Ivica Zubac (12)Lou Williams (7)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
48–23
72August 14Oklahoma CityW 107–103 (OT)Terance Mann (25)Mann, Patterson (14)Terance Mann (9)HP Field House
No In-Person Attendance
49–23
Cancelled games
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Record
65March 13BrooklynStaples Center
66March 14New OrleansStaples Center
67March 16DallasStaples Center
68March 18@ DenverPepsi Center
69March 20PhoenixStaples Center
70March 23@ New YorkMadison Square Garden
71March 25@ BrooklynBarclays Center
72March 27@ DetroitLittle Caesars Arena
73March 28@ CharlotteSpectrum Center
74March 30IndianaStaples Center
75April 2@ SacramentoGolden 1 Center
76April 4Oklahoma CityStaples Center
77April 6ChicagoStaples Center
78April 7@ UtahVivint Smart Home Arena
79April 9@ LA LakersStaples Center
80April 11Golden StateStaples Center
81April 13MinnesotaStaples Center
82April 15@ PortlandModa Center
2019–20 season schedule

Playoffs edit

2020 playoff game log
Total: 7–6 (home: 3–4; road: 4–2)
First round: 4–2 (home: 2–1; road: 2–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1August 17DallasW 118–110 Kawhi Leonard (29)Kawhi Leonard (12)Kawhi Leonard (6)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
1–0
2August 19DallasL 114–127 Kawhi Leonard (35)Leonard, George (10)Lou Williams (7)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
1–1
3August 21@ DallasW 130–122 Kawhi Leonard (36)Leonard, George (9)Kawhi Leonard (8)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
2–1
4August 23@ DallasL 133–135 (OT)Lou Williams (36)Kawhi Leonard (9)Lou Williams (5)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
2–2
5August 25DallasW 154–111 Paul George (35)Montrezl Harrell (11)Reggie Jackson (5)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
3–2
6August 30@ DallasW 111–97 Kawhi Leonard (33)Kawhi Leonard (14)George, Leonard (7)The Arena
No In-Person Attendance
4–2
Conference semifinals: 3–4 (home: 1–3; road: 2–1)
GameDateTeamScoreHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsLocation
Attendance
Series
1September 3DenverW 120–97 Kawhi Leonard (29)George, Green, Zubac (7)George, Williams (4)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
1–0
2September 5DenverL 101–110 Paul George (22)JaMychal Green (11)Kawhi Leonard (8)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
1–1
3September 7@ DenverW 113–107 Paul George (32)Kawhi Leonard (14)Kawhi Leonard (6)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
2–1
4September 9@ DenverW 96–85 Kawhi Leonard (30)Kawhi Leonard (11)Kawhi Leonard (9)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
3–1
5September 11DenverL 105–111 Kawhi Leonard (36)Leonard, Zubac (9)Paul George (6)HP Field House
No in-person attendance
3–2
6September 13@ DenverL 98–111 Paul George (33)Ivica Zubac (12)Kawhi Leonard (5)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
3–3
7September 15DenverL 89–104 Montrezl Harrell (20)Green, Leonard, Morris (6)Beverley, Leonard, Williams (6)AdventHealth Arena
No in-person attendance
3–4
2020 playoff schedule

Transactions edit

Overview edit

Players Added

Draft

Trade

Free agency

Two-way contract

Players Lost

Trade

Free agency

Waived

Trades edit

June 20, 2019To Los Angeles Clippers
Draft rights to Mfiondu Kabengele
To Brooklyn Nets
Draft rights to Jaylen Hands
2020 first-round pick
July 6, 2019To Los Angeles Clippers
Maurice Harkless (from Portland)
Draft rights to Mathias Lessort (from Philadelphia)
2023 first-round pick (from Miami)
To Portland Trail Blazers
Hassan Whiteside (from Miami)
To Philadelphia 76ers
Josh Richardson (from Miami)
To Miami Heat
Jimmy Butler (from Philadelphia)
Meyers Leonard (from Portland)
Cash considerations (from Los Angeles)
July 10, 2019To Los Angeles Clippers
Paul George
To Oklahoma City Thunder
Danilo Gallinari
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
2021 first-round pick (from Miami)
2022 first-round pick
2023 first-round pick (from Miami)
2024 first-round pick
2026 first-round pick
Right to swap first-round picks in 2023 and 2025
February 6, 2020To Los Angeles Clippers
Protected 2022 second-round pick
To Atlanta Hawks
Derrick Walton, Jr.
Cash considerations
February 6, 2020To Los Angeles Clippers
Marcus Morris (from New York)
Isaiah Thomas (from Washington)
To New York Knicks
Maurice Harkless (from LA Clippers)
2020 LAC first-round pick
2021 LAC first-round pick swap[a]
2021 DET second-round pick (from LA Clippers)
Draft rights to Issuf Sanon (2018 #44) (from Washington)
To Washington Wizards
Jerome Robinson (from LA Clippers)

Free agency edit

Re-signed edit

PlayerSigned
Ivica ZubacJuly 10, 2019
Rodney McGruderJuly 10, 2019
Patrick BeverleyJuly 11, 2019
JaMychal GreenJuly 18, 2019
Johnathan MotleyJuly 25, 2019, Two-way contract

Additions edit

PlayerSignedFormer team
Amir CoffeyJuly 9, 2019, Two-way contractMinnesota Golden Gophers (NCAA)
Kawhi Leonard[20]July 10, 2019, 3-year contract worth $103 millionToronto Raptors
Patrick PattersonAugust 15, 2019Oklahoma City Thunder
Derrick Walton, Jr.October 21, 2019, Exhibit 10 contractAlba Berlin (BBL)
Reggie JacksonFebruary 20, 2020Detroit Pistons
Joakim NoahMarch 9, 2020, 10-day contract
June 28, 2020, signed for rest of the season
Memphis Grizzlies

Subtractions edit

PlayerReason leftNew team
Tyrone WallaceWaived, July 6, 2019Minnesota Timberwolves
Sindarius ThornwellWaived, July 6, 2019Cleveland Cavaliers
Garrett TempleFree agency, July 8, 2019Brooklyn Nets
Wilson ChandlerFree agency, July 8, 2019Brooklyn Nets
Angel DelgadoFree agency, August 8, 2019Beijing Royal Fighters (CBA)
Isaiah ThomasWaived, February 8, 2020New Orleans Pelicans

Notes edit

  1. ^ Top 4 protected.

References edit

  1. ^ "Clippers to land Leonard, George". espn.com. Retrieved July 5, 2019.
  2. ^ "The Clippers Got Kawhi and Paul George, and Changed the NBA". theringer.com. July 6, 2019. Retrieved July 6, 2019.
  3. ^ "Big questions, greatest edge for seven NBA title contenders". ESPN.com. ESPN. August 22, 2019. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  4. ^ Harper, Zach. "Zach Harper's 2019-20 NBA Team Tiers: Certified contender status". theathletic.com. The Athletic Media Group. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
  5. ^ "Lakers' LeBron James, Bucks' Giannis Antetokounmpo named starters and captains for 2020 NBA All-Star Game". nba.com. Retrieved July 13, 2020.
  6. ^ "Clippers' Montrezl Harrell wins 2019-20 Kia NBA Sixth Man Award". NBA.
  7. ^ "NBA to suspend season following Wednesday's games". NBA.com. March 11, 2020. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  8. ^ Reynolds, Tim (March 11, 2020). "NBA suspends season until further notice, over coronavirus". NBA.com. Retrieved March 12, 2020.
  9. ^ a b "What we know and don't know about the NBA's return to play". ESPN.com. June 5, 2020. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  10. ^ Blumenthal, Eli. "NBA restart: Everything you need to know about basketball's 2020 return". CNET. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  11. ^ Ferdinand Cruz. "Clippers vs. Mavericks, Game 5: Paul George leads Los Angeles to lopsided win over Dallas | Viral NewsWeek". Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  12. ^ "NBA players show no mercy on Twitter in Clippers-Nuggets Game 7 shocker". ESPN.com. ESPN. September 16, 2020. Retrieved September 16, 2020.
  13. ^ Windhorst, Brian. "NBA playoffs: The Clippers' dynasty is on the clock before it can even begin". ESPN.com. ESPN. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  14. ^ Caparell, Adam. "The Clippers Choked Away a Golden Opportunity". Complex.com. Complex. Retrieved September 16, 2020.
  15. ^ Buha, Jovan. "'We came up short': Clippers complete one of the worst collapses in NBA history". theathletic.com. The Athletic Media Company. Retrieved September 16, 2020.
  16. ^ "Doc Rivers out as Clippers head coach after 7 seasons".
  17. ^ "Full 2019 NBA Draft Order". tankathon.com. Archived from the original on May 15, 2019. Retrieved May 15, 2019.
  18. ^ "NBA reschedules postponed Lakers, Clippers game for April 9 at Staples Center".
  19. ^ "Lakers vs. Clippers game postponed". NBA.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. January 27, 2020. Retrieved January 27, 2020.
  20. ^ "L.A. Clippers Sign Two-Time Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard". NBA.com/clippers. July 10, 2019. Retrieved July 10, 2019.