LOS ANGELES — Losing large double-digit leads has become an unnerving trend in the NBA. Many teams, whether they are top-tier or sit near the bottom of the standings, have seen significant leads evaporate amid a barrage of 3-pointers.
The Clippers have experienced this phenomenon a few times this season, the most recent coming Tuesday night against the Minnesota Timberwolves.
After leading by as much as 22 points in the first half, the Clippers’ focus gave way, resulting in a 118-100 collapse to the Timberwolves at Crypto.com Arena.
The dropoff seemed to coincide with Kawhi Leonard’s departure. He left the court after playing 12 minutes because of thoracic spasms that made it difficult for the All-Star wing to sit. The two-time NBA Finals MVP dressed and left Crypto.com Arena during the second quarter.
Coach Tyronn Lue said Leonard has been dealing with the spasms for a couple of days, but he decided to try and play.
“It just didn’t loosen up for him,” Lue said.
Leonard wasn’t the only Clippers starter playing in discomfort. James Harden, who has played in all 59 games that he has suited up for, has a sore left shoulder that has hampered his shooting. He made just 4 of 10 shots from the field.
It’s uncertain whether Leonard and Harden will be available for the Clippers’ upcoming two-game trip.
“We’ll see tomorrow how I feel,” Harden said.
Without Leonard and an effective Harden, the Timberwolves encountered little resistance and took advantage of the Clippers’ 18 turnovers.
Minnesota guard Anthony Edwards picked up the scoring in place of Karl-Anthony Towns, who is out with a left meniscus tear. Edwards scored 29 of his game-high 37 points in the second half and Nickeil Alexander-Walker added a season-high 28 points to lead the Timberwolves to their third victory in four games against the Clippers this season.
“He has dog,” Lue said of Edwards. “He don’t care who’s in front of him, he’s going to try. He’s going to attack you and he’s relentless.”
The game was big, not only in terms of the Western Conference standings but as a potential tiebreaker. The loss left the Clippers (41-23) sitting 3½ games behind first-place Oklahoma City Thunder and gave a head-to-head tiebreaker edge to the third-place Timberwolves, who are now three games ahead of the Clippers in the standings.
“We got to get better and understand that all these games mean something,” Lue said. “Not just Minnesota tonight with the tiebreaker, but the other 18 games after this; they all mean something. So, we’ve got to have the right approach, understanding what we want to do on offense, what we want to do on defense and actually execute it.
“That’s got to be our mindset for these last 18, 19 games.”
Especially if Leonard is out for any length of time. The two-time NBA Finals MVP sat out a loss to the Milwaukee Bucks on Sunday because of left groin soreness and there wasn’t any word about how the back spasms will affect his availability going forward.
Fellow All-Star Paul George said Leonard mentioned his discomfort but still tried to push through it.
“I mean that’s him. I mean if he can go, whatever the case that the narrative people may think, being around him, he’s going to try to push through what he can and tonight was a sign of it,” George said. “But yeah, it just got locked up on him.”
George picked up as much of the slack left by Leonard, scoring 22 points on 5-of-11 shooting and making all 10 of his free-throw attempts. Harden had a quiet 12 points and seven assists, while Norman Powell finished with 12 points.
Meanwhile, the Timberwolves made their move largely after Leonard departed, going on a 20-2 run that nearly erased the work the Clippers did early in building their 22-point lead. Behind Edwards’ long-range shooting, Minnesota pulled to within 59-55 with 51 seconds left in the first half.
“For the most part it’s been the same Achilles heel we’ve been having,” George said. “It’s giving up offensive rebounds. Transition, we were good to start the season off, but we’ve had slippage there. But I think more than anything, we got to give a little bit more effort.”
The Timberwolves struggled from 3-point range for much of the first half. Without Towns, the team’s second-best 3-point shooter, they languished. It wasn’t until the late shooting spree that they managed to find the basket from behind the arc.
They shot 36.4% (12 for 33) from the 3-point range and 51.1% overall (48 for 94). The Clippers shot 47.2% (34 for 72) from the field and 36.7% (11 for 30) from long range.
That wasn’t the only area where the Timberwolves held an advantage. They outrebounded the Clippers 48-34, scored 22 more points in the paint and had 11 more second-chance points.
“You can go down the list. It was a lot of things that we didn’t do well,” Lue said. “And, I thought they were tougher than us. They played tougher than we did and that’s the result. And, so, we just got to be better.”
The Clippers managed to regroup and hang on for a 63-55 halftime lead, but that lead wasn’t safe, either.
After George buried his second 3-pointer to put the Clippers ahead 66-57, Minnesota went on a 12-0 run to grab the lead at 69-68 with 7:21 left in the third quarter and led 84-78 heading into the fourth quarter.
The Clippers failed to capitalize offensively, coming up empty on their final seven possessions of the quarter, which allowed the Timberwolves to take over and open their own 22-point lead.