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Clippers – Mavericks Game 5 Preview: The Bounce Back

LA Clippers Dallas Mavericks Kawhi Leonard Luka Doncic

The LA Clippers have only one option against the Dallas Mavericks in game 5: bounce back. After an embarrassing game 4 loss, the Clippers fell to a 2-2 tie in the best-of-seven series, making game 5 an absolutely crucial, pivotal game for both teams.

Game Information

Where: Disneyworld, Orlando, Florida
When: 6:00 PM PT
How to Watch: TNT, Prime Ticket

Projected Starting Lineups

Clippers: Landry Shamet – Paul George – Kawhi Leonard – Marcus Morris – Ivica Zubac
Mavericks: Luka Doncic – Tim Hardaway, Jr. – Dorian Finney-Smith – Maxi Kleber – Kristaps Porzingis

Injury Report

Clippers: Patrick Beverley – Doubtful (left calf strain)
Mavericks: Kristaps Porzingis – Game-time decision (knee soreness), Luka Doncic – Probable (sprained ankle), Trey Burke – Probable (sprained ankle)

The Big Picture

The Clippers have struggled to play consistently good basketball in this series, and as losses mount in the first round, faith in this team and several of its core parts is beginning to wane.

That’s probably premature. On its face, losing two games to a very good Dallas Mavericks team in the first round is hardly a sign that this Clippers squad isn’t a championship-caliber team. Last year, the top-seeded Golden State Warriors lost two first-round games to an 8th-place Clippers team that was much less scary than this Mavs group. The eventual champion, Toronto, faced criticism after losing game 1 in the first round to the even lowlier Orlando Magic. Later, in the Eastern Conference Finals, they came one insane bounce away from potentially going to overtime in game 7 and missing the Finals entirely. Nobody’s perfect, and sometimes even champions need a little luck.

What matters for the Clippers, particularly the guilty parties in these two losses, is that the team finds its bearing down the stretch of this series to survive, advance, and keep improving as the playoffs continue. I know we’re conditioned to expect perfection and greatness at all times, but the reality is that for finalists, the NBA Playoffs are a roughly 25-game, 8-week tournament. We’d never expect a team to go 25 regular-season games without a game where they drop the ball, or a scoring slump for an important player, any more than we would expect to see 25 games without a hot shooting night or a surprising role player earning more minutes.

If the Clippers lose tonight in game 5, their season won’t be over, but their margin for error will be reduced to 0, needing to win games 6 and 7 just to head into the second round at a rest disadvantage (likely against a seasoned Utah Jazz team starring Donovan Mitchell’s blistering playoff scoring). I don’t need to spell out how significant a game 5 win is in a series tied 2-2. The Clippers’ job tonight is simple: bounce back.

The Antagonist

That simple job is complicated by the team of men standing in the Clippers’ way, most notably 21-year-old Slovenian phenom Luka Doncic. A lot of times, the word phenom adequately captures the young player we’re talking about, like if I were describing the heroics of Devin Booker against the Clippers in the bubble two weeks ago.

It doesn’t quite do Luka justice. I’m not prepared to make a statement as bold as “Luka is better at his age than LeBron James or Michael Jordan was”–but I’ll take the cowardly route of saying he’s at least in the conversation with those two. Doncic’s legacy will be determined over the next fifteen years or so, and his ability to lead teams to titles and repeat iconic performances like Sunday’s game 4 will determine how history views him. For now, we can only say (with respect to these Hall of Famers) that his career trajectory isn’t along the lines of A-list stars like Damian Lillard and James Harden, but rather those of James, Jordan, and the Clippers’ own two-time NBA Finals MVP, Kawhi Leonard.

Despite Doncic’s greatness, the Clippers can blame themselves for Dallas’ two wins in this series. With all credit to Doncic, Rick Carlisle, and the rest of the Mavericks for playing well and perfectly positioning themselves to take advantage of LA’s mistakes, this series has come down to just that: LA’s mistakes. Now, the Clippers have given the Mavericks something very dangerous: hope.

If Dallas hadn’t come back from down 21 in the second quarter of game 4, if they hadn’t gone on a 16-0 run in the third to take the lead, if Doncic hadn’t hit a 28-foot step-back three at the buzzer to lift the Mavs to an overtime victory, then that might not be a factor. Dallas would be down 3-1, needing three straight wins against a team that had beaten them six of seven times this season. Now, the younger, less-experienced Mavericks can look at a 2-2 series and note that their two losses came first in a game where their second star, Kristaps Porzingis, was ejected, and then in a game where Doncic exited early with an ankle injury. Not only did they win game 2 at full strength, but they triumphed in game 4 with Porzingis sidelined with a knee injury.

The task in front of the Mavericks is to win two of the next three games against the LA Clippers. How can they not believe in their ability to do so when they just won two out of the last three games?

It is unimaginably hard to beat a good team, playing high-intensity basketball a full strength, four times in a row. Winning an NBA playoff series in four or five games requires not just being the better team, but convincing your opponent to roll over because the series is all but over anyway. There will be no such quit in Doncic and the Mavericks after game 4.

Notes

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