The Clippers’ last game of the 2025 regular season is also their most important, as it will determine whether or not they make the playoffs or enter the play-in tournament. Their opponent, the Golden State Warriors, is in a similar position, making this perhaps the highest stakes regular season game of the entire NBA season regardless of team.

Game Information

Where: Chase Center, San Francisco, California

When: 12:30 PM PT

How to Watch: ESPN, FanDuel Sports SoCal, AM 1150

Projected Starting Lineups

Clippers: James Harden – Norm Powell – Kris Dunn – Kawhi Leonard – Ivica Zubac

Warriors: Steph Curry – Brandin Podziemski – Moses Moody – Jimmy Butler – Draymond Green

Injuries

Clippers: Nic Batum Out (Groin), Patty Mills Out (Illness), Seth Lundy Out (Two-way)

Warriors: Gary Payton II Out

The Big Picture

Despite how well the Clippers have played over the last month (and really, most of the season), a lot is riding on this last game. A win would place the Clippers in the playoffs proper and give them either the 4 or 5 seed. A loss would open the door for the Clippers to fall all the way to 7 and the play-in tournament. The Clippers were not at their sharpest in the win over the Kings on Friday night, but did just enough to win. They will need to be much better to beat a Warriors team for whom this game is every bit as important as it is for the Clippers.

The Antagonist

The Warriors have been one of the few teams in the NBA that’s been as hot as the Clippers over the second half of the season. The Jimmy Butler trade reinvigorated the previously listless Dubs, giving them another creator and scorer on offense to help Steph Curry while also strengthening their perimeter defense and rebounding. The Warriors have had some bad losses, but in general have played quite well on both ends of the court for almost two months, pushing Steph into All-NBA First Team talks and Draymond Green in the center of the Defensive Player of the Year discussions. Unfortunately for opposing teams, both claims have merit – it turns out that Steph still looks unstoppable when he has enough help, and Draymond remains probably the most well-rounded defender in the game. Add in a competent supporting cast and you have a highly dangerous team that can win in multiple ways. You hate to see it.

Notes

Winning the Rebounding Battle: Despite playing small much of the time, the Warriors rank 4th in offensive rebounding rate in the NBA. When Looney plays, he’s an excellent offensive rebounder, and their wings like Podziemski, Moody, and Kuminga are all effective at crashing the offensive glass as well. The Clippers, on the other hand, are 1st in defensive rebound rate, largely thanks to the efforts of Ivica Zubac. It’s even more important to keep the Warriors off the offensive glass than most teams, as offensive rebounds for the Warriors turn into threes for Steph Curry (and to a much lesser extent, Buddy Hield). If the Clippers can hold the Warriors to a single possession on a regular basis, they will be in a strong position to win this game.

The Turnover Battle: Similarly, the Warriors are better than the Clippers at taking care of the basketball. Normally the Steph Curry Warriors are very high in turnover rate, flinging the ball all over the court (while also nearly always leading the league in assist rate, as they are this year). However, they have lowered that turnover rate this year, with Jimmy Butler being a stabilizing influence. The Clippers rank 23rd in turnover rate, the worst of any playoff team in the NBA. Again, giving the Warriors fastbreak opportunities is death – Steph is simply too good in those situations. The Clippers’ turnovers have been a bugaboo for them all year, and it would be a shame for that weakness to bite them in this critical game.

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