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Wikipedia

Los Angeles Clippers

The Los Angeles Clippers are an American professional basketball team based in the Greater Los Angeles area. The Clippers compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA) as a member of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference. The Clippers recently played their home games at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles from 1999 to 2024, which they had shared with NBA's Los Angeles Lakers, the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA), and the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL), and will play in the Intuit Dome beginning with the 2024–25 NBA season.

Los Angeles Clippers
2023–24 Los Angeles Clippers season
ConferenceWestern
DivisionPacific
Founded1970
HistoryBuffalo Braves
1970–1978
San Diego Clippers
1978–1984
Los Angeles Clippers
1984–present[1][2]
ArenaIntuit Dome
LocationInglewood, California
Team colorsRoyal blue, red, black, silver, white[3][4][5]
         
Main sponsorPayPal Honey[6]
PresidentLawrence Frank[7]
General managerTrent Redden
Head coachTyronn Lue
OwnershipSteve Ballmer[8]
Affiliation(s)San Diego Clippers
Championships0
Conference titles0
Division titles3 (2013, 2014, 2024)
Websitewww.nba.com/clippers
Association
Icon
Statement
City

The franchise was founded as the Buffalo Braves in 1970 as an expansion team. Led by Hall of Famer Bob McAdoo, the Braves reached the NBA playoffs three times during their eight seasons in Buffalo, New York. Conflicts with the Canisius Golden Griffins over the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium and the sale of the franchise led to their relocation from Buffalo to San Diego, California in 1978 and subsequent rebranding as the San Diego Clippers, in reference to the sailing ships synonymous with San Diego Bay.[9] The team saw little success on the court and missed the playoffs during all six of their years in San Diego. In 1984, owner Donald Sterling controversially relocated the franchise to Los Angeles without NBA approval. The NBA spent more than three years on a lawsuit to force the team back to San Diego before eventually dropping the suit in exchange for Sterling paying a fine.

Arguably the least successful franchise in North American professional sports, the Clippers qualified for the postseason only four times and won a single playoff round during their first 27 seasons in Los Angeles. They were frequently considered a perennial loser in American professional sports, drawing unfavorable comparisons to the historically successful Lakers.

The Clippers' reputation improved during the 2010s, which saw them transform into consistent postseason contenders. Aided by the "Lob City" lineup of Blake Griffin, DeAndre Jordan, and Chris Paul, the team qualified for the playoffs in six consecutive seasons from 2012 to 2017 and won two consecutive division titles in 2013 and 2014, both firsts for the franchise. Despite this success, the Clippers struggled in the postseason and were frequently eliminated in the conference semifinals; the team reached the conference finals for the first time in 2021 and lost. To date, they are the oldest franchise in North American professional sports to have never played in a championship game.

Franchise history

1970–1978: Buffalo Braves

 
Bob McAdoo (11) was the NBA MVP in the 1974–75 season after averaging 34.5 points and 14.1 rebounds per game.

The franchise began in Western New York as the Buffalo Braves, one of three NBA expansion franchises that began play in the 1970–71 season, along with the Portland Trail Blazers and Cleveland Cavaliers.[10] They played their home games at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, along with another Buffalo team that would begin play that year, the National Hockey League's Buffalo Sabres.[11]

After two bad seasons, the Braves' fortunes started to change under coach Jack Ramsay and star forward/center Bob McAdoo.[12] McAdoo led the NBA in scoring for three consecutive seasons and was named the league's MVP in the 1974–75 season. The Braves qualified for the playoffs three times in a row, losing twice to the eventual Eastern Conference champions (the Boston Celtics in 1974 and 1976, and the Washington Bullets in 1975). Despite the team's modest success in Buffalo, Braves owner Paul Snyder and the league found it impossible to schedule home games at the auditorium because of the Canisius Golden Griffins men's basketball team, which had a pre-existing lease on the arena and priority on game dates over the Braves, with the next best dates in turn taken by the more successful Sabres.[13] At a time where the NBA was nearing a nadir and the league did not have its current prestige, the Griffins saw the Braves as a threat to their own success, and purposely scheduled better dates at the arena to prevent the Braves from succeeding.[14][15] As a result, after a failed attempt to sell the team to an owner who intended to move it to South Florida, Snyder sold the team to Kentucky Colonels owner John Y. Brown, Jr., who decimated the team's roster, traded away all of its stars, and drove attendance down to the point where they could break their own lease on the arena.[16] Eventually, Brown met with Celtics owner Irv Levin in 1978 so they could trade franchise ownerships. Southern California resident Levin then decided to move the Braves to San Diego, something the league would have never allowed him to do with the Celtics.[17] Asked about the move, Levin nominated a shorter commute for himself as a key reason.[18]

1978–1984: San Diego Clippers

In 1978, San Diego welcomed the relocation of the Buffalo Braves franchise, as the city's previous NBA franchise, the San Diego Rockets, had relocated to Houston seven years earlier in 1971. Another failed basketball franchise in the city had been the San Diego Conquistadors.[18] San Diego team officials did not think "Braves" was a proper representative nickname for the club in San Diego, and a local naming contest ultimately decided on "Clippers", in reference to the city being known for the great sailing ships that passed through San Diego Bay.[9] The first head coach of the Clippers was chosen to be Gene Shue, a respected tactician.[19] He preferred a fast playing style with many scoring opportunities.[19] Only three players from the Braves started in the team: Randy Smith, Swen Nater, and Scott Lloyd.[20] Other starting players included Kermit Washington, and Sidney Wicks.[19] World B. Free was also brought in, in exchange for a future first round pick for the Philadelphia 76ers.[20]

The 1978–79 season started off poorly, with the Clippers' first win coming only in their fourth game, against the Chicago Bulls.[20] The team lost 12 of its 18 first games and dropped to the bottom of the Pacific Division.[21] Player Kevin Kunnert argued they had the "killer instinct of a field mouse".[21] The worst loss came against the San Antonio Spurs, with a loss of 163 to 125.[21] Nevertheless, within weeks, Free had become the leading scorer, as well as becoming a public icon.[21] He finished second overall in NBA scoring average, with 28.9 per game (George Gervin of the San Antonio Spurs had a 29.6 average). Shue, meanwhile, tried to create a team spirit by creating a common social life.[22] By the annual break for the All-Star game, however, the Clippers had improved, winning half of their 54 games, leading to a sixth ranking in the Western Conference.[23] Aiming for one of the six play-off spots for the Conference, they managed to win eight games in a row, and then another five games consecutively.[23] Playing at the San Diego Sports Arena, the Clippers posted a record of 43–39 in their first season in California under, leaving them two wins shy of the final playoff spot. It was also the first season in Southern California for long-time announcer Ralph Lawler began his association with the franchise.

The 1979–80 season saw the Clippers begin to struggle, despite adding center Bill Walton, a San Diego native who was two years removed from winning an NBA Championship and the NBA Most Valuable Player Award with the Portland Trail Blazers. Walton missed 68 games in his first season in San Diego due to foot injuries (which he also suffered in his final years in Portland). San Diego finished 35–47, as Walton and other key players missed significant time due to injuries. Free again finished second in league scoring, with 30.2 points per game. Paul Silas replaced Shue as head coach the following season, and the Clippers finished 36–46, again missing the postseason. Walton missed the entire season due to foot injuries, while Free was traded to the Golden State Warriors in exchange for guard Phil Smith.

The 1981–82 season brought ultimately unwelcome changes to the franchise as Levin sold the team to Los Angeles-area real estate developer and attorney Donald Sterling for $12.5 million. The Clippers experienced poor play, as foot injuries again caused Walton to miss the entire season, and the team limped to a 17–65 record. Rumors of a move to Sterling's hometown of Los Angeles and franchise mismanagement plagued the team immediately from the onset of Sterling's acquisition. On one occasion, Sterling was fined $10,000 by the NBA, the largest sum ever levied by the NBA against an owner at the time, for publicly guaranteeing the Clippers would lose enough games to contend for a high enough draft pick to select Ralph Sampson. On another, he was fined for flying his players to away games in coach seats on commercial airliners, a violation of the league's collective bargaining agreement. Hotels refused to house the Clippers because of alleged non-payment for previous accommodations on multiple occasions. A bus company in Newark once stranded the team at the airport after Sterling failed to pay for previous trips, which nearly caused the team to miss a scheduled regular-season game that day against the New Jersey Nets.[24]

Sterling attempted to relocate the franchise to Los Angeles in June 1982 but the NBA denied his request. Sterling then filed an unsuccessful antitrust lawsuit against the league, which subsequently filed a countersuit against the club and the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, which Sterling had a tentative agreement with to become the franchise's new home.[25] The attempted move, combined with the franchise mismanagement issues, prompted an investigation of the Clippers by an NBA committee of other owners. In September of that year, the committee recommended that Sterling's ownership be terminated, having found that he was late in paying creditors and players.[26] Days before a league scheduled vote in October to remove Sterling, he agreed to sell the team, and the league sought buyers who would keep the franchise in San Diego. At the suggestion of David Stern, then the league's vice president, Sterling was able to maintain his position as owner, by instead handing over operations duties of the franchise to Alan Rothenberg, who became the team's president. By February 1983, Stern called the Clippers a "first-class" franchise, and the ouster of Sterling was no longer pursued.[27] Later in 1983, Larry Fleisher, then the general counsel of the National Basketball Players Association, stated ''in all my years of involvement with the NBA, no team ever provided as much difficulties for the players than the Clippers under Sterling." "He almost caused three strikes last season.''[26] The team's final two seasons in San Diego were not much better on the court despite Walton finally returning to action, finishing 25–57 in 1982–83 and 30–52 in 1983–84.

In 1984, Sterling, despite again being denied permission from the NBA to do so, moved the Clippers north to Los Angeles. The NBA subsequently fined Sterling $25 million for violating league rules and filed a lawsuit demanding the franchise be returned to San Diego. The league threatened to dissolve the franchise if ownership did not comply and return the team to San Diego.[28][29] Sterling then filed another antitrust lawsuit against the league (for $100 million). This time, thanks to the court decision that allowed Al Davis to move the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League (NFL) to Los Angeles, it appeared Sterling would win his case. The league soon agreed to drop their lawsuit in exchange for Sterling dropping his case, allowing him to keep the team in Los Angeles and decreasing his fine to $6 million.[30]

Forty years after the NBA Clippers left San Diego, the Ontario Clippers of the NBA G League would relocate from Ontario, California starting with the 2024–25 season, adopting the San Diego Clippers name as well as the modernized version of the "three sails" logo.[31]

1984–1989: Move to Los Angeles, and early struggles

 
Los Angeles Clippers secondary logo from 1991 to 2010. A variation was used from 2010 to 2015.

In 1984, despite the pending lawsuits between franchise ownership and the NBA following the move, the Clippers began play at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.[30] The Clippers finished their first season in Los Angeles 31–51 under head coach Jim Lynam.

The Clippers' early days in Los Angeles were marred with many seasons of hapless performances. Despite fielding a squad of talented veterans, the organization suffered systematic injuries to many of its star players. The phenomenon was dubbed the "Clipper Triangle" by some sportswriters, a reference to the Bermuda Triangle urban legend.[32] Derek Smith suffered a knee injury during the 1985–86 season, followed by Norm Nixon (knee) and Marques Johnson (spinal cord) the following season.[32] The team's 12–70 finish in the 1987 season was the second-worst single-season record in NBA history at the time (and is now the third-worst winning percentage in NBA history, behind the 1973 Philadelphia 76ers and the 2012 Charlotte Bobcats). That same season also saw Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor join the team as the general manager and vice president of basketball operations. Nixon suffered an ailing Achilles tendon in 1987–88 season, while number one draft pick rookie Danny Manning injured his anterior cruciate ligament during the 1988–89 campaign.[32]

1989–1994: Playoff appearances

 
Ken Norman, the Clippers' scoring leader in 1988–89, was a key part of the team's nucleus during the late 1980s and early 1990s

The Clippers traded the rights to the recently drafted Danny Ferry and Reggie Williams for high-scoring shooting guard Ron Harper at the start of the 1989–90 season. Los Angeles had a 19–19 record nearly halfway into the season, prompting some to seriously consider the team as a possible playoff contender.[32] That move, along with the 1987 NBA draft of Ken Norman, the 1988 selections of Danny Manning and Charles Smith (Smith was acquired from Philadelphia in exchange for the draft rights to Hersey Hawkins), and the 1990 draft of Loy Vaught, formed a nucleus that would make the franchise a playoff contender.

Midway through the 1991–92 season, the Clippers made yet another coaching change. Larry Brown, recently fired by the San Antonio Spurs, was hired as the team's head coach in late January 1992. He replaced Mike Schuler, who had led the team to a 22–25 record before his firing. Brown finished the season with a 23–12 mark, for a 45–37 overall—the franchise's first winning season in 13 years. For the first time since moving to Los Angeles, they finished with a better record than the crosstown Los Angeles Lakers. The Clippers advanced to the playoffs for the first time in 16 years (since the franchise's Buffalo heyday), but were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Utah Jazz, 3–2. Due to the late April 1992 Los Angeles riots, the Anaheim Convention Center was the site of Game 4 of the series, which the Clippers won. The team made the playoffs again in the 1992–93 season with a 41–41 record, but lost again in five games in the first round, this time to the Rockets.

Brown left to become the Indiana Pacers' head coach after the season and Bob Weiss was brought in to replace him. That 1993–94 season proved to be one of the worst in Los Angeles history, with the Clippers and Lakers going a combined 60–104. In February 1994, the Clippers traded Manning to the Atlanta Hawks for Dominique Wilkins. Wilkins played 25 games for the club, averaging 29.1 points, 7.0 rebounds, and 2.2 assists in 37.9 minutes per game. After one year on the job, Weiss was fired, Wilkins left in free agency, and veteran head coach Bill Fitch was brought in to guide a new roster of young and inexperienced players.

1994–2000: Fitch, Anaheim and the move to Staples Center

Anaheim relocation talks

Anaheim, a suburb approximately thirty miles (48 km) south of Downtown Los Angeles in Orange County, expressed interest in obtaining an NBA franchise. The city, expecting to lose the NFL's Los Angeles Rams (who relocated to St. Louis in 1995 for 21 seasons, before moving back to Los Angeles in 2016), was looking for a new professional team and began courting the Clippers, who struggled to carve out an identity competing against the popular Lakers for audience share. From 1994 to 1999, the Clippers played several games annually (usually five to eight regular-season games a season, and an annual preseason game) at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, sharing the venue with the NHL's Ducks and the Splash indoor soccer team. Clippers games regularly drew a much-higher average attendance per game at the Pond than when the team played its home games at their regular venue, the Los Angeles Sports Arena; the Anaheim games proved so popular that many Clippers players and much of the fan base, as well as the NBA, wanted to the team to stay in what was considered at the time a state-of-the-art arena.[citation needed] For instance, between 1994 and 1997, the Clippers drew an average of nearly 16,000 fans per game at the Pond, while in Los Angeles, they drew in the neighborhood of 9,200 per home game.[33] Anaheim officials and the Clippers had had on-going talks about moving to Anaheim full-time years before the Pond was eventually built,[34] as Donald Sterling was pursuing options to play elsewhere in the Los Angeles metropolitan region if there was not a replacement for the Sports Arena being built.

The Clippers, however, nearly moved to Anaheim permanently in time for the 1996–97 season, but according to a Los Angeles Times article published in June 1996,[35] owner Donald Sterling turned down a deal that would have paid the team $95 million over 12 years. Odgen Corporation, who at the time managed the Pond, and the city of Anaheim offered the Clippers a multi-tiered deal that would have included upwards of $33 million paid to the team over the first six years of their Pond agreement, plus other monies allocated towards new locker rooms, team offices, and a practice facility. In another related Times article,[36] Odgen and Sterling were in talks to have the management company take care of the Clippers' day-to-day operations for a $4 million a year fee. Also at the time, the Walt Disney Company, owners of the Ducks and Anaheim Angels baseball team during that period, were pursuing at least a partial ownership of the Clippers, with the key element being that its game telecasts would be part of a planned ESPN regional network for Southern California. However, as the planned ESPN West network never came to reality, all three teams had continued to maintain broadcast partnerships with Fox Sports West and Prime Ticket. This remained a sticking point in any deal to relocate to Anaheim, eventually leaving the team to remain in Los Angeles.

Bill Fitch era

On the court, the Clippers continued to make frequent roster changes throughout this particular period, which only resulted in one playoff appearance under Fitch. Along with Loy Vaught, a collection of young players (including Lamond Murray, Eric Piatkowski, and Lorenzen Wright), and journeyman veterans (among them Pooh Richardson, Tony Massenburg, Rodney Rogers, Darrick Martin, and Brian Williams), the Fitch-coached teams during this particular era struggled mightily, although they did make the playoffs once during this time. The 1996–97 team made the playoffs with a losing record (36–46) and were swept in the first round by the eventual Western Conference champions, the Utah Jazz, three games to none.

Four members of the 1996–97 squad are now deceased. Malik Sealy died in a car accident in 2000, Kevin Duckworth died of heart disease in 2008, Lorenzen Wright went missing and was murdered in 2010, and Dwayne Schintzius died from cancer complications in 2012. Two other players from the Fitch era suffered tragic circumstances of their own; Brian Williams (who played for the Clippers during the 1995–96 season, and later became known as Bison Dele) was believed to have been murdered by his brother while the two were vacationing in 2002 while in the South Pacific, and Rodney Rogers became paralyzed after a dirt bike crash in 2008 in his native North Carolina.[37]

In December, Vaught, the team's leading scorer for the past three seasons, had season-ending back surgery. Without Vaught, the Clippers finished 17–65, the third-worst record in the league. Fitch was fired after the 1997–98 season (and later sued the team to recover the remaining money on his contract), and was replaced by one of his proteges, former Celtics and Bucks coach Chris Ford. Meanwhile, Vaught's career as a Clipper was effectively finished, as he left as a free agent after that season, and signed with the Detroit Pistons; at the time of his departure, he was the franchise's all-time rebounds leader with 4,471 (a number that was later surpassed by Elton Brand, with 4,710).[38]

The Clippers won the first overall pick in the 1998 Draft Lottery and selected center Michael Olowokandi from University of the Pacific. The team had a 0–17 start and finished with a 9–41 record in the lockout-shortened 1998–99 season. They were led by second-year forward Maurice Taylor, who averaged 16.8 points per game, and won the fourth overall pick in the following draft, which coincided with their move to the Staples Center. The Clippers would draft Lamar Odom, and then hired former All-Star (and Los Angeles native) Dennis Johnson as an assistant coach, as well as Hall of Fame former Laker great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar to help tutor Olowokandi during his second-year. Johnson remained an assistant coach until the middle of the 2002–03 season, when he took over as head coach. Abdul-Jabbar remained only one season, detailing a lack of improvement in Olowokandi, who is largely considered one of the biggest draft busts in league history.

During the 1999 off-season, Rodney Rogers signed with the Phoenix Suns. The Clippers also sent Lamond Murray to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Derek Anderson and Johnny Newman. However, Newman was then traded to the New Jersey Nets for Eric Murdock a month later without ever playing a game for the Clippers. The team finished with the worst record in the league (15–67) in the 1999–2000 season, while the Lakers had the best record that year (67–15), and won the NBA championship.

Move to Staples Center

In what was supposed to be a counter-move, the Coliseum Commission, the management entity that managed the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena and Coliseum, had planned to build a new 18,700-seat arena in the parking lot next to the Sports Arena that would have cost up to $94 million, that would have included 1,100 club seats, 84 luxury suites, and an on-site practice facility for the Clippers. However, those plans were scuttled once planning for Staples Center (two miles directly up the street from the Sports Arena) were taking place, and the Clippers decided to become a tenant at Staples.[citation needed]

In 1999, the Clippers joined the Lakers and Los Angeles Kings in the new Staples Center in Downtown Los Angeles.[39] In sharing the building with other tenants, such as the more popular Lakers, the Clippers, with relatively low success, were often overshadowed.[citation needed] Also, because of the terms of its leasing agreement with Staples Center, the Kings and Lakers had scheduling priority over the Clippers, with the Clippers taking whatever dates that were available, including scheduling same-day Clipper-Laker and Clipper-King doubleheaders. However, in the years after, the Clippers' scheduling at Staples Center became gradually more favorable (especially given the popularity of the team in recent years) in their lease renewals in 2004 and 2013, with the team receiving increased profits, including more of a share of luxury suite and concession revenue. Since February 2011, the Clippers have sold out every regular season and postseason home game, behind the popularity of stars Blake Griffin, DeAndre Jordan, and Chris Paul.[citation needed]

2000–2009: Further struggles at Staples Center

The 2000–01 season brought changes. Derek Strong was sent to the Orlando Magic in exchange for Corey Maggette and the draft rights to Keyon Dooling. The Clippers' two draft picks that year were childhood friends from Illinois: high schooler Darius Miles (3rd overall pick) and Quentin Richardson (18th overall pick). The team became popular among fans with its high-flying style of basketball and the Clippers did improve slightly, registering a 31–51 record. The team also lead the NBA in bench-scoring, with 37 points per game.

To improve upon the previous season, the Clippers acquired high-scoring and rebounding power forward Elton Brand from the Chicago Bulls in exchange for the draft rights to Tyson Chandler. Brand earned a spot on the 2002 NBA Western Conference All-Star team as an injury replacement for Shaquille O'Neal. The Clippers contended for most of the season, but won only 3 of the last 12 games and finished 39–43, five games out of the playoffs. In order to seriously challenge for playoff contention in 2003, the franchise traded Miles to the Cavaliers for Andre Miller, who led the NBA in assists in 2001–02 with 11 per game. With a seasoned point guard in Miller, Lamar Odom at small forward, one of the league's best power forwards in Brand, and center Olowokandi, as well as having the best supporting cast in the league, the Clippers threatened a potential playoff run. However, poor team chemistry and injuries (the Clippers lost 293 man-games to injury), they finished with a disappointing 27–55 record. Coach Alvin Gentry was also replaced, with Dennis Johnson entering midway through the 2002–03 season.

After the dismal season prior, the team lost several of its core players, with Miller, Odom, Olowakandi, and forward Eric Piatkowski (who was one of the longest-tenured players in franchise history)[40] departing via free agency prior to the 2003–04 season. The team opted to retain Brand and Maggette with long-term contracts. They, along with Richardson, made up one of the NBA's best high-scoring trios, with a combined 58 points per game. With new head coach Mike Dunleavy, Sr., they finished 28–54, due to inexperience and injuries. The following season again saw the team missing the playoffs, although, they posted a better record than the Lakers for the first time since 1993. Bobby Simmons, a former second-round pick, won the 2004–05 NBA Most Improved Player award after averaging 16 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 assists per game. As a result, Simmons signed a 5-year, $47 million deal with the Milwaukee Bucks. To counter Simmons' defection, the Clippers announced they would sign Cuttino Mobley. Mobley's contract was identical in length, but for five million less than Simmons', and marked the first significant free-agent signing from outside the organization since Walton in the late 1970s. The Clippers also completed the building of a practice facility (the first NBA practice facility within the four corners of the City of Los Angeles) in the Playa Vista development.[41] Midway through the season, the Clippers traded Marko Jarić (in a sign and trade transaction) and Lionel Chalmers to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for Sam Cassell and a lottery-protected first round pick in the 2006 NBA draft.

The 2005–06 season was a turning point for the team's image; marked by several wins over top teams, Brand's performances were greatly praised, and he was chosen for the All-Star Game. Many sports writers noted the team's improvement, especially after acquiring sharpshooter Vladimir Radmanović from the Seattle SuperSonics in exchange for big-man Chris Wilcox.[citation needed] While the team had a few stretches of poor play, they were able to maintain a solid record, including posting several winning streaks. They achieved their first winning record in 14 seasons, and clinched their first playoff spot since 1997. They also finished with a better record than the Lakers for the second straight year. By finishing sixth in the Western Conference, with a record of 47–35 (their highest finish since the team left Buffalo), they benefited from the current NBA playoff format of regular-season records taking precedence over winning the division, and secured home court advantage over the Denver Nuggets.

On April 22, 2006, the Clippers won their first NBA playoff game in 13 years. Two days later, they won their second playoff game, going 2–0 against an opponent for the first time in franchise history. They lost Game 3, won Game 4, and on May 1, they won Game 5 in Los Angeles. This would mark their first playoff series win since they moved from Buffalo. In the next round, the team faced the Phoenix Suns. After losing a close Game 1, they won Game 2, 122–97. The series shifted to Staples Center for Game 3, but the Suns won, 94–91. In Game 4, Brand posted 30 points, nine rebounds, and eight assists as the Clippers evened the series. In Game 5, Raja Bell made a key 3-pointer for the Suns with 1.1 seconds left in the first overtime to send the game into a second overtime. However, Phoenix won in double-overtime, 125–118. They bounced back with a series-saving 118–106 Game 6 win. Second-year defensive specialist Quinton Ross had a timely offensive game, scoring a then career-high 18 points. Brand had 30 points (his scoring average in this series), 12 rebounds, and five blocks. Corey Maggette came off the bench to score 25 points, with 7–8 shooting from the field, and 9–9 from the free-throw line. Kaman and Cassell each scored 15 points. However, the Clippers lost the seventh game, 127–107. General Manager (and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame member) Elgin Baylor won the NBA Executive of the Year award for leading the Clippers' playoff run.

The 2006 off-season started as the team drafted Paul Davis in the second round of the 2006 NBA draft, as the 34th overall pick. The pick was acquired by the Clippers by way of a 2004 trade for Melvin Ely. The team also drafted Guillermo Diaz as the 52nd overall pick. While Davis signed with the team, Diaz decided to play overseas. However, the team still holds his draft rights. Meanwhile, in free agency, they signed Tim Thomas away from divisional Phoenix, in a four-year, $24 million deal. That was to counter the defection of Vladimir Radmanović to the Lakers in a similar deal. Radmanovic's contract lasted another year, but both players would make the same amount of money annually, which would be $6 million. Cassell (widely credited as the biggest reason for the Clippers' recent success) re-signed on a two-year, $13 million deal, while the team also signed veteran Aaron Williams to an undisclosed deal.

In September, the Clippers also announced a radio broadcast deal with KSPN-AM, the local ESPN Radio-operated outlet. Despite several additions, the team did not perform to expectations, with a lack of team chemistry and injuries to several key players, including Cassell, Thomas, and Kaman, forcing the team to sign journeymen Luke Jackson, Alvin Williams, and Doug Christie to help solidify the team's bench. The season disappointment extended as Shaun Livingston suffered a dislocated left knee in which he tore every ligament in his knee. This was one of the most devastating injuries that season, and considered one of the worst in league history.[42] The extent of the injury was so severe, local news outlets such as KCBS-TV/KCAL-TV and KNBC-TV elected not to air the clip of the injury. According to the team's lead physician, Dr. Tony Daly, Livingston's prognosis for him to return to basketball activity was eight months (which was around the first week of the upcoming season) to a full calendar year.[43] The Clippers finished the season 40–42, two games behind the eighth-seed, while the Lakers finished with a better record for the first time since the 2003–04 season. The Clippers received the 14th draft pick from the NBA lottery in the 2007 NBA Draft, selecting Al Thornton.

The 2007–08 season started off negatively, with Brand rupturing his left Achilles tendon. Brand missed most of the season, and the team struggled to stay competitive. Chris Kaman took advantage of a depleted roster by averaging 15.7 points and 12.7 rebounds per game, but was limited to playing 56 games, also due to various injuries. The Clippers ended the season 23–59, and the team aimed to rebuild for the following season. Both Brand and Maggette were allowed to depart, while ten players were acquired. Brand stated his desire to stay, but the contract faltered, allowing him to move to the Philadelphia 76ers. Baron Davis, a Los Angeles native and formerly of the Golden State Warriors, signed a five-year contract with the Clippers, worth an estimated $65 million.[44] In the upcoming draft, the Clippers obtained the seventh pick, and selected Eric Gordon.[45] They also selected DeAndre Jordan, who was picked 35th overall. Mike Taylor, the 55th overall pick, was acquired from the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for a future second-round pick.

In July 2008, they acquired Marcus Camby from the Denver Nuggets in return for a $10 million trade exception and the choice to exchange second round picks with the Clippers in 2010.[46] The Clippers also acquired guard Jason Hart from the Utah Jazz, in exchange for guard Brevin Knight,[47] and signed Ricky Davis to a one-year deal.[48] They continued an active off-season by re-signing former Clippers player Brian Skinner in July, while trading for Steve Novak. The team would also sign Jason Williams to a one-year deal.[49] However, just prior to the start of training camp in September, Williams announced his retirement. Other mid-season acquisitions came in the form of Zach Randolph and Mardy Collins, who arrived from the New York Knicks in exchange for Tim Thomas and Cuttino Mobley.[50] This trade made Kaman the sole member still on the team from their playoff run two years prior.

In October 2008, Baylor ended his 22-year reign as vice president and general manager of basketball operations. It remains one of the longest tenures in professional sports history. The Clippers indicated that Baylor had retired from his post,[51] and as a result, head coach Mike Dunleavy, Sr. assumed the role of General Manager, while director of player personnel Neil Olshey was promoted to assistant general manager.[52][53][54] However, several other reports indicated Baylor had been fired or resigned, and when questioned, Baylor responded he had been advised by his attorneys not to comment on the matter.[55] This prompted speculation that the team and Baylor were in negotiations to work out a settlement agreement for his departure, with Baylor reportedly working without a formal contract since the early 1990s.

The 2008–09 season ended with the team 14th in the Western Conference, with a record of 19–63.[56] They were then awarded the first overall pick in the 2009 NBA draft.

2009–2011: The arrival of Blake Griffin and steady improvement

With the first overall pick, the team selected Blake Griffin. To clear a spot in the lineup for him, they traded Zach Randolph to Memphis for Quentin Richardson. Richardson was then traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Sebastian Telfair, Craig Smith, and Mark Madsen.[57]

Griffin immediately impressed in training camp and preseason. On October 23, he broke his kneecap during the Clippers' final exhibition game against the New Orleans Hornets, following a dunk. Initially, the Clippers' stated that he only had a sore left knee, which would make him questionable for the season opener the following night, before they revealed the break. The injury sidelined Griffin for the entire season.[58]

On February 4, 2010, head coach Mike Dunleavy resigned, and Kim Hughes was named interim coach.[59] Dunleavy retained his front-office title and duties for just over a month, but on March 10 he was fired as General Manager, being replaced by Neil Olshey. Dunleavy received the news of his dismissal from the internet, as well as friends and reporters calling his cell phone.[60] The Los Angeles Times reported that Dunleavy had filed for arbitration and that the Clippers had cut off his salary, even though his guaranteed contract did not end until after the 2010–11 season.[61] Although the Clippers saw minor improvement, finishing with ten more wins at 29–53, Hughes was fired as head coach at the end of the season.

In July, former Chicago Bulls coach Vinny Del Negro was hired as the next head coach.[62] In August, the team introduced new uniform designs at a photoshoot, at the team's practice facility. Griffin and DeAndre Jordan, who saw significant improvement in his two years with the team, modeled the new uniforms, which were re-designed for the first time since the 2000–01 season.[63] The Clippers' primary and secondary logos, which are modifications of the previous ones, were introduced to the public weeks earlier, on the night of the 2010 NBA draft, where the Clippers selected Al-Farouq Aminu eighth overall.

With an improved Gordon, stalwart Kaman, rookie Aminu, starting center Jordan, a re-energized Baron Davis, and the debut of Griffin, the Clippers had high hopes for the season. However, they started slowly, losing ten of the first 11 games, with Davis and Kaman out with injuries. However, the Clippers showed strength when three of their first four wins came from the top teams in the Western Conference. Griffin got off to a strong start, drawing increased media attention in Clippers games and boosting ratings of local broadcasts of Clippers games.[64] Griffin was chosen as a Western Conference Reserve in the 2011 NBA All-Star Game, a rare honor for a rookie, the first chosen by the coaches for the game since Tim Duncan in 1997. He also won the NBA Sprite Slam Dunk Contest, and was named the Rookie of the Year as the team finished with a record of 32–50. As the trade deadline approached, the Clippers sent Baron Davis along with their 2011 first-round draft pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Mo Williams and Jamario Moon. The pick eventually became the number one overall pick, which the Cavaliers used to select Kyrie Irving.

2011–2017: Arrival of Chris Paul and "Lob City"

In December 2011, the Clippers signed Caron Butler to a $24 million deal and claimed veteran point guard Chauncey Billups three days later. On December 14, they traded Eric Gordon, Chris Kaman, Al-Farouq Aminu and Minnesota's 2012 first-round pick acquired in 2005 for New Orleans Hornets' four-time all-star Chris Paul. Paul had previously almost been traded to the Los Angeles Lakers, but NBA commissioner David Stern had vetoed the trade (the NBA was owner of the Hornets at the time). Paul and Griffin were selected as starters for the Western Conference team in the 2012 NBA All-Star Game, the first time in franchise history the team had two All-Star starters in the same year.

The team gained the nickname "Lob City" due to a comment made by Griffin during the Clippers Media Day when the announcement of Chris Paul's trade reached the team. Griffin, after being told the news by Jordan, declared, "Yeah! It's going to be lob city!"[65]

In February 2012, the Clippers signed Kenyon Martin. An 11-year NBA veteran and former NBA All-Star (2004), Martin joined the Clippers after signing with the Xinjiang Guanghui Flying Tigers of the Chinese Basketball Association the previous summer. On February 6, 2012, during a game against the Orlando Magic, Billups tore his Achilles tendon and missed the remainder of the season. In March 2012, Nick Young joined the Clippers as part of a three-team trade with the Washington Wizards and the Denver Nuggets. He became the eighth player to debut in the 2011–12 season.

After a stretch that saw the Clippers lose 12 of 19 games after Billups's season-ending injury, with rumors of Vinny Del Negro's career as head coach of the Clippers possibly coming to an abrupt end, Los Angeles went on a tear.[66] The Clippers won 12 of their next 14 games, including road wins over the defending champions Dallas Mavericks and the Western Conference-leading Oklahoma City Thunder, clinching their fifth playoff berth since their 1976 conference semifinals loss to the Boston Celtics (the last time they made the playoffs as the Buffalo Braves) before a dominating home win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on April 16, 2012. It was their third win in four regular-season games against the Thunder. Chris Paul's push for the NBA Most Valuable Player Award was at its peak, and the 2011–12 season was the first time the Clippers were in the playoffs since 2005–06 season.

In their first playoff game, the Clippers rallied from a 27-point deficit against the Grizzlies to win 99–98 in one of the biggest rallies in playoff history. They led the series 3–1, then lost two straight, before coming back to win Game 7 in Memphis 82–72, becoming the sixth NBA road team to win Game 7 after leading series 3–1, and prevail to the second round. The Clippers relied on their bench during that game, and they came through, scoring all but two of their points in the fourth quarter. In the second round of the playoffs, the team was swept by the San Antonio Spurs.[67] The following off-season, GM Neil Olshey reached an agreement to become General Manager of the Portland Trail Blazers.[68] Olshey was replaced by Gary Sacks. On draft night, the team re-acquired Lamar Odom from the Dallas Mavericks as part of a four-team deal that also sent Mo Williams and Furkan Aldemir, their 2012 draftee, to the Utah Jazz and Houston Rockets, respectively. The team then sent Reggie Evans to the Brooklyn Nets for the right to swap second-round draft picks with the Nets in the 2016 NBA draft.[69] On the same day, the Clippers signed free agent Jamal Crawford, formerly of the Portland Trail Blazers, and re-signed Billups to a one-year deal. The franchise then rounded out its roster for the upcoming season with Grant Hill, Ryan Hollins, and Ronny Turiaf, while signing Matt Barnes to a one-year deal early in the season.

On November 29, 2012, public address announcer David Courtney died in hospital, and was replaced by former Clippers and current Los Angeles Dodgers PA announcer, Eric Smith. On December 15, with a 111–85 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks, the Clippers recorded their record ninth consecutive win, breaking their previous franchise record (in Los Angeles) of eight wins set in the 1991–92 season.[70] On December 21, with a 97–85 win over the Sacramento Kings, they notched their twelfth consecutive victory, breaking their previous 11-game streak as the Buffalo Braves in the 1974–75 season.[71] On December 30, the Clippers recorded a team-record 17th straight win against the Utah Jazz, beating them 107–96. The win also made the Clippers the third team in NBA history to record an undefeated month ending the month of December 16–0. The streak ended when they lost to the Denver Nuggets on January 2, 2013.

 
Doc Rivers became head coach during the 2013 off-season.

On January 9, 2013, with a 99–93 victory over the Dallas Mavericks, the Clippers recorded another franchise record with their 13th straight home victory.[72] On January 12, the Clippers 13 game home win streak came to an end with a 104–101 loss to the Orlando Magic.[73] A 126–101 victory over the Phoenix Suns saw the Clippers reach the 50-win mark for the first time in franchise history, breaking their previous mark of 49 from 1974–75, when they were in Buffalo.[74] On April 7, with a 109–95 victory over the Lakers, they swept the LA season series, and clinched their first division title in franchise history.[75] They would finish the season with a 56–26 record, and entered the playoffs as the fourth seed, to once again face the fifth seeded Memphis Grizzlies. The Clippers would go up 2–0 early in the series after a buzzer beater by Chris Paul in game 2. After being up 2–0 in the series, the Clippers would lose 4 games in a row to be eliminated the first round. This caused the team to not renew Vinny Del Negro's contract as head coach, and acquired Doc Rivers from the Boston Celtics.[76] The deal was announced to have included two future first-round draft picks, in addition to an anti-trade clause preventing the Clippers and Celtics from engaging in further transactions amongst each other, including the exchanging of players, for the duration of the 2013–14 season.[77][78][79]

On July 3, 2013, the Clippers traded Eric Bledsoe and Caron Butler to the Phoenix Suns for Jared Dudley and JJ Redick (from the Milwaukee Bucks). The Clippers and Suns also sent a second-round pick each to the Bucks. On July 7, the team re-signed Barnes, Paul, and Ryan Hollins. Paul's deal was for 5 years, worth around $105.3 million. The team also signed Darren Collison to fill the back-up point guard role, replacing Bledsoe and free agent Chauncey Billups, who signed with the Detroit Pistons. On August 28, the Clippers signed free agent power forward Antawn Jamison to a one-year deal worth the veteran minimum. Jamison only appeared in 22 games, and was eventually traded to the Atlanta Hawks on February 20, 2014, in exchange for the draft rights to Cenk Akyol. On December 19, 2013, the Clippers signed free agent small forward Stephen Jackson. Jackson also appeared sporadically, and was eventually waived on January 7, 2014. On January 16, the Clippers signed free agent small forward Hedo Türkoğlu, while also acquiring both Glen Davis and Danny Granger for the remainder of 2013–14 season. On March 6, the Clippers defeated their crosstown rivals by 48 points 142–94, the most lopsided victory ever for the Clippers' franchise, and the most one-sided loss in Lakers history. On April 15, the Clippers broke the franchise record of wins with 57. In the playoffs, they defeated the Warriors in seven games before falling again, this time to the Thunder, in six games in the second round.

Donald Sterling controversy

On April 25, 2014, entertainment news website TMZ released a taped conversation in which team owner Donald Sterling—who had a history of accusations of racist behavior against African Americans and Latinos dating back to the 1990s—reprimanded V. Stiviano (of African American and Mexican heritage, who had reportedly been dating Sterling while he was estranged from wife) for posting an Instagram photo featuring her, former Los Angeles Lakers point guard Magic Johnson, and another woman. Sterling stated that it bothered him that she had "broadcast that [she is] associating with black people", and that he did not want Stiviano to bring them to the team's games.[80] The remarks in the tape caused public backlash (including condemnations from many players, with Johnson, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Charles Barkley, Shaquille O'Neal, LeBron James, and Kobe Bryant all voicing their disapproval); several sponsors also severed ties with the team, among them Kia Motors (for whom Griffin serves as its television spokesperson), State Farm Insurance, and Virgin America.[81] Threats of boycotts against the Clippers were also considered, with the team itself briefly contemplating one at the April 27 playoff game against the Golden State Warriors (the fourth game in the team's first round playoff series). They opted to conduct a silent protest instead, by wearing their shirts inside-out, obscuring team logos.[82][83]

On April 29, the NBA issued Sterling a lifetime ban from the organization after a league investigation into the recording confirmed that he was the one conversing with Stiviano. The league also issued a $2.5 million fine against Sterling (the highest allowable by the NBA) and barred him from attending games or practices involving any NBA team; being present in any Clippers office or facility; and from participating in any team business, player personnel decisions or league activity. NBA commissioner Adam Silver stated in a press conference regarding the decision that he will try to force Sterling to sell the Clippers, which would require the consent of three-quarters of the league's 29 other team owners.[84] Silver later announced that the NBA would appoint a CEO to run the team.[85] Before the ban was issued, Sterling told Fox News contributor Jim Gray that he had no plans to sell the team.[86] The NBA installed former Citigroup and Time Warner chairman Richard Parsons as the interim CEO of the team on May 9,[87] prior to allowing Steve Ballmer, a former CEO of Microsoft, to purchase the team for $2 billion.[88][89] To buy the team, Ballmer reportedly beat out other candidates, including Eric Piatkowski and his group, Oprah Winfrey, Floyd Mayweather, Magic Johnson, as well as a group of crowdfunders.[90][91] The team's sale price, which was four times the expected purchase-evaluated price, prompted speculation that Ballmer aimed to relocate the team to Seattle, his hometown. He had previously been a part of an ownership group that had unsuccessfully attempted to move the Sacramento Kings to that city, but later stated no intention to relocate the team.[92]

 
The Clippers hosting the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 of the 2015 NBA playoffs first-round series

On August 12, 2014, Ballmer officially took control of the team following an order by a California court that confirmed the sale from Shelly Sterling to Ballmer. As part of the deal, Shelly received the titles of "Owner Emeritus" and "Clippers' Number 1 Fan", as well as ten tickets in sections 101 or 111 for all Clippers games, two courtside tickets for all games in Los Angeles, six parking spots in Lot C for each game, 12 VIP passes that include access to the Lexus Club, Arena Club, or Chairman's Lounge and Media room or equivalent, for each Staples games, three championship rings following any Clippers title, and will run a charitable foundation.[8][93][94][95] The deal also included a stipulation that Steve Ballmer would keep the Clippers in Los Angeles.[96] On November 6, the team hired its first major female executive as former Auto Club Speedway president Gillian Zucker was hired as the Clippers' president of business operations.[97] Zucker became one of two women to serve in an executive capacity in any of the four major professional sports leagues; the other being Jeanie Buss, president and part-owner of the crosstown Lakers.

2014–2017: Final seasons of Lob City

The Clippers' first regular season under Ballmer's co-ownership ended with a 56–26 record and the third seed in the Western Conference going into the 2015 playoffs. They met the defending NBA champion San Antonio Spurs, winning the series in the seventh game on a game-winning shot by Paul with one second left.[98] In the next series against the second-seeded Houston Rockets, they took a 3–1 series lead that included 25 and 33-point wins in games three and four, respectively. However, Houston won the final three games to eliminate Los Angeles. In the off-season, the Clippers acquired Lance Stephenson,[99] Wesley Johnson,[100] and Paul Pierce[101] while re-signing Austin Rivers.[102] Griffin missed half of the season and the Clippers finished with the fourth playoff seed before being then eliminated in the first round of the 2016 playoffs by the fifth-seeded Portland Trail Blazers.

The Clippers finished the 2016–17 season with a 51–31 record, the team's fifth straight 50-win season, despite injuries to both Griffin and Paul during the regular season.[103] The Clippers won their last seven games and earned the fourth playoff seed by defeating the Sacramento Kings in the final game of the season.[104] The Clippers faced the Utah Jazz in the first round of the playoffs, but lost in seven games. Paul Pierce retired after the season.

2017–2019: Rebuild

In preparation for a rebuild, the Clippers brought in two-time Executive Of The Year winner Jerry West to serve as their special consultant; West was the architect behind the dynasties of the 2000 to 2002 Los Angeles Lakers and mid to late 2010s Golden State Warriors, and had helped to establish the Memphis Grizzlies as a relevant playoff contender.[105] On June 28, 2017, Chris Paul was sent to the Houston Rockets in a sign-and-trade in exchange for Lou Williams, Patrick Beverley, Montrezl Harrell, Sam Dekker, Darrun Hilliard, DeAndre Liggins, Kyle Wiltjer, a future first-round pick, and cash considerations. The team retained Griffin and acquired Italian wing Danilo Gallinari in a three-team trade with the Denver Nuggets and Atlanta Hawks. Due to injuries to Griffin and Gallinari and no serious depth on the roster, the team was struggling by the 2018 trade deadline and traded Griffin to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for Tobias Harris, Avery Bradley, Boban Marjanović, a protected first-round pick in 2018, and a second-round pick in 2019. With the added depth, they finished with a winning record of 42–40 but missed the playoffs for the first time since 2011.

In the 2018 NBA draft, the team were awarded the 12th and 13th overall picks, and selected Miles Bridges and Jerome Robinson, respectively. They then traded Bridges and two future second-round picks on draft night to Charlotte for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Austin Rivers was traded to the Washington Wizards in exchange for Marcin Gortat, while long-time Clipper DeAndre Jordan, who had been with the team since 2008, opted out of his contract and became a free agent.[106] Despite the departure of Griffin and Jordan for the 2018–19 season, the Clippers clinched a playoff berth and finished the regular season with a 48–34 record. The team faced the defending two-time NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the first round, losing in six games.

2019–present: The Paul George/Kawhi Leonard era

In the 2019 off-season, Kawhi Leonard opted out of his final year on his contract with the Toronto Raptors to become one of the top free agents. Leonard chose to sign with the Clippers when the team agreed to trade for the Oklahoma City Thunder's Paul George.[107] For George, the Clippers traded Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari, four unprotected first-round picks, a protected first-round pick, and two pick swaps.

Following the suspension of the 2019–20 NBA season, the Clippers were one of the 22 teams invited to the NBA Bubble to participate in the final 8 games of the regular season.[108] They finished the year with a 49–23 record as the Western Conferences second seed. Despite high expectations, the Clippers failed to win their first conference semifinals series when they were eliminated by the Denver Nuggets in seven games.[109] The defeat marked the second time that the Clippers lost the conference semifinals after taking a 3–1 series lead. A week later, Ballmer announced that Rivers stepped down as head coach in a mutual decision.[110] Rivers was succeeded by Tyronn Lue.

Despite losing Leonard to injury during the 2021 playoffs, the Clippers defeated the top-seeded Utah Jazz in the semifinals, leading them to their first Western Conference finals appearance in franchise history.[111][112] The Clippers lost the conference finals in six games to the Phoenix Suns, preventing them from reaching their first NBA Finals.

On September 17, 2021, ground was broken for the Intuit Dome which will be the Clipper's home arena from the 2024-25 season. Due to Kawhi's injury during the playoffs, Leonard missed the entire 2021-22 season. In August 2021, the Clippers traded Patrick Beverley, Rajon Rondo, and a 2025 pick to the Memphis Grizzlies for Eric Bledsoe, who would be dealt in February 2022 with Justise Winslow and Keon Johnson for Norman Powell and Robert Covington. The Clippers ended the season 42–40, qualifying for the play-in game, but would not make it out due to losses to Minnesota and New Orleans.

In the next season, the Clippers acquired former MVP Russell Westbrook and former All-NBA guard John Wall via free agency. Wall would later be dealt for Eric Gordon as part of a three-team deal. The Clippers would finish the season 44–38 and make the playoffs but be eliminated in the first round due to injuries to Kawhi Leonard and Paul George.

Near the start of the 2023–24 season, the Clippers traded Marcus Morris Sr., Kenyon Martin Jr., Nicolas Batum and Robert Covington to the Philadelphia 76ers for P. J. Tucker, Filip Petrušev and former MVP James Harden. In the Clippers' final season in the Crypto.com Arena, they would start off the season slow, but when Terance Mann replaced Westbrook in the starting lineup, the Clippers went on a roll. They clinched a playoff spot on April 11, 2024, and finished as the fourth seed in the Western Conference with a 51–31 record.

Rivalries

Los Angeles Lakers

The rivalry between the Clippers and the Los Angeles Lakers is unique because they are the only two NBA teams to share an arena, the Crypto.com Arena. It is also one of only two intra-city rivalries in the NBA, the other being the crosstown rivalry between the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets.

Los Angeles fans have historically favored the Lakers.[113][114] Some contend that the term rivalry is inaccurate due to the Lakers historical success and the Clippers historical lack thereof.[115]

Season-by-season record

List of the last five seasons completed by the Clippers. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Los Angeles Clippers seasons.

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, W–L% = Winning percentage

Season GP W L W–L% Finish Playoffs
2019–20 72 49 23 .681 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference semifinals, 3–4 (Nuggets)
2020–21 72 47 25 .653 2nd, Pacific Lost in Conference finals, 2–4 (Suns)
2021–22 82 42 40 .512 3rd, Pacific Did not qualify
2022–23 82 44 38 .537 3rd, Pacific Lost in First Round, 1–4 (Suns)
2023–24 82 51 31 .622 1st, Pacific Lost in First Round, 2–4 (Mavericks)

Home arenas

Move to Intuit Dome

On June 15, 2017, the Clippers and the city of Inglewood entered into an exclusive negotiating agreement in which the team plans to build a new privately funded 18,000 to 20,000-seat arena, Inglewood Basketball and Entertainment Center, planning to open by 2024, when the Clippers' current lease with Crypto.com Arena expires.[116][117] The planned arena is expected to be located at Century Boulevard between Yukon and Prairie Avenues, directly south of the new SoFi Stadium, the home of the Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League. The arena is also expected to house a practice facility and team headquarters for the Clippers, as the team's current practice facility in Los Angeles' Playa Vista neighborhood is still owned by the Sterling Family Trust, and is leased back to the team. The Inglewood city council unanimously voted for the agreement in which a subsidiary of the Clippers will purchase 22 acres covering four large city blocks in what is largely a lower-class/lower-middle-class residential neighborhood (Century to the north, 104th Street to the south, Doty to the east, and Prairie to the west) to build the new facility.

The planned arena was met with immediate opposition from the nearby Forum and its operator, the Madison Square Garden Company (parent company of the New York Knicks), as they accused both the Clippers and the Inglewood city government of "backroom dealing" and the fear that a new Clippers' arena would siphon events from the recently renovated sports arena-turned-concert venue. In March 2020, Steve Ballmer, owner of the Clippers, reached an agreement with the Madison Square Garden Company to buy The Forum, eliminating any opposition related to the construction of the Clippers' new arena.[118]

On July 25, 2019, the Clippers released images of the proposed arena with the construction planned to begin in 2021 and completed in fall 2024 following the expiration of the Clippers' lease with the Staples Center.[119] On September 17, 2021, the Clippers unveiled the first renditions of the new arena with an expected cost of up to $2 billion. The team also revealed the arena's name as the Intuit Dome through a 23-year naming rights deal with Intuit worth $500 million.[120][121]

Logos and uniforms

 
The Clippers' updated wordmark logo, unveiled on June 18, 2015.[122]
 
The Clippers' future logo, starting with the 2024–2025 NBA season, which was unveiled on February 26, 2024.

When the Braves franchise moved to San Diego and renamed the Clippers, they retained the baby blue base on their uniforms, but replaced black with orange trim. A series of nautical flags which spelled "Clippers" adorned each side of the shorts. The team's original logo featured a large baby blue circle enclosing a small orange circle to represent Southern California's sunny climate and three white sails to represent a clipper.[123][124] The "three sails" logo was later reused by the Clippers' G League team upon relocating from Ontario to San Diego in 2024.[31]

In a foreshadowing move, the Clippers redesigned their logo and uniforms during the 1982–83 season. This set, which the team carried over upon moving to Los Angeles in 1984, replaced baby blue and orange with royal blue and red. The uniforms featured a royal blue base and red trim and were emblazoned with the team name in front; the "C" in the word "Clippers" was enlarged in the same manner as the logo.[125] Most notably, "San Diego" was removed from the away jerseys and replaced with the same "Clippers" wordmark from the home jerseys. The Clippers also wore red uniforms on a number of occasions in 1984. The logo was now a generic moving white basketball with red lines superimposed over the full team name, which the team used until 2015, albeit with some tweaks to the design.[123]

In 1987, the Clippers uniforms changed to a set that remained mostly intact until 2010. Red became the base color while blue was relegated to trim color. On the home white uniform, the team name was written in script lettering, while on the road red uniform, the city name in script was used. Later on, the road uniforms replaced the city name with the team name, and blue numerals were replaced with white numerals.[125] Before the 2000–01 season, the Clippers made slight changes to their uniform, adding the interlocking "LAC" logo on the neckline and gaining thicker contrasting stripes and bolder numerals. Later on, the Clippers unveiled a blue alternate uniform which spelled the city name in red with white trim.[126]

In 2010, the Clippers changed their uniforms, adjusting the stripes and letters. The white uniforms featured the team name in blue and the numerals in red, while the red uniforms were emblazoned with the city name in white and numerals in blue. Later on, the Clippers added a blue alternate uniform and a sleeved baby blue alternate uniform; both designs featured the city name in white and numerals in red.[126]

On June 18, 2015, the Los Angeles Clippers unveiled its new brand identity. The club's primary logo features a basketball in the shape of a compass, with the club's "LAC" monogram situated in the middle. Below that is the club's wordmark logo in black, with the two curved lines below the wordmark symbolizing the horizon of the ocean, which the club says it alludes to its nautical roots. The team also unveiled its new home and away uniforms, which kept the design template from the previous uniforms. The home white uniform features the club's wordmark logo in black across the front. The away red uniform features the club's "LAC" monogram across the right breast, with the player's jersey number across the left breast.[127][122]

The Clippers introduced an alternate black uniform intended to celebrate downtown Los Angeles on November 6, 2015. The uniform keeps the design template from the previous uniform, and features the club's primary logo without the wordmark.[128]

The Clippers unveiled their new Nike Association (white) and Icon (team color) uniform designs on August 11, 2017.[3] The home and road designations were dropped, and the team replaced its seldom-used road red uniform with a new blue "Icon" uniform that resembles the white "Association" uniform, which dropped the black accents. The black alternate (a.k.a. Statement uniform) was also retained. All three sets featured updated numeral and letter fonts.

A fourth uniform option, the City uniform, was later unveiled. For the 2017–18 season, the Clippers brought back the classic San Diego baby blue and orange scheme for their first City uniform, including the nautical flags which spell the acronym "LAC".[129] The next season, the Clippers wore navy blue City uniforms to commemorate the team's 35th season in Los Angeles, as well as to pay tribute to the 1984 Summer Olympics.[130] In the 2019–20 season, the Clippers donned white City uniforms with black letters and "Los Angeles" in Old English font as a tribute to Los Angeles' street culture.[131] The Clippers kept most of the same design for the 2020–21 "City" uniform, this time with a black base.[132] The 2021–22 "City" uniform saw the Clippers incorporate various uniform styles from the past, including the baby blue and orange of the Buffalo/San Diego era, the "Clippers" script from 1987 to 2015, and the three sails motif from the 2017–18 "City" uniform.[133]

In the 2022–23 season, the Clippers wore black "City" uniforms as homage to the Drew League, a summer tournament in Los Angeles that celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2023. The white "Los Angeles" script was surrounded by a mosaic inspired by the Watts Towers.[134]

The 2023–24 "City" uniform featured the shortened nickname "Clips" in a font based on the team's 1978–1983 logo. The mostly navy uniform was designed by local artist Jonas Wood, who drew inspiration from the city's love for basketball.[135]

After reaching the 2020 NBA playoffs, the Clippers were rewarded with an "Earned" uniform for the 2020–21 season. The uniform essentially recreated the team's "Icon" uniform, but had a grey base with thick white stripes, and red and blue were relegated to the arm piping.[136]

In the 2022–23 season, the Clippers updated their black "Statement" uniforms, replacing the "LAC" logo with the "Los Angeles" script first used in their 2019–20 and 2020–21 "City" uniforms. The three sails motif from the 2017–18 and 2021–22 "City" uniforms was also added.[137]

Starting with the 2024–25 season, the Clippers unveiled modern versions of the script uniforms they previously wore from 1987 to 2015. The logo now featured a stylized clipper ship surrounding a navy blue "C" in a white circle and Pacific blue outline, with pointed marks inspired by a compass and a basketball silhouette on the hull. The "Association" white uniform featured the modernized script "Clippers" wordmark in navy blue with red numbers. The "Icon" navy blue uniform featured the aforementioned "Clippers" script in red with white numbers, and the red "Statement" uniform featured a stacked script "Los Angeles" wordmark in navy blue with white numbers, along with nautical flags that spell "LAC" on the navy blue stripe.[138][139]

Personnel

All-time roster

Current roster

Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB From
G 4 Boston, Brandon Jr. 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 188 lb (85 kg) 2001-11-28 Kentucky
F 21 Brown, Kobe 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 2000-01-01 Missouri
G/F 7 Coffey, Amir 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1997-06-17 Minnesota
C 25 Diabaté, Moussa (TW) 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 2002-01-21 Michigan
F 13 George, Paul 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1990-05-02 Fresno State
G 1 Harden, James 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1989-08-26 Arizona State
G 5 Hyland, Bones 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 173 lb (78 kg) 2000-09-14 VCU
F/C 23 Jones, Kai 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 221 lb (100 kg) 2001-01-19 Texas
F 2 Leonard, Kawhi 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 225 lb (102 kg) 1991-06-29 San Diego State
G/F 14 Mann, Terance 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1996-10-18 Florida State
F 11 Miller, Jordan (TW) 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m) 195 lb (88 kg) 2000-01-23 Miami (FL)
G 22 Moon, Xavier (TW) 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 165 lb (75 kg) 1995-01-02 Morehead State
F/C 44 Plumlee, Mason 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 254 lb (115 kg) 1990-03-05 Duke
G 24 Powell, Norman 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1993-05-25 UCLA
F/C 10 Theis, Daniel 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1992-04-04 Germany
F 17 Tucker, P. J. 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1985-05-05 Texas
G 0 Westbrook, Russell 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1988-11-12 UCLA
C 40 Zubac, Ivica 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 240 lb (109 kg) 1997-03-18 Croatia
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: April 13, 2024

Retained draft rights

The Clippers hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA. A drafted player, either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him, is allowed to sign with any non-NBA teams. In this case, the team retains the player's draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player's contract with the non-NBA team ends.[140] This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams.

Draft Round Pick Player Pos. Nationality Current team Note(s) Ref
2022 2 46 Ismaël Kamagate C   France Bertram Derthona Tortona (Italy) Acquired from the Detroit Pistons (via Portland and Denver) [141]
2021 2 57 Balša Koprivica C   Serbia Partizan Mozzart Bet (Serbia) Acquired from the Detroit Pistons [142]
2015 2 60 Luka Mitrović F   Serbia Crvena zvezda Meridianbet (Serbia) Acquired from the Philadelphia 76ers (via Sacramento) [143]

Retired numbers

The NBA retired Bill Russell's No. 6 for all its member teams on August 11, 2022.[144][145]

Basketball Hall of Famers

Los Angeles Clippers Hall of Famers
Players
No. Name Position Tenure Inducted
32 Bill Walton C 1979–1985 1993
11 Bob McAdoo F/C 1972–1976 2000
20 Moses Malone C/F 1976 2001
21 Dominique Wilkins F 1994 2006
44 Adrian Dantley F/G 1976–1977 2008
52 Jamaal Wilkes F 1985 2012
33 Grant Hill F 2012–2013 2018
34 Paul Pierce F 2015–2017 2021
1 Chauncey Billups G 2011–2013 2024
Coaches
Name Position Tenure Inducted
Jack Ramsay Head coach 1972–1976 1992
Larry Brown Head coach 1992–1993 2002
Bill Fitch Head coach 1994–1998 2019
Contributors
Cotton Fitzsimmons Head coach 1977–1978 2021
Jerry West Executive 2017–present 2024

Franchise leaders

Bold denotes still active with team. Italic denotes still active but not with team.

Regular season (as of the end of the 2023–24 season)[146]

Points

  1. Randy Smith (12,735)
  2. Blake Griffin (10,863)
  3. Bob McAdoo (9,434)
  4. Elton Brand (9,174)
  5. Corey Maggette (8,835)
  6. Chris Paul (7,674)
  7. Danny Manning (7,120)
  8. DeAndre Jordan (7,078)
  9. Loy Vaught (6,614)
  10. Ken Norman (6,432)
  11. Paul George (6,049)
  12. Ron Harper (5,853)
  13. Chris Kaman (5,813)
  14. Kawhi Leonard (5,687)
  15. Jamal Crawford (5,675)
  16. Benoit Benjamin (5,405)
  17. Eric Piatkowski (5,269)
  18. Charles Smith (4,994)
  19. Lou Williams (4,975)
  20. Bob Kauffman (4,847)
  21. Swen Nater (4,694)
  22. Freeman Williams (4,467)
  23. World B. Free (4,299)
  24. JJ Redick (4,208)
  25. Lamond Murray (4,173)
  26. Norm Nixon (4,127)
  27. Michael Brooks (4,010)
  28. Lamar Odom (3,986)
  29. Gary Grant (3,899)
  30. Ivica Zubac (3,887)
Most minutes played
Player Minutes
Randy Smith 24,393
DeAndre Jordan 21,045
Blake Griffin 17,706
Elton Brand 17,595
Corey Maggette 15,780
Loy Vaught 15,671
Chris Kaman 14,661
Chris Paul 13,885
Ken Norman 13,584
Bob McAdoo 13,381
Most rebounds
Player Rebounds
DeAndre Jordan 7,988
Elton Brand 4,710
Blake Griffin 4,686
Loy Vaught 4,471
Bob McAdoo 4,229
Swen Nater 4,168
Chris Kaman 4,109
Benoit Benjamin 3,538
Ivica Zubac 3,288
Randy Smith 2,985
Most assists
Player Assists
Chris Paul 4,023
Randy Smith 3,498
Gary Grant 2,810
Norm Nixon 2,540
Blake Griffin 2,133
Ron Harper 1,463
Ernie DiGregorio 1,457
Mark Jackson 1,402
Baron Davis 1,398
Pooh Richardson 1,397
Most steals
Player Steals
Randy Smith 1,072
Chris Paul 902
Gary Grant 747
Ron Harper 606
Danny Manning 548
Blake Griffin 484
Loy Vaught 468
DeAndre Jordan 448
Elton Brand 438
Corey Maggette 421
Most blocks
Player Blocks
DeAndre Jordan 1,277
Benoit Benjamin 1,117
Elton Brand 1,039
Chris Kaman 707
Bob McAdoo 614
Michael Olowokandi 527
Gar Heard 477
Charles Smith 451
Bo Outlaw 421
Ivica Zubac 410
Most three-pointers made
Player 3-pointers
Paul George 820
Eric Piatkowski 738
JJ Redick 674
Jamal Crawford 662
Chris Paul 618
Kawhi Leonard 468
Lou Williams 447
Eric Gordon 403
Reggie Jackson 392
Marcus Morris 379

Single-season records

Single-season records
Category Player Statistics
Minutes played Bob McAdoo 3,539
Field goals Bob McAdoo 1,095
3-point field goals Paul George 243
Free throws World B. Free 654
Offensive rebounds DeAndre Jordan 397
Defensive rebounds Swen Nater 864
Total rebounds DeAndre Jordan 1,226
Assists Norm Nixon 914
Steals Randy Smith 203
Blocks Bob McAdoo 246
Points Bob McAdoo 2,831
Player efficiency rating Chris Paul 27.0

Individual awards

NBA All-Star Weekend

NBA All-Star selections

NBA All-Star Game Most Valuable Player

Slam Dunk champion

Head coaches

ClipperVision

In 2022, the Clippers launched their own direct-to-consumer streaming service for non-national Clippers games. The service includes the regular game feed, along with CourtVision, which features analytics overlaid on the regular broadcast, BallerVision, an alternate viewing option for all games featuring Steve Ballmer and NBA legends, and Spanish and Korean broadcasts. The service also includes access to on-demand games. The service is available on Roku, iOS, Android, Apple TV and personal computers.[147]

Commentators and broadcast outlets

  • Brian Sieman (television and radio play-by-play)
  • Jim Jackson (television and radio color commentator)
  • Kristina Pink (television sideline reporter)
  • Noah Eagle (radio play-by-play and courtside reporter, TV play-by-play fill-in)
  • Mike Fratello (pregame and postgame analyst for telecasts on Bally Sports SoCal, TV commentary fill-in)
  • Corey Maggette (pregame and postgame analyst for telecasts on Bally Sports SoCal, TV commentary fill-in)
  • Adam Ausland (pregame and postgame host for the KLAC/Clippers Radio Network)
  • Broadcast television (14 games): KTLA (Los Angeles), KUSI-TV (San Diego), KGET-TV (Bakersfield), KSEE-TV (Fresno)
  • Cable television: Bally Sports SoCal
  • Radio: KLAC (570 AM); KWKW (1330 AM; Spanish); any Clippers game which conflicts with a Los Angeles Dodgers game on KLAC will be heard instead on KEIB (1150 AM)

Notes and references

Notes

References

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Further reading

  • Jenkins, Lee (January 30, 2012). "Finally, It's Hip To Be A Clip". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved March 17, 2012.

External links

  • Official website  

angeles, clippers, clippers, redirects, here, other, uses, clipper, disambiguation, american, professional, basketball, team, based, greater, angeles, area, clippers, compete, national, basketball, association, member, pacific, division, western, conference, c. The Clippers redirects here For other uses see Clipper disambiguation The Los Angeles Clippers are an American professional basketball team based in the Greater Los Angeles area The Clippers compete in the National Basketball Association NBA as a member of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference The Clippers recently played their home games at Crypto com Arena in Los Angeles from 1999 to 2024 which they had shared with NBA s Los Angeles Lakers the Los Angeles Sparks of the Women s National Basketball Association WNBA and the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League NHL and will play in the Intuit Dome beginning with the 2024 25 NBA season Los Angeles Clippers2023 24 Los Angeles Clippers seasonConferenceWesternDivisionPacificFounded1970HistoryBuffalo Braves1970 1978San Diego Clippers1978 1984Los Angeles Clippers1984 present 1 2 ArenaIntuit DomeLocationInglewood CaliforniaTeam colorsRoyal blue red black silver white 3 4 5 Main sponsorPayPal Honey 6 PresidentLawrence Frank 7 General managerTrent ReddenHead coachTyronn LueOwnershipSteve Ballmer 8 Affiliation s San Diego ClippersChampionships0Conference titles0Division titles3 2013 2014 2024 Websitewww wbr nba wbr com wbr clippersAssociationIconStatementCity The franchise was founded as the Buffalo Braves in 1970 as an expansion team Led by Hall of Famer Bob McAdoo the Braves reached the NBA playoffs three times during their eight seasons in Buffalo New York Conflicts with the Canisius Golden Griffins over the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium and the sale of the franchise led to their relocation from Buffalo to San Diego California in 1978 and subsequent rebranding as the San Diego Clippers in reference to the sailing ships synonymous with San Diego Bay 9 The team saw little success on the court and missed the playoffs during all six of their years in San Diego In 1984 owner Donald Sterling controversially relocated the franchise to Los Angeles without NBA approval The NBA spent more than three years on a lawsuit to force the team back to San Diego before eventually dropping the suit in exchange for Sterling paying a fine Arguably the least successful franchise in North American professional sports the Clippers qualified for the postseason only four times and won a single playoff round during their first 27 seasons in Los Angeles They were frequently considered a perennial loser in American professional sports drawing unfavorable comparisons to the historically successful Lakers The Clippers reputation improved during the 2010s which saw them transform into consistent postseason contenders Aided by the Lob City lineup of Blake Griffin DeAndre Jordan and Chris Paul the team qualified for the playoffs in six consecutive seasons from 2012 to 2017 and won two consecutive division titles in 2013 and 2014 both firsts for the franchise Despite this success the Clippers struggled in the postseason and were frequently eliminated in the conference semifinals the team reached the conference finals for the first time in 2021 and lost To date they are the oldest franchise in North American professional sports to have never played in a championship game Contents 1 Franchise history 1 1 1970 1978 Buffalo Braves 1 2 1978 1984 San Diego Clippers 1 3 1984 1989 Move to Los Angeles and early struggles 1 4 1989 1994 Playoff appearances 1 5 1994 2000 Fitch Anaheim and the move to Staples Center 1 5 1 Anaheim relocation talks 1 5 2 Bill Fitch era 1 5 3 Move to Staples Center 1 6 2000 2009 Further struggles at Staples Center 1 7 2009 2011 The arrival of Blake Griffin and steady improvement 1 8 2011 2017 Arrival of Chris Paul and Lob City 1 8 1 Donald Sterling controversy 1 8 2 2014 2017 Final seasons of Lob City 1 9 2017 2019 Rebuild 1 10 2019 present The Paul George Kawhi Leonard era 2 Rivalries 2 1 Los Angeles Lakers 3 Season by season record 4 Home arenas 4 1 Move to Intuit Dome 5 Logos and uniforms 6 Personnel 6 1 All time roster 6 2 Current roster 6 3 Retained draft rights 6 4 Retired numbers 6 5 Basketball Hall of Famers 6 6 Franchise leaders 6 7 Single season records 6 8 Individual awards 6 9 NBA All Star Weekend 7 Head coaches 8 ClipperVision 9 Commentators and broadcast outlets 10 Notes and references 10 1 Notes 10 2 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksFranchise historyThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Los Angeles Clippers news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message 1970 1978 Buffalo Braves Main article Buffalo Braves nbsp Bob McAdoo 11 was the NBA MVP in the 1974 75 season after averaging 34 5 points and 14 1 rebounds per game The franchise began in Western New York as the Buffalo Braves one of three NBA expansion franchises that began play in the 1970 71 season along with the Portland Trail Blazers and Cleveland Cavaliers 10 They played their home games at the Buffalo Memorial Auditorium along with another Buffalo team that would begin play that year the National Hockey League s Buffalo Sabres 11 After two bad seasons the Braves fortunes started to change under coach Jack Ramsay and star forward center Bob McAdoo 12 McAdoo led the NBA in scoring for three consecutive seasons and was named the league s MVP in the 1974 75 season The Braves qualified for the playoffs three times in a row losing twice to the eventual Eastern Conference champions the Boston Celtics in 1974 and 1976 and the Washington Bullets in 1975 Despite the team s modest success in Buffalo Braves owner Paul Snyder and the league found it impossible to schedule home games at the auditorium because of the Canisius Golden Griffins men s basketball team which had a pre existing lease on the arena and priority on game dates over the Braves with the next best dates in turn taken by the more successful Sabres 13 At a time where the NBA was nearing a nadir and the league did not have its current prestige the Griffins saw the Braves as a threat to their own success and purposely scheduled better dates at the arena to prevent the Braves from succeeding 14 15 As a result after a failed attempt to sell the team to an owner who intended to move it to South Florida Snyder sold the team to Kentucky Colonels owner John Y Brown Jr who decimated the team s roster traded away all of its stars and drove attendance down to the point where they could break their own lease on the arena 16 Eventually Brown met with Celtics owner Irv Levin in 1978 so they could trade franchise ownerships Southern California resident Levin then decided to move the Braves to San Diego something the league would have never allowed him to do with the Celtics 17 Asked about the move Levin nominated a shorter commute for himself as a key reason 18 1978 1984 San Diego Clippers San Diego Clippers redirects here For the NBA G League team see San Diego Clippers NBA G League In 1978 San Diego welcomed the relocation of the Buffalo Braves franchise as the city s previous NBA franchise the San Diego Rockets had relocated to Houston seven years earlier in 1971 Another failed basketball franchise in the city had been the San Diego Conquistadors 18 San Diego team officials did not think Braves was a proper representative nickname for the club in San Diego and a local naming contest ultimately decided on Clippers in reference to the city being known for the great sailing ships that passed through San Diego Bay 9 The first head coach of the Clippers was chosen to be Gene Shue a respected tactician 19 He preferred a fast playing style with many scoring opportunities 19 Only three players from the Braves started in the team Randy Smith Swen Nater and Scott Lloyd 20 Other starting players included Kermit Washington and Sidney Wicks 19 World B Free was also brought in in exchange for a future first round pick for the Philadelphia 76ers 20 The 1978 79 season started off poorly with the Clippers first win coming only in their fourth game against the Chicago Bulls 20 The team lost 12 of its 18 first games and dropped to the bottom of the Pacific Division 21 Player Kevin Kunnert argued they had the killer instinct of a field mouse 21 The worst loss came against the San Antonio Spurs with a loss of 163 to 125 21 Nevertheless within weeks Free had become the leading scorer as well as becoming a public icon 21 He finished second overall in NBA scoring average with 28 9 per game George Gervin of the San Antonio Spurs had a 29 6 average Shue meanwhile tried to create a team spirit by creating a common social life 22 By the annual break for the All Star game however the Clippers had improved winning half of their 54 games leading to a sixth ranking in the Western Conference 23 Aiming for one of the six play off spots for the Conference they managed to win eight games in a row and then another five games consecutively 23 Playing at the San Diego Sports Arena the Clippers posted a record of 43 39 in their first season in California under leaving them two wins shy of the final playoff spot It was also the first season in Southern California for long time announcer Ralph Lawler began his association with the franchise The 1979 80 season saw the Clippers begin to struggle despite adding center Bill Walton a San Diego native who was two years removed from winning an NBA Championship and the NBA Most Valuable Player Award with the Portland Trail Blazers Walton missed 68 games in his first season in San Diego due to foot injuries which he also suffered in his final years in Portland San Diego finished 35 47 as Walton and other key players missed significant time due to injuries Free again finished second in league scoring with 30 2 points per game Paul Silas replaced Shue as head coach the following season and the Clippers finished 36 46 again missing the postseason Walton missed the entire season due to foot injuries while Free was traded to the Golden State Warriors in exchange for guard Phil Smith The 1981 82 season brought ultimately unwelcome changes to the franchise as Levin sold the team to Los Angeles area real estate developer and attorney Donald Sterling for 12 5 million The Clippers experienced poor play as foot injuries again caused Walton to miss the entire season and the team limped to a 17 65 record Rumors of a move to Sterling s hometown of Los Angeles and franchise mismanagement plagued the team immediately from the onset of Sterling s acquisition On one occasion Sterling was fined 10 000 by the NBA the largest sum ever levied by the NBA against an owner at the time for publicly guaranteeing the Clippers would lose enough games to contend for a high enough draft pick to select Ralph Sampson On another he was fined for flying his players to away games in coach seats on commercial airliners a violation of the league s collective bargaining agreement Hotels refused to house the Clippers because of alleged non payment for previous accommodations on multiple occasions A bus company in Newark once stranded the team at the airport after Sterling failed to pay for previous trips which nearly caused the team to miss a scheduled regular season game that day against the New Jersey Nets 24 Sterling attempted to relocate the franchise to Los Angeles in June 1982 but the NBA denied his request Sterling then filed an unsuccessful antitrust lawsuit against the league which subsequently filed a countersuit against the club and the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena which Sterling had a tentative agreement with to become the franchise s new home 25 The attempted move combined with the franchise mismanagement issues prompted an investigation of the Clippers by an NBA committee of other owners In September of that year the committee recommended that Sterling s ownership be terminated having found that he was late in paying creditors and players 26 Days before a league scheduled vote in October to remove Sterling he agreed to sell the team and the league sought buyers who would keep the franchise in San Diego At the suggestion of David Stern then the league s vice president Sterling was able to maintain his position as owner by instead handing over operations duties of the franchise to Alan Rothenberg who became the team s president By February 1983 Stern called the Clippers a first class franchise and the ouster of Sterling was no longer pursued 27 Later in 1983 Larry Fleisher then the general counsel of the National Basketball Players Association stated in all my years of involvement with the NBA no team ever provided as much difficulties for the players than the Clippers under Sterling He almost caused three strikes last season 26 The team s final two seasons in San Diego were not much better on the court despite Walton finally returning to action finishing 25 57 in 1982 83 and 30 52 in 1983 84 In 1984 Sterling despite again being denied permission from the NBA to do so moved the Clippers north to Los Angeles The NBA subsequently fined Sterling 25 million for violating league rules and filed a lawsuit demanding the franchise be returned to San Diego The league threatened to dissolve the franchise if ownership did not comply and return the team to San Diego 28 29 Sterling then filed another antitrust lawsuit against the league for 100 million This time thanks to the court decision that allowed Al Davis to move the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League NFL to Los Angeles it appeared Sterling would win his case The league soon agreed to drop their lawsuit in exchange for Sterling dropping his case allowing him to keep the team in Los Angeles and decreasing his fine to 6 million 30 Forty years after the NBA Clippers left San Diego the Ontario Clippers of the NBA G League would relocate from Ontario California starting with the 2024 25 season adopting the San Diego Clippers name as well as the modernized version of the three sails logo 31 1984 1989 Move to Los Angeles and early struggles nbsp Los Angeles Clippers secondary logo from 1991 to 2010 A variation was used from 2010 to 2015 In 1984 despite the pending lawsuits between franchise ownership and the NBA following the move the Clippers began play at the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 30 The Clippers finished their first season in Los Angeles 31 51 under head coach Jim Lynam The Clippers early days in Los Angeles were marred with many seasons of hapless performances Despite fielding a squad of talented veterans the organization suffered systematic injuries to many of its star players The phenomenon was dubbed the Clipper Triangle by some sportswriters a reference to the Bermuda Triangle urban legend 32 Derek Smith suffered a knee injury during the 1985 86 season followed by Norm Nixon knee and Marques Johnson spinal cord the following season 32 The team s 12 70 finish in the 1987 season was the second worst single season record in NBA history at the time and is now the third worst winning percentage in NBA history behind the 1973 Philadelphia 76ers and the 2012 Charlotte Bobcats That same season also saw Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor join the team as the general manager and vice president of basketball operations Nixon suffered an ailing Achilles tendon in 1987 88 season while number one draft pick rookie Danny Manning injured his anterior cruciate ligament during the 1988 89 campaign 32 1989 1994 Playoff appearances nbsp Ken Norman the Clippers scoring leader in 1988 89 was a key part of the team s nucleus during the late 1980s and early 1990s The Clippers traded the rights to the recently drafted Danny Ferry and Reggie Williams for high scoring shooting guard Ron Harper at the start of the 1989 90 season Los Angeles had a 19 19 record nearly halfway into the season prompting some to seriously consider the team as a possible playoff contender 32 That move along with the 1987 NBA draft of Ken Norman the 1988 selections of Danny Manning and Charles Smith Smith was acquired from Philadelphia in exchange for the draft rights to Hersey Hawkins and the 1990 draft of Loy Vaught formed a nucleus that would make the franchise a playoff contender Midway through the 1991 92 season the Clippers made yet another coaching change Larry Brown recently fired by the San Antonio Spurs was hired as the team s head coach in late January 1992 He replaced Mike Schuler who had led the team to a 22 25 record before his firing Brown finished the season with a 23 12 mark for a 45 37 overall the franchise s first winning season in 13 years For the first time since moving to Los Angeles they finished with a better record than the crosstown Los Angeles Lakers The Clippers advanced to the playoffs for the first time in 16 years since the franchise s Buffalo heyday but were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Utah Jazz 3 2 Due to the late April 1992 Los Angeles riots the Anaheim Convention Center was the site of Game 4 of the series which the Clippers won The team made the playoffs again in the 1992 93 season with a 41 41 record but lost again in five games in the first round this time to the Rockets Brown left to become the Indiana Pacers head coach after the season and Bob Weiss was brought in to replace him That 1993 94 season proved to be one of the worst in Los Angeles history with the Clippers and Lakers going a combined 60 104 In February 1994 the Clippers traded Manning to the Atlanta Hawks for Dominique Wilkins Wilkins played 25 games for the club averaging 29 1 points 7 0 rebounds and 2 2 assists in 37 9 minutes per game After one year on the job Weiss was fired Wilkins left in free agency and veteran head coach Bill Fitch was brought in to guide a new roster of young and inexperienced players 1994 2000 Fitch Anaheim and the move to Staples Center Anaheim relocation talks Anaheim a suburb approximately thirty miles 48 km south of Downtown Los Angeles in Orange County expressed interest in obtaining an NBA franchise The city expecting to lose the NFL s Los Angeles Rams who relocated to St Louis in 1995 for 21 seasons before moving back to Los Angeles in 2016 was looking for a new professional team and began courting the Clippers who struggled to carve out an identity competing against the popular Lakers for audience share From 1994 to 1999 the Clippers played several games annually usually five to eight regular season games a season and an annual preseason game at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim sharing the venue with the NHL s Ducks and the Splash indoor soccer team Clippers games regularly drew a much higher average attendance per game at the Pond than when the team played its home games at their regular venue the Los Angeles Sports Arena the Anaheim games proved so popular that many Clippers players and much of the fan base as well as the NBA wanted to the team to stay in what was considered at the time a state of the art arena citation needed For instance between 1994 and 1997 the Clippers drew an average of nearly 16 000 fans per game at the Pond while in Los Angeles they drew in the neighborhood of 9 200 per home game 33 Anaheim officials and the Clippers had had on going talks about moving to Anaheim full time years before the Pond was eventually built 34 as Donald Sterling was pursuing options to play elsewhere in the Los Angeles metropolitan region if there was not a replacement for the Sports Arena being built The Clippers however nearly moved to Anaheim permanently in time for the 1996 97 season but according to a Los Angeles Times article published in June 1996 35 owner Donald Sterling turned down a deal that would have paid the team 95 million over 12 years Odgen Corporation who at the time managed the Pond and the city of Anaheim offered the Clippers a multi tiered deal that would have included upwards of 33 million paid to the team over the first six years of their Pond agreement plus other monies allocated towards new locker rooms team offices and a practice facility In another related Times article 36 Odgen and Sterling were in talks to have the management company take care of the Clippers day to day operations for a 4 million a year fee Also at the time the Walt Disney Company owners of the Ducks and Anaheim Angels baseball team during that period were pursuing at least a partial ownership of the Clippers with the key element being that its game telecasts would be part of a planned ESPN regional network for Southern California However as the planned ESPN West network never came to reality all three teams had continued to maintain broadcast partnerships with Fox Sports West and Prime Ticket This remained a sticking point in any deal to relocate to Anaheim eventually leaving the team to remain in Los Angeles Bill Fitch era On the court the Clippers continued to make frequent roster changes throughout this particular period which only resulted in one playoff appearance under Fitch Along with Loy Vaught a collection of young players including Lamond Murray Eric Piatkowski and Lorenzen Wright and journeyman veterans among them Pooh Richardson Tony Massenburg Rodney Rogers Darrick Martin and Brian Williams the Fitch coached teams during this particular era struggled mightily although they did make the playoffs once during this time The 1996 97 team made the playoffs with a losing record 36 46 and were swept in the first round by the eventual Western Conference champions the Utah Jazz three games to none Four members of the 1996 97 squad are now deceased Malik Sealy died in a car accident in 2000 Kevin Duckworth died of heart disease in 2008 Lorenzen Wright went missing and was murdered in 2010 and Dwayne Schintzius died from cancer complications in 2012 Two other players from the Fitch era suffered tragic circumstances of their own Brian Williams who played for the Clippers during the 1995 96 season and later became known as Bison Dele was believed to have been murdered by his brother while the two were vacationing in 2002 while in the South Pacific and Rodney Rogers became paralyzed after a dirt bike crash in 2008 in his native North Carolina 37 In December Vaught the team s leading scorer for the past three seasons had season ending back surgery Without Vaught the Clippers finished 17 65 the third worst record in the league Fitch was fired after the 1997 98 season and later sued the team to recover the remaining money on his contract and was replaced by one of his proteges former Celtics and Bucks coach Chris Ford Meanwhile Vaught s career as a Clipper was effectively finished as he left as a free agent after that season and signed with the Detroit Pistons at the time of his departure he was the franchise s all time rebounds leader with 4 471 a number that was later surpassed by Elton Brand with 4 710 38 The Clippers won the first overall pick in the 1998 Draft Lottery and selected center Michael Olowokandi from University of the Pacific The team had a 0 17 start and finished with a 9 41 record in the lockout shortened 1998 99 season They were led by second year forward Maurice Taylor who averaged 16 8 points per game and won the fourth overall pick in the following draft which coincided with their move to the Staples Center The Clippers would draft Lamar Odom and then hired former All Star and Los Angeles native Dennis Johnson as an assistant coach as well as Hall of Fame former Laker great Kareem Abdul Jabbar to help tutor Olowokandi during his second year Johnson remained an assistant coach until the middle of the 2002 03 season when he took over as head coach Abdul Jabbar remained only one season detailing a lack of improvement in Olowokandi who is largely considered one of the biggest draft busts in league history During the 1999 off season Rodney Rogers signed with the Phoenix Suns The Clippers also sent Lamond Murray to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Derek Anderson and Johnny Newman However Newman was then traded to the New Jersey Nets for Eric Murdock a month later without ever playing a game for the Clippers The team finished with the worst record in the league 15 67 in the 1999 2000 season while the Lakers had the best record that year 67 15 and won the NBA championship Move to Staples Center In what was supposed to be a counter move the Coliseum Commission the management entity that managed the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena and Coliseum had planned to build a new 18 700 seat arena in the parking lot next to the Sports Arena that would have cost up to 94 million that would have included 1 100 club seats 84 luxury suites and an on site practice facility for the Clippers However those plans were scuttled once planning for Staples Center two miles directly up the street from the Sports Arena were taking place and the Clippers decided to become a tenant at Staples citation needed In 1999 the Clippers joined the Lakers and Los Angeles Kings in the new Staples Center in Downtown Los Angeles 39 In sharing the building with other tenants such as the more popular Lakers the Clippers with relatively low success were often overshadowed citation needed Also because of the terms of its leasing agreement with Staples Center the Kings and Lakers had scheduling priority over the Clippers with the Clippers taking whatever dates that were available including scheduling same day Clipper Laker and Clipper King doubleheaders However in the years after the Clippers scheduling at Staples Center became gradually more favorable especially given the popularity of the team in recent years in their lease renewals in 2004 and 2013 with the team receiving increased profits including more of a share of luxury suite and concession revenue Since February 2011 the Clippers have sold out every regular season and postseason home game behind the popularity of stars Blake Griffin DeAndre Jordan and Chris Paul citation needed 2000 2009 Further struggles at Staples Center The 2000 01 season brought changes Derek Strong was sent to the Orlando Magic in exchange for Corey Maggette and the draft rights to Keyon Dooling The Clippers two draft picks that year were childhood friends from Illinois high schooler Darius Miles 3rd overall pick and Quentin Richardson 18th overall pick The team became popular among fans with its high flying style of basketball and the Clippers did improve slightly registering a 31 51 record The team also lead the NBA in bench scoring with 37 points per game To improve upon the previous season the Clippers acquired high scoring and rebounding power forward Elton Brand from the Chicago Bulls in exchange for the draft rights to Tyson Chandler Brand earned a spot on the 2002 NBA Western Conference All Star team as an injury replacement for Shaquille O Neal The Clippers contended for most of the season but won only 3 of the last 12 games and finished 39 43 five games out of the playoffs In order to seriously challenge for playoff contention in 2003 the franchise traded Miles to the Cavaliers for Andre Miller who led the NBA in assists in 2001 02 with 11 per game With a seasoned point guard in Miller Lamar Odom at small forward one of the league s best power forwards in Brand and center Olowokandi as well as having the best supporting cast in the league the Clippers threatened a potential playoff run However poor team chemistry and injuries the Clippers lost 293 man games to injury they finished with a disappointing 27 55 record Coach Alvin Gentry was also replaced with Dennis Johnson entering midway through the 2002 03 season After the dismal season prior the team lost several of its core players with Miller Odom Olowakandi and forward Eric Piatkowski who was one of the longest tenured players in franchise history 40 departing via free agency prior to the 2003 04 season The team opted to retain Brand and Maggette with long term contracts They along with Richardson made up one of the NBA s best high scoring trios with a combined 58 points per game With new head coach Mike Dunleavy Sr they finished 28 54 due to inexperience and injuries The following season again saw the team missing the playoffs although they posted a better record than the Lakers for the first time since 1993 Bobby Simmons a former second round pick won the 2004 05 NBA Most Improved Player award after averaging 16 points 6 rebounds and 3 assists per game As a result Simmons signed a 5 year 47 million deal with the Milwaukee Bucks To counter Simmons defection the Clippers announced they would sign Cuttino Mobley Mobley s contract was identical in length but for five million less than Simmons and marked the first significant free agent signing from outside the organization since Walton in the late 1970s The Clippers also completed the building of a practice facility the first NBA practice facility within the four corners of the City of Los Angeles in the Playa Vista development 41 Midway through the season the Clippers traded Marko Jaric in a sign and trade transaction and Lionel Chalmers to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for Sam Cassell and a lottery protected first round pick in the 2006 NBA draft The 2005 06 season was a turning point for the team s image marked by several wins over top teams Brand s performances were greatly praised and he was chosen for the All Star Game Many sports writers noted the team s improvement especially after acquiring sharpshooter Vladimir Radmanovic from the Seattle SuperSonics in exchange for big man Chris Wilcox citation needed While the team had a few stretches of poor play they were able to maintain a solid record including posting several winning streaks They achieved their first winning record in 14 seasons and clinched their first playoff spot since 1997 They also finished with a better record than the Lakers for the second straight year By finishing sixth in the Western Conference with a record of 47 35 their highest finish since the team left Buffalo they benefited from the current NBA playoff format of regular season records taking precedence over winning the division and secured home court advantage over the Denver Nuggets On April 22 2006 the Clippers won their first NBA playoff game in 13 years Two days later they won their second playoff game going 2 0 against an opponent for the first time in franchise history They lost Game 3 won Game 4 and on May 1 they won Game 5 in Los Angeles This would mark their first playoff series win since they moved from Buffalo In the next round the team faced the Phoenix Suns After losing a close Game 1 they won Game 2 122 97 The series shifted to Staples Center for Game 3 but the Suns won 94 91 In Game 4 Brand posted 30 points nine rebounds and eight assists as the Clippers evened the series In Game 5 Raja Bell made a key 3 pointer for the Suns with 1 1 seconds left in the first overtime to send the game into a second overtime However Phoenix won in double overtime 125 118 They bounced back with a series saving 118 106 Game 6 win Second year defensive specialist Quinton Ross had a timely offensive game scoring a then career high 18 points Brand had 30 points his scoring average in this series 12 rebounds and five blocks Corey Maggette came off the bench to score 25 points with 7 8 shooting from the field and 9 9 from the free throw line Kaman and Cassell each scored 15 points However the Clippers lost the seventh game 127 107 General Manager and Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame member Elgin Baylor won the NBA Executive of the Year award for leading the Clippers playoff run The 2006 off season started as the team drafted Paul Davis in the second round of the 2006 NBA draft as the 34th overall pick The pick was acquired by the Clippers by way of a 2004 trade for Melvin Ely The team also drafted Guillermo Diaz as the 52nd overall pick While Davis signed with the team Diaz decided to play overseas However the team still holds his draft rights Meanwhile in free agency they signed Tim Thomas away from divisional Phoenix in a four year 24 million deal That was to counter the defection of Vladimir Radmanovic to the Lakers in a similar deal Radmanovic s contract lasted another year but both players would make the same amount of money annually which would be 6 million Cassell widely credited as the biggest reason for the Clippers recent success re signed on a two year 13 million deal while the team also signed veteran Aaron Williams to an undisclosed deal In September the Clippers also announced a radio broadcast deal with KSPN AM the local ESPN Radio operated outlet Despite several additions the team did not perform to expectations with a lack of team chemistry and injuries to several key players including Cassell Thomas and Kaman forcing the team to sign journeymen Luke Jackson Alvin Williams and Doug Christie to help solidify the team s bench The season disappointment extended as Shaun Livingston suffered a dislocated left knee in which he tore every ligament in his knee This was one of the most devastating injuries that season and considered one of the worst in league history 42 The extent of the injury was so severe local news outlets such as KCBS TV KCAL TV and KNBC TV elected not to air the clip of the injury According to the team s lead physician Dr Tony Daly Livingston s prognosis for him to return to basketball activity was eight months which was around the first week of the upcoming season to a full calendar year 43 The Clippers finished the season 40 42 two games behind the eighth seed while the Lakers finished with a better record for the first time since the 2003 04 season The Clippers received the 14th draft pick from the NBA lottery in the 2007 NBA Draft selecting Al Thornton The 2007 08 season started off negatively with Brand rupturing his left Achilles tendon Brand missed most of the season and the team struggled to stay competitive Chris Kaman took advantage of a depleted roster by averaging 15 7 points and 12 7 rebounds per game but was limited to playing 56 games also due to various injuries The Clippers ended the season 23 59 and the team aimed to rebuild for the following season Both Brand and Maggette were allowed to depart while ten players were acquired Brand stated his desire to stay but the contract faltered allowing him to move to the Philadelphia 76ers Baron Davis a Los Angeles native and formerly of the Golden State Warriors signed a five year contract with the Clippers worth an estimated 65 million 44 In the upcoming draft the Clippers obtained the seventh pick and selected Eric Gordon 45 They also selected DeAndre Jordan who was picked 35th overall Mike Taylor the 55th overall pick was acquired from the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for a future second round pick In July 2008 they acquired Marcus Camby from the Denver Nuggets in return for a 10 million trade exception and the choice to exchange second round picks with the Clippers in 2010 46 The Clippers also acquired guard Jason Hart from the Utah Jazz in exchange for guard Brevin Knight 47 and signed Ricky Davis to a one year deal 48 They continued an active off season by re signing former Clippers player Brian Skinner in July while trading for Steve Novak The team would also sign Jason Williams to a one year deal 49 However just prior to the start of training camp in September Williams announced his retirement Other mid season acquisitions came in the form of Zach Randolph and Mardy Collins who arrived from the New York Knicks in exchange for Tim Thomas and Cuttino Mobley 50 This trade made Kaman the sole member still on the team from their playoff run two years prior In October 2008 Baylor ended his 22 year reign as vice president and general manager of basketball operations It remains one of the longest tenures in professional sports history The Clippers indicated that Baylor had retired from his post 51 and as a result head coach Mike Dunleavy Sr assumed the role of General Manager while director of player personnel Neil Olshey was promoted to assistant general manager 52 53 54 However several other reports indicated Baylor had been fired or resigned and when questioned Baylor responded he had been advised by his attorneys not to comment on the matter 55 This prompted speculation that the team and Baylor were in negotiations to work out a settlement agreement for his departure with Baylor reportedly working without a formal contract since the early 1990s The 2008 09 season ended with the team 14th in the Western Conference with a record of 19 63 56 They were then awarded the first overall pick in the 2009 NBA draft 2009 2011 The arrival of Blake Griffin and steady improvement With the first overall pick the team selected Blake Griffin To clear a spot in the lineup for him they traded Zach Randolph to Memphis for Quentin Richardson Richardson was then traded to the Minnesota Timberwolves for Sebastian Telfair Craig Smith and Mark Madsen 57 Griffin immediately impressed in training camp and preseason On October 23 he broke his kneecap during the Clippers final exhibition game against the New Orleans Hornets following a dunk Initially the Clippers stated that he only had a sore left knee which would make him questionable for the season opener the following night before they revealed the break The injury sidelined Griffin for the entire season 58 On February 4 2010 head coach Mike Dunleavy resigned and Kim Hughes was named interim coach 59 Dunleavy retained his front office title and duties for just over a month but on March 10 he was fired as General Manager being replaced by Neil Olshey Dunleavy received the news of his dismissal from the internet as well as friends and reporters calling his cell phone 60 The Los Angeles Times reported that Dunleavy had filed for arbitration and that the Clippers had cut off his salary even though his guaranteed contract did not end until after the 2010 11 season 61 Although the Clippers saw minor improvement finishing with ten more wins at 29 53 Hughes was fired as head coach at the end of the season In July former Chicago Bulls coach Vinny Del Negro was hired as the next head coach 62 In August the team introduced new uniform designs at a photoshoot at the team s practice facility Griffin and DeAndre Jordan who saw significant improvement in his two years with the team modeled the new uniforms which were re designed for the first time since the 2000 01 season 63 The Clippers primary and secondary logos which are modifications of the previous ones were introduced to the public weeks earlier on the night of the 2010 NBA draft where the Clippers selected Al Farouq Aminu eighth overall With an improved Gordon stalwart Kaman rookie Aminu starting center Jordan a re energized Baron Davis and the debut of Griffin the Clippers had high hopes for the season However they started slowly losing ten of the first 11 games with Davis and Kaman out with injuries However the Clippers showed strength when three of their first four wins came from the top teams in the Western Conference Griffin got off to a strong start drawing increased media attention in Clippers games and boosting ratings of local broadcasts of Clippers games 64 Griffin was chosen as a Western Conference Reserve in the 2011 NBA All Star Game a rare honor for a rookie the first chosen by the coaches for the game since Tim Duncan in 1997 He also won the NBA Sprite Slam Dunk Contest and was named the Rookie of the Year as the team finished with a record of 32 50 As the trade deadline approached the Clippers sent Baron Davis along with their 2011 first round draft pick to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Mo Williams and Jamario Moon The pick eventually became the number one overall pick which the Cavaliers used to select Kyrie Irving 2011 2017 Arrival of Chris Paul and Lob City nbsp Blake Griffin nbsp Chris Paul nbsp DeAndre Jordan In December 2011 the Clippers signed Caron Butler to a 24 million deal and claimed veteran point guard Chauncey Billups three days later On December 14 they traded Eric Gordon Chris Kaman Al Farouq Aminu and Minnesota s 2012 first round pick acquired in 2005 for New Orleans Hornets four time all star Chris Paul Paul had previously almost been traded to the Los Angeles Lakers but NBA commissioner David Stern had vetoed the trade the NBA was owner of the Hornets at the time Paul and Griffin were selected as starters for the Western Conference team in the 2012 NBA All Star Game the first time in franchise history the team had two All Star starters in the same year The team gained the nickname Lob City due to a comment made by Griffin during the Clippers Media Day when the announcement of Chris Paul s trade reached the team Griffin after being told the news by Jordan declared Yeah It s going to be lob city 65 In February 2012 the Clippers signed Kenyon Martin An 11 year NBA veteran and former NBA All Star 2004 Martin joined the Clippers after signing with the Xinjiang Guanghui Flying Tigers of the Chinese Basketball Association the previous summer On February 6 2012 during a game against the Orlando Magic Billups tore his Achilles tendon and missed the remainder of the season In March 2012 Nick Young joined the Clippers as part of a three team trade with the Washington Wizards and the Denver Nuggets He became the eighth player to debut in the 2011 12 season After a stretch that saw the Clippers lose 12 of 19 games after Billups s season ending injury with rumors of Vinny Del Negro s career as head coach of the Clippers possibly coming to an abrupt end Los Angeles went on a tear 66 The Clippers won 12 of their next 14 games including road wins over the defending champions Dallas Mavericks and the Western Conference leading Oklahoma City Thunder clinching their fifth playoff berth since their 1976 conference semifinals loss to the Boston Celtics the last time they made the playoffs as the Buffalo Braves before a dominating home win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on April 16 2012 It was their third win in four regular season games against the Thunder Chris Paul s push for the NBA Most Valuable Player Award was at its peak and the 2011 12 season was the first time the Clippers were in the playoffs since 2005 06 season In their first playoff game the Clippers rallied from a 27 point deficit against the Grizzlies to win 99 98 in one of the biggest rallies in playoff history They led the series 3 1 then lost two straight before coming back to win Game 7 in Memphis 82 72 becoming the sixth NBA road team to win Game 7 after leading series 3 1 and prevail to the second round The Clippers relied on their bench during that game and they came through scoring all but two of their points in the fourth quarter In the second round of the playoffs the team was swept by the San Antonio Spurs 67 The following off season GM Neil Olshey reached an agreement to become General Manager of the Portland Trail Blazers 68 Olshey was replaced by Gary Sacks On draft night the team re acquired Lamar Odom from the Dallas Mavericks as part of a four team deal that also sent Mo Williams and Furkan Aldemir their 2012 draftee to the Utah Jazz and Houston Rockets respectively The team then sent Reggie Evans to the Brooklyn Nets for the right to swap second round draft picks with the Nets in the 2016 NBA draft 69 On the same day the Clippers signed free agent Jamal Crawford formerly of the Portland Trail Blazers and re signed Billups to a one year deal The franchise then rounded out its roster for the upcoming season with Grant Hill Ryan Hollins and Ronny Turiaf while signing Matt Barnes to a one year deal early in the season On November 29 2012 public address announcer David Courtney died in hospital and was replaced by former Clippers and current Los Angeles Dodgers PA announcer Eric Smith On December 15 with a 111 85 victory over the Milwaukee Bucks the Clippers recorded their record ninth consecutive win breaking their previous franchise record in Los Angeles of eight wins set in the 1991 92 season 70 On December 21 with a 97 85 win over the Sacramento Kings they notched their twelfth consecutive victory breaking their previous 11 game streak as the Buffalo Braves in the 1974 75 season 71 On December 30 the Clippers recorded a team record 17th straight win against the Utah Jazz beating them 107 96 The win also made the Clippers the third team in NBA history to record an undefeated month ending the month of December 16 0 The streak ended when they lost to the Denver Nuggets on January 2 2013 nbsp Doc Rivers became head coach during the 2013 off season On January 9 2013 with a 99 93 victory over the Dallas Mavericks the Clippers recorded another franchise record with their 13th straight home victory 72 On January 12 the Clippers 13 game home win streak came to an end with a 104 101 loss to the Orlando Magic 73 A 126 101 victory over the Phoenix Suns saw the Clippers reach the 50 win mark for the first time in franchise history breaking their previous mark of 49 from 1974 75 when they were in Buffalo 74 On April 7 with a 109 95 victory over the Lakers they swept the LA season series and clinched their first division title in franchise history 75 They would finish the season with a 56 26 record and entered the playoffs as the fourth seed to once again face the fifth seeded Memphis Grizzlies The Clippers would go up 2 0 early in the series after a buzzer beater by Chris Paul in game 2 After being up 2 0 in the series the Clippers would lose 4 games in a row to be eliminated the first round This caused the team to not renew Vinny Del Negro s contract as head coach and acquired Doc Rivers from the Boston Celtics 76 The deal was announced to have included two future first round draft picks in addition to an anti trade clause preventing the Clippers and Celtics from engaging in further transactions amongst each other including the exchanging of players for the duration of the 2013 14 season 77 78 79 On July 3 2013 the Clippers traded Eric Bledsoe and Caron Butler to the Phoenix Suns for Jared Dudley and JJ Redick from the Milwaukee Bucks The Clippers and Suns also sent a second round pick each to the Bucks On July 7 the team re signed Barnes Paul and Ryan Hollins Paul s deal was for 5 years worth around 105 3 million The team also signed Darren Collison to fill the back up point guard role replacing Bledsoe and free agent Chauncey Billups who signed with the Detroit Pistons On August 28 the Clippers signed free agent power forward Antawn Jamison to a one year deal worth the veteran minimum Jamison only appeared in 22 games and was eventually traded to the Atlanta Hawks on February 20 2014 in exchange for the draft rights to Cenk Akyol On December 19 2013 the Clippers signed free agent small forward Stephen Jackson Jackson also appeared sporadically and was eventually waived on January 7 2014 On January 16 the Clippers signed free agent small forward Hedo Turkoglu while also acquiring both Glen Davis and Danny Granger for the remainder of 2013 14 season On March 6 the Clippers defeated their crosstown rivals by 48 points 142 94 the most lopsided victory ever for the Clippers franchise and the most one sided loss in Lakers history On April 15 the Clippers broke the franchise record of wins with 57 In the playoffs they defeated the Warriors in seven games before falling again this time to the Thunder in six games in the second round Donald Sterling controversy On April 25 2014 entertainment news website TMZ released a taped conversation in which team owner Donald Sterling who had a history of accusations of racist behavior against African Americans and Latinos dating back to the 1990s reprimanded V Stiviano of African American and Mexican heritage who had reportedly been dating Sterling while he was estranged from wife for posting an Instagram photo featuring her former Los Angeles Lakers point guard Magic Johnson and another woman Sterling stated that it bothered him that she had broadcast that she is associating with black people and that he did not want Stiviano to bring them to the team s games 80 The remarks in the tape caused public backlash including condemnations from many players with Johnson Kareem Abdul Jabbar Charles Barkley Shaquille O Neal LeBron James and Kobe Bryant all voicing their disapproval several sponsors also severed ties with the team among them Kia Motors for whom Griffin serves as its television spokesperson State Farm Insurance and Virgin America 81 Threats of boycotts against the Clippers were also considered with the team itself briefly contemplating one at the April 27 playoff game against the Golden State Warriors the fourth game in the team s first round playoff series They opted to conduct a silent protest instead by wearing their shirts inside out obscuring team logos 82 83 On April 29 the NBA issued Sterling a lifetime ban from the organization after a league investigation into the recording confirmed that he was the one conversing with Stiviano The league also issued a 2 5 million fine against Sterling the highest allowable by the NBA and barred him from attending games or practices involving any NBA team being present in any Clippers office or facility and from participating in any team business player personnel decisions or league activity NBA commissioner Adam Silver stated in a press conference regarding the decision that he will try to force Sterling to sell the Clippers which would require the consent of three quarters of the league s 29 other team owners 84 Silver later announced that the NBA would appoint a CEO to run the team 85 Before the ban was issued Sterling told Fox News contributor Jim Gray that he had no plans to sell the team 86 The NBA installed former Citigroup and Time Warner chairman Richard Parsons as the interim CEO of the team on May 9 87 prior to allowing Steve Ballmer a former CEO of Microsoft to purchase the team for 2 billion 88 89 To buy the team Ballmer reportedly beat out other candidates including Eric Piatkowski and his group Oprah Winfrey Floyd Mayweather Magic Johnson as well as a group of crowdfunders 90 91 The team s sale price which was four times the expected purchase evaluated price prompted speculation that Ballmer aimed to relocate the team to Seattle his hometown He had previously been a part of an ownership group that had unsuccessfully attempted to move the Sacramento Kings to that city but later stated no intention to relocate the team 92 nbsp The Clippers hosting the San Antonio Spurs in Game 5 of the 2015 NBA playoffs first round series On August 12 2014 Ballmer officially took control of the team following an order by a California court that confirmed the sale from Shelly Sterling to Ballmer As part of the deal Shelly received the titles of Owner Emeritus and Clippers Number 1 Fan as well as ten tickets in sections 101 or 111 for all Clippers games two courtside tickets for all games in Los Angeles six parking spots in Lot C for each game 12 VIP passes that include access to the Lexus Club Arena Club or Chairman s Lounge and Media room or equivalent for each Staples games three championship rings following any Clippers title and will run a charitable foundation 8 93 94 95 The deal also included a stipulation that Steve Ballmer would keep the Clippers in Los Angeles 96 On November 6 the team hired its first major female executive as former Auto Club Speedway president Gillian Zucker was hired as the Clippers president of business operations 97 Zucker became one of two women to serve in an executive capacity in any of the four major professional sports leagues the other being Jeanie Buss president and part owner of the crosstown Lakers 2014 2017 Final seasons of Lob City The Clippers first regular season under Ballmer s co ownership ended with a 56 26 record and the third seed in the Western Conference going into the 2015 playoffs They met the defending NBA champion San Antonio Spurs winning the series in the seventh game on a game winning shot by Paul with one second left 98 In the next series against the second seeded Houston Rockets they took a 3 1 series lead that included 25 and 33 point wins in games three and four respectively However Houston won the final three games to eliminate Los Angeles In the off season the Clippers acquired Lance Stephenson 99 Wesley Johnson 100 and Paul Pierce 101 while re signing Austin Rivers 102 Griffin missed half of the season and the Clippers finished with the fourth playoff seed before being then eliminated in the first round of the 2016 playoffs by the fifth seeded Portland Trail Blazers The Clippers finished the 2016 17 season with a 51 31 record the team s fifth straight 50 win season despite injuries to both Griffin and Paul during the regular season 103 The Clippers won their last seven games and earned the fourth playoff seed by defeating the Sacramento Kings in the final game of the season 104 The Clippers faced the Utah Jazz in the first round of the playoffs but lost in seven games Paul Pierce retired after the season 2017 2019 Rebuild In preparation for a rebuild the Clippers brought in two time Executive Of The Year winner Jerry West to serve as their special consultant West was the architect behind the dynasties of the 2000 to 2002 Los Angeles Lakers and mid to late 2010s Golden State Warriors and had helped to establish the Memphis Grizzlies as a relevant playoff contender 105 On June 28 2017 Chris Paul was sent to the Houston Rockets in a sign and trade in exchange for Lou Williams Patrick Beverley Montrezl Harrell Sam Dekker Darrun Hilliard DeAndre Liggins Kyle Wiltjer a future first round pick and cash considerations The team retained Griffin and acquired Italian wing Danilo Gallinari in a three team trade with the Denver Nuggets and Atlanta Hawks Due to injuries to Griffin and Gallinari and no serious depth on the roster the team was struggling by the 2018 trade deadline and traded Griffin to the Detroit Pistons in exchange for Tobias Harris Avery Bradley Boban Marjanovic a protected first round pick in 2018 and a second round pick in 2019 With the added depth they finished with a winning record of 42 40 but missed the playoffs for the first time since 2011 In the 2018 NBA draft the team were awarded the 12th and 13th overall picks and selected Miles Bridges and Jerome Robinson respectively They then traded Bridges and two future second round picks on draft night to Charlotte for Shai Gilgeous Alexander Austin Rivers was traded to the Washington Wizards in exchange for Marcin Gortat while long time Clipper DeAndre Jordan who had been with the team since 2008 opted out of his contract and became a free agent 106 Despite the departure of Griffin and Jordan for the 2018 19 season the Clippers clinched a playoff berth and finished the regular season with a 48 34 record The team faced the defending two time NBA champion Golden State Warriors in the first round losing in six games 2019 present The Paul George Kawhi Leonard era In the 2019 off season Kawhi Leonard opted out of his final year on his contract with the Toronto Raptors to become one of the top free agents Leonard chose to sign with the Clippers when the team agreed to trade for the Oklahoma City Thunder s Paul George 107 For George the Clippers traded Shai Gilgeous Alexander Danilo Gallinari four unprotected first round picks a protected first round pick and two pick swaps Following the suspension of the 2019 20 NBA season the Clippers were one of the 22 teams invited to the NBA Bubble to participate in the final 8 games of the regular season 108 They finished the year with a 49 23 record as the Western Conferences second seed Despite high expectations the Clippers failed to win their first conference semifinals series when they were eliminated by the Denver Nuggets in seven games 109 The defeat marked the second time that the Clippers lost the conference semifinals after taking a 3 1 series lead A week later Ballmer announced that Rivers stepped down as head coach in a mutual decision 110 Rivers was succeeded by Tyronn Lue Despite losing Leonard to injury during the 2021 playoffs the Clippers defeated the top seeded Utah Jazz in the semifinals leading them to their first Western Conference finals appearance in franchise history 111 112 The Clippers lost the conference finals in six games to the Phoenix Suns preventing them from reaching their first NBA Finals On September 17 2021 ground was broken for the Intuit Dome which will be the Clipper s home arena from the 2024 25 season Due to Kawhi s injury during the playoffs Leonard missed the entire 2021 22 season In August 2021 the Clippers traded Patrick Beverley Rajon Rondo and a 2025 pick to the Memphis Grizzlies for Eric Bledsoe who would be dealt in February 2022 with Justise Winslow and Keon Johnson for Norman Powell and Robert Covington The Clippers ended the season 42 40 qualifying for the play in game but would not make it out due to losses to Minnesota and New Orleans In the next season the Clippers acquired former MVP Russell Westbrook and former All NBA guard John Wall via free agency Wall would later be dealt for Eric Gordon as part of a three team deal The Clippers would finish the season 44 38 and make the playoffs but be eliminated in the first round due to injuries to Kawhi Leonard and Paul George Near the start of the 2023 24 season the Clippers traded Marcus Morris Sr Kenyon Martin Jr Nicolas Batum and Robert Covington to the Philadelphia 76ers for P J Tucker Filip Petrusev and former MVP James Harden In the Clippers final season in the Crypto com Arena they would start off the season slow but when Terance Mann replaced Westbrook in the starting lineup the Clippers went on a roll They clinched a playoff spot on April 11 2024 and finished as the fourth seed in the Western Conference with a 51 31 record RivalriesLos Angeles Lakers Main article Lakers Clippers rivalry The rivalry between the Clippers and the Los Angeles Lakers is unique because they are the only two NBA teams to share an arena the Crypto com Arena It is also one of only two intra city rivalries in the NBA the other being the crosstown rivalry between the New York Knicks and Brooklyn Nets Los Angeles fans have historically favored the Lakers 113 114 Some contend that the term rivalry is inaccurate due to the Lakers historical success and the Clippers historical lack thereof 115 Season by season recordList of the last five seasons completed by the Clippers For the full season by season history see List of Los Angeles Clippers seasons Note GP Games played W Wins L Losses W L Winning percentage Season GP W L W L Finish Playoffs 2019 20 72 49 23 681 2nd Pacific Lost in Conference semifinals 3 4 Nuggets 2020 21 72 47 25 653 2nd Pacific Lost in Conference finals 2 4 Suns 2021 22 82 42 40 512 3rd Pacific Did not qualify 2022 23 82 44 38 537 3rd Pacific Lost in First Round 1 4 Suns 2023 24 82 51 31 622 1st Pacific Lost in First Round 2 4 Mavericks Home arenasBuffalo Memorial Auditorium 1970 1978 Maple Leaf Gardens occasional games 1971 1975 San Diego Sports Arena 1978 1984 Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena 1984 1999 Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim occasional games 1994 1999 Crypto com Arena 1999 2024 Intuit Dome planned to open August 2024 Move to Intuit Dome On June 15 2017 the Clippers and the city of Inglewood entered into an exclusive negotiating agreement in which the team plans to build a new privately funded 18 000 to 20 000 seat arena Inglewood Basketball and Entertainment Center planning to open by 2024 when the Clippers current lease with Crypto com Arena expires 116 117 The planned arena is expected to be located at Century Boulevard between Yukon and Prairie Avenues directly south of the new SoFi Stadium the home of the Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League The arena is also expected to house a practice facility and team headquarters for the Clippers as the team s current practice facility in Los Angeles Playa Vista neighborhood is still owned by the Sterling Family Trust and is leased back to the team The Inglewood city council unanimously voted for the agreement in which a subsidiary of the Clippers will purchase 22 acres covering four large city blocks in what is largely a lower class lower middle class residential neighborhood Century to the north 104th Street to the south Doty to the east and Prairie to the west to build the new facility The planned arena was met with immediate opposition from the nearby Forum and its operator the Madison Square Garden Company parent company of the New York Knicks as they accused both the Clippers and the Inglewood city government of backroom dealing and the fear that a new Clippers arena would siphon events from the recently renovated sports arena turned concert venue In March 2020 Steve Ballmer owner of the Clippers reached an agreement with the Madison Square Garden Company to buy The Forum eliminating any opposition related to the construction of the Clippers new arena 118 On July 25 2019 the Clippers released images of the proposed arena with the construction planned to begin in 2021 and completed in fall 2024 following the expiration of the Clippers lease with the Staples Center 119 On September 17 2021 the Clippers unveiled the first renditions of the new arena with an expected cost of up to 2 billion The team also revealed the arena s name as the Intuit Dome through a 23 year naming rights deal with Intuit worth 500 million 120 121 Logos and uniforms nbsp The Clippers updated wordmark logo unveiled on June 18 2015 122 nbsp The Clippers future logo starting with the 2024 2025 NBA season which was unveiled on February 26 2024 When the Braves franchise moved to San Diego and renamed the Clippers they retained the baby blue base on their uniforms but replaced black with orange trim A series of nautical flags which spelled Clippers adorned each side of the shorts The team s original logo featured a large baby blue circle enclosing a small orange circle to represent Southern California s sunny climate and three white sails to represent a clipper 123 124 The three sails logo was later reused by the Clippers G League team upon relocating from Ontario to San Diego in 2024 31 In a foreshadowing move the Clippers redesigned their logo and uniforms during the 1982 83 season This set which the team carried over upon moving to Los Angeles in 1984 replaced baby blue and orange with royal blue and red The uniforms featured a royal blue base and red trim and were emblazoned with the team name in front the C in the word Clippers was enlarged in the same manner as the logo 125 Most notably San Diego was removed from the away jerseys and replaced with the same Clippers wordmark from the home jerseys The Clippers also wore red uniforms on a number of occasions in 1984 The logo was now a generic moving white basketball with red lines superimposed over the full team name which the team used until 2015 albeit with some tweaks to the design 123 In 1987 the Clippers uniforms changed to a set that remained mostly intact until 2010 Red became the base color while blue was relegated to trim color On the home white uniform the team name was written in script lettering while on the road red uniform the city name in script was used Later on the road uniforms replaced the city name with the team name and blue numerals were replaced with white numerals 125 Before the 2000 01 season the Clippers made slight changes to their uniform adding the interlocking LAC logo on the neckline and gaining thicker contrasting stripes and bolder numerals Later on the Clippers unveiled a blue alternate uniform which spelled the city name in red with white trim 126 In 2010 the Clippers changed their uniforms adjusting the stripes and letters The white uniforms featured the team name in blue and the numerals in red while the red uniforms were emblazoned with the city name in white and numerals in blue Later on the Clippers added a blue alternate uniform and a sleeved baby blue alternate uniform both designs featured the city name in white and numerals in red 126 On June 18 2015 the Los Angeles Clippers unveiled its new brand identity The club s primary logo features a basketball in the shape of a compass with the club s LAC monogram situated in the middle Below that is the club s wordmark logo in black with the two curved lines below the wordmark symbolizing the horizon of the ocean which the club says it alludes to its nautical roots The team also unveiled its new home and away uniforms which kept the design template from the previous uniforms The home white uniform features the club s wordmark logo in black across the front The away red uniform features the club s LAC monogram across the right breast with the player s jersey number across the left breast 127 122 The Clippers introduced an alternate black uniform intended to celebrate downtown Los Angeles on November 6 2015 The uniform keeps the design template from the previous uniform and features the club s primary logo without the wordmark 128 The Clippers unveiled their new Nike Association white and Icon team color uniform designs on August 11 2017 3 The home and road designations were dropped and the team replaced its seldom used road red uniform with a new blue Icon uniform that resembles the white Association uniform which dropped the black accents The black alternate a k a Statement uniform was also retained All three sets featured updated numeral and letter fonts A fourth uniform option the City uniform was later unveiled For the 2017 18 season the Clippers brought back the classic San Diego baby blue and orange scheme for their first City uniform including the nautical flags which spell the acronym LAC 129 The next season the Clippers wore navy blue City uniforms to commemorate the team s 35th season in Los Angeles as well as to pay tribute to the 1984 Summer Olympics 130 In the 2019 20 season the Clippers donned white City uniforms with black letters and Los Angeles in Old English font as a tribute to Los Angeles street culture 131 The Clippers kept most of the same design for the 2020 21 City uniform this time with a black base 132 The 2021 22 City uniform saw the Clippers incorporate various uniform styles from the past including the baby blue and orange of the Buffalo San Diego era the Clippers script from 1987 to 2015 and the three sails motif from the 2017 18 City uniform 133 In the 2022 23 season the Clippers wore black City uniforms as homage to the Drew League a summer tournament in Los Angeles that celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2023 The white Los Angeles script was surrounded by a mosaic inspired by the Watts Towers 134 The 2023 24 City uniform featured the shortened nickname Clips in a font based on the team s 1978 1983 logo The mostly navy uniform was designed by local artist Jonas Wood who drew inspiration from the city s love for basketball 135 After reaching the 2020 NBA playoffs the Clippers were rewarded with an Earned uniform for the 2020 21 season The uniform essentially recreated the team s Icon uniform but had a grey base with thick white stripes and red and blue were relegated to the arm piping 136 In the 2022 23 season the Clippers updated their black Statement uniforms replacing the LAC logo with the Los Angeles script first used in their 2019 20 and 2020 21 City uniforms The three sails motif from the 2017 18 and 2021 22 City uniforms was also added 137 Starting with the 2024 25 season the Clippers unveiled modern versions of the script uniforms they previously wore from 1987 to 2015 The logo now featured a stylized clipper ship surrounding a navy blue C in a white circle and Pacific blue outline with pointed marks inspired by a compass and a basketball silhouette on the hull The Association white uniform featured the modernized script Clippers wordmark in navy blue with red numbers The Icon navy blue uniform featured the aforementioned Clippers script in red with white numbers and the red Statement uniform featured a stacked script Los Angeles wordmark in navy blue with white numbers along with nautical flags that spell LAC on the navy blue stripe 138 139 PersonnelAll time roster Main article Los Angeles Clippers all time roster Current roster Los Angeles Clippers rostervte Players Coaches Pos No Name Height Weight DOB From G 4 Boston Brandon Jr 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m 188 lb 85 kg 2001 11 28 Kentucky F 21 Brown Kobe 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 250 lb 113 kg 2000 01 01 Missouri G F 7 Coffey Amir 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 210 lb 95 kg 1997 06 17 Minnesota C 25 Diabate Moussa TW 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 210 lb 95 kg 2002 01 21 Michigan F 13 George Paul 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 220 lb 100 kg 1990 05 02 Fresno State G 1 Harden James 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 220 lb 100 kg 1989 08 26 Arizona State G 5 Hyland Bones 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 173 lb 78 kg 2000 09 14 VCU F C 23 Jones Kai 6 ft 11 in 2 11 m 221 lb 100 kg 2001 01 19 Texas F 2 Leonard Kawhi 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 225 lb 102 kg 1991 06 29 San Diego State G F 14 Mann Terance 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 215 lb 98 kg 1996 10 18 Florida State F 11 Miller Jordan TW 6 ft 7 in 2 01 m 195 lb 88 kg 2000 01 23 Miami FL G 22 Moon Xavier TW 6 ft 2 in 1 88 m 165 lb 75 kg 1995 01 02 Morehead State F C 44 Plumlee Mason 6 ft 10 in 2 08 m 254 lb 115 kg 1990 03 05 Duke G 24 Powell Norman 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 215 lb 98 kg 1993 05 25 UCLA F C 10 Theis Daniel 6 ft 8 in 2 03 m 245 lb 111 kg 1992 04 04 Germany F 17 Tucker P J 6 ft 5 in 1 96 m 245 lb 111 kg 1985 05 05 Texas G 0 Westbrook Russell 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m 200 lb 91 kg 1988 11 12 UCLA C 40 Zubac Ivica 7 ft 0 in 2 13 m 240 lb 109 kg 1997 03 18 Croatia Head coach Tyronn Lue Assistant coach es Jeremy Castleberry Dan Craig associate HC Larry Drew Shaun Fein Dahntay Jones Jay Larranaga Brendan O Connor Brian Shaw Legend DP Unsigned draft pick FA Free agent S Suspended GL On assignment to G League affiliate TW Two way affiliate player nbsp Injured Roster Last transaction April 13 2024 Retained draft rights The Clippers hold the draft rights to the following unsigned draft picks who have been playing outside the NBA A drafted player either an international draftee or a college draftee who is not signed by the team that drafted him is allowed to sign with any non NBA teams In this case the team retains the player s draft rights in the NBA until one year after the player s contract with the non NBA team ends 140 This list includes draft rights that were acquired from trades with other teams Draft Round Pick Player Pos Nationality Current team Note s Ref 2022 2 46 Ismael Kamagate C nbsp France Bertram Derthona Tortona Italy Acquired from the Detroit Pistons via Portland and Denver 141 2021 2 57 Balsa Koprivica C nbsp Serbia Partizan Mozzart Bet Serbia Acquired from the Detroit Pistons 142 2015 2 60 Luka Mitrovic F nbsp Serbia Crvena zvezda Meridianbet Serbia Acquired from the Philadelphia 76ers via Sacramento 143 Retired numbers The NBA retired Bill Russell s No 6 for all its member teams on August 11 2022 144 145 Basketball Hall of Famers Los Angeles Clippers Hall of Famers Players No Name Position Tenure Inducted 32 Bill Walton C 1979 1985 1993 11 Bob McAdoo F C 1972 1976 2000 20 Moses Malone C F 1976 2001 21 Dominique Wilkins F 1994 2006 44 Adrian Dantley F G 1976 1977 2008 52 Jamaal Wilkes F 1985 2012 33 Grant Hill F 2012 2013 2018 34 Paul Pierce F 2015 2017 2021 1 Chauncey Billups G 2011 2013 2024 Coaches Name Position Tenure Inducted Jack Ramsay Head coach 1972 1976 1992 Larry Brown Head coach 1992 1993 2002 Bill Fitch Head coach 1994 1998 2019 Contributors Cotton Fitzsimmons Head coach 1977 1978 2021 Jerry West Executive 2017 present 2024 Franchise leaders Main article Los Angeles Clippers accomplishments and records Bold denotes still active with team Italic denotes still active but not with team Regular season as of the end of the 2023 24 season 146 Points Randy Smith 12 735 Blake Griffin 10 863 Bob McAdoo 9 434 Elton Brand 9 174 Corey Maggette 8 835 Chris Paul 7 674 Danny Manning 7 120 DeAndre Jordan 7 078 Loy Vaught 6 614 Ken Norman 6 432 Paul George 6 049 Ron Harper 5 853 Chris Kaman 5 813 Kawhi Leonard 5 687 Jamal Crawford 5 675 Benoit Benjamin 5 405 Eric Piatkowski 5 269 Charles Smith 4 994 Lou Williams 4 975 Bob Kauffman 4 847 Swen Nater 4 694 Freeman Williams 4 467 World B Free 4 299 JJ Redick 4 208 Lamond Murray 4 173 Norm Nixon 4 127 Michael Brooks 4 010 Lamar Odom 3 986 Gary Grant 3 899 Ivica Zubac 3 887 Most minutes played Player Minutes Randy Smith 24 393 DeAndre Jordan 21 045 Blake Griffin 17 706 Elton Brand 17 595 Corey Maggette 15 780 Loy Vaught 15 671 Chris Kaman 14 661 Chris Paul 13 885 Ken Norman 13 584 Bob McAdoo 13 381Most rebounds Player Rebounds DeAndre Jordan 7 988 Elton Brand 4 710 Blake Griffin 4 686 Loy Vaught 4 471 Bob McAdoo 4 229 Swen Nater 4 168 Chris Kaman 4 109 Benoit Benjamin 3 538 Ivica Zubac 3 288 Randy Smith 2 985Most assists Player Assists Chris Paul 4 023 Randy Smith 3 498 Gary Grant 2 810 Norm Nixon 2 540 Blake Griffin 2 133 Ron Harper 1 463 Ernie DiGregorio 1 457 Mark Jackson 1 402 Baron Davis 1 398 Pooh Richardson 1 397Most steals Player Steals Randy Smith 1 072 Chris Paul 902 Gary Grant 747 Ron Harper 606 Danny Manning 548 Blake Griffin 484 Loy Vaught 468 DeAndre Jordan 448 Elton Brand 438 Corey Maggette 421Most blocks Player Blocks DeAndre Jordan 1 277 Benoit Benjamin 1 117 Elton Brand 1 039 Chris Kaman 707 Bob McAdoo 614 Michael Olowokandi 527 Gar Heard 477 Charles Smith 451 Bo Outlaw 421 Ivica Zubac 410Most three pointers made Player 3 pointers Paul George 820 Eric Piatkowski 738 JJ Redick 674 Jamal Crawford 662 Chris Paul 618 Kawhi Leonard 468 Lou Williams 447 Eric Gordon 403 Reggie Jackson 392 Marcus Morris 379 Single season records Single season records Category Player Statistics Minutes played Bob McAdoo 3 539 Field goals Bob McAdoo 1 095 3 point field goals Paul George 243 Free throws World B Free 654 Offensive rebounds DeAndre Jordan 397 Defensive rebounds Swen Nater 864 Total rebounds DeAndre Jordan 1 226 Assists Norm Nixon 914 Steals Randy Smith 203 Blocks Bob McAdoo 246 Points Bob McAdoo 2 831 Player efficiency rating Chris Paul 27 0 Individual awards NBA Rookie of the Year Terry Cummings 1983 Blake Griffin 2011 NBA Most Improved Player Bobby Simmons 2005 NBA Sixth Man of the Year Jamal Crawford 2014 2016 Lou Williams 2018 2019 Montrezl Harrell 2020 NBA Sportsmanship Award Elton Brand 2006 NBA Hustle Award Montrezl Harrell 2020 NBA Teammate of the Year Chauncey Billups 2013 NBA Executive of the Year Elgin Baylor 2006 All NBA First Team Chris Paul 2012 2014 DeAndre Jordan 2016 Kawhi Leonard 2021 All NBA Second Team Elton Brand 2006 Blake Griffin 2012 2014 Chris Paul 2015 2016 Kawhi Leonard 2020 2024All NBA Third Team Dominique Wilkins 1994 Blake Griffin 2015 DeAndre Jordan 2015 2017 Paul George 2021 NBA All Defensive First Team Chris Paul 2012 2017 DeAndre Jordan 2015 2016 NBA All Defensive Second Team Patrick Beverley 2020 Kawhi Leonard 2020 2021 NBA All Rookie First Team Terry Cummings 1983 Charles Smith 1989 Lamar Odom 2000 Darius Miles 2001 Al Thornton 2008 Blake Griffin 2011 NBA All Rookie Second Team Brent Barry 1996 Maurice Taylor 1998 Michael Olowokandi 1999 Eric Gordon 2009 Eric Bledsoe 2011 Shai Gilgeous Alexander 2019 Landry Shamet 2019 NBA All Star Weekend NBA All Star selections Norm Nixon 1985 Marques Johnson 1986 Danny Manning 1993 1994 Elton Brand 2002 2006 Chris Kaman 2010 Blake Griffin 2011 2015 Chris Paul 2012 2016 DeAndre Jordan 2017 Paul George 2021 2023 2024 Kawhi Leonard 2020 2021 2024 NBA All Star Game Most Valuable Player Randy Smith 1978 Chris Paul 2013 Kawhi Leonard 2020 Slam Dunk champion Brent Barry 1996 Blake Griffin 2011Head coachesMain article List of Los Angeles Clippers head coachesClipperVisionIn 2022 the Clippers launched their own direct to consumer streaming service for non national Clippers games The service includes the regular game feed along with CourtVision which features analytics overlaid on the regular broadcast BallerVision an alternate viewing option for all games featuring Steve Ballmer and NBA legends and Spanish and Korean broadcasts The service also includes access to on demand games The service is available on Roku iOS Android Apple TV and personal computers 147 Commentators and broadcast outletsMain article List of Los Angeles Clippers broadcasters Brian Sieman television and radio play by play Jim Jackson television and radio color commentator Kristina Pink television sideline reporter Noah Eagle radio play by play and courtside reporter TV play by play fill in Mike Fratello pregame and postgame analyst for telecasts on Bally Sports SoCal TV commentary fill in Corey Maggette pregame and postgame analyst for telecasts on Bally Sports SoCal TV commentary fill in Adam Ausland pregame and postgame host for the KLAC Clippers Radio Network Broadcast television 14 games KTLA Los Angeles KUSI TV San Diego KGET TV Bakersfield KSEE TV Fresno Cable television Bally Sports SoCal Radio KLAC 570 AM KWKW 1330 AM Spanish any Clippers game which conflicts with a Los Angeles Dodgers game on KLAC will be heard instead on KEIB 1150 AM Notes and referencesNotes References Franchise History NBA Advanced Stats NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Retrieved May 13 2024 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link NBA com Stats LA Clippers seasons Stats NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 2 2022 a b Ibarra Joseph August 11 2017 Press Release L A Clippers Unveil 2017 18 Nike Uniforms Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on December 16 2018 Retrieved December 14 2018 NBA LockerVision LA Clippers Icon Edition Story Guide LockerVision NBA com NBA Properties Inc Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved December 12 2021 The LA Clippers Icon Edition uniform represents the team s iconic brand identity This uniform features LA Clippers royal blue as the base color and showcases the jersey wordmark Clippers in white The side inserts mirror the Association Edition with horizontal lines that are inspired by the sharp lined hull of a Clipper ship The shorts also feature red and white asymmetrical color elements on either side inspired by maritime navigational lights LA Clippers Reproduction and Usage Guideline Sheet NBA Properties Inc Archived from the original on October 17 2016 Retrieved August 10 2016 Honey and LA Clippers Expand Partnership Introduce Honey Logo Patch on Clippers Jerseys Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC November 20 2020 Archived from the original on January 12 2021 Retrieved December 25 2020 CLIPPERS RESTRUCTURE BASKETBALL OPERATIONS DEPARTMENT Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 16 2014 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved November 29 2015 a b STEVE BALLMER COMPLETES PURCHASE OF LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC August 12 2014 Archived from the original on April 19 2023 Retrieved November 29 2015 a b Behind The Name Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC August 31 2006 Archived from the original on June 6 2021 Retrieved June 6 2021 THE OFFICIAL PAGE OF THE BUFFALO BRAVES Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on July 3 2011 Retrieved August 2 2018 Tarapacki Thomas July 12 2008 Remember the Buffalo Braves Buffalo Rising Archived from the original on May 2 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Sport Braves New World Time April 1 1974 Archived from the original on November 7 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 The Buffalo Braves Saga Do Not Lionize Paul Snyder Artvoice artvoice com April 24 2016 Retrieved April 11 2024 LA Clippers From Underdogs to Championship Contenders Joyce Rey joycerey com Retrieved April 11 2024 Braves and Sabres End Dates Dispute The New York Times January 31 1976 Mostiller Conrad July 31 2014 Worst Buffalo Sports Moments 5 The Death of the Buffalo Braves UB Bull Run SB Nation Archived from the original on April 1 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Peter May May 22 2012 Freaky Friday N B A Style When the Clippers Were the Celtics The New York Times Archived from the original on July 18 2013 Retrieved May 3 2013 a b Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 17 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 a b c Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 18 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 a b c Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 20 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 a b c d Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 21 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 22 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 a b Minas Mick 2016 The Curse The Colorful amp Chaotic History of the LA Clippers CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 26 ISBN 978 1 5391 4875 3 Archived from the original on May 28 2023 Retrieved July 6 2021 Thirty five years later Clippers strange run and stunning exit lingers San Diego Union Tribune December 30 2019 Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved December 22 2020 Upi July 7 1982 Clipper Legal Case Stays in San Diego Published 1982 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on July 3 2021 Retrieved December 22 2020 a b Goldaper Sam November 13 1983 Clippers Are Showing Signs of Revival The New York Times Archived from the original on July 15 2014 Dohrmann George May 30 2014 Recently banned Donald Sterling has long history of clashing with NBA SI com permanent dead link Clippers and NBA Reach Agreement Suit Dropped Los Angeles Times September 30 1987 Archived from the original on August 8 2020 Retrieved August 10 2019 Clippers Are Facing 8 Million in Losses Since Move to L A Los Angeles Times March 16 1986 Archived from the original on September 25 2019 Retrieved September 25 2019 a b Lidz Franz April 17 2000 Up And Down In Beverly Hills Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on April 28 2014 Retrieved April 27 2014 a b LA Clippers G League team to relocate and rebrand as San Diego Clippers NBA com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC March 11 2024 Retrieved March 12 2024 a b c d Moore David January 21 1990 Clipper Triangle strikes again Boca Raton News Dallas Texas The Dallas Morning News p 7D Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved January 6 2014 Los Angeles Clippers 1970 Attendance by Year DatabaseSports com May 7 2015 Archived from the original on July 3 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 Clippers Owner Wants New Stadium Los Angeles Times May 11 1989 Archived from the original on December 20 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 Chris Baker Greg Hernandez June 7 1996 L A Clippers Decide Against Anaheim Move Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on July 10 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Chris Baker Greg Hernandez June 2 1996 Clippers Anaheim On Again Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 20 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 Report Former Wake Forest NBA star Rogers paralyzed in ATV accident ESPN December 4 2008 Archived from the original on November 29 2022 Retrieved November 29 2022 Los Angeles Clippers Career Leaders Sports Reference LLC May 7 2015 Archived from the original on June 12 2013 Retrieved May 7 2015 Steve Springer April 17 1998 Clippers to Join Kings Lakers in New Arena Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 20 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 CLIPPERS Clippers All Time Statistical Leaders Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on March 21 2010 Retrieved March 2 2010 Training Center Press Conference Transcript Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC July 7 2005 Archived from the original on June 22 2018 Retrieved August 2 2018 Livingston Injury Report Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC February 26 2007 Archived from the original on June 27 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Shaun Livingston Injury Update Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC February 27 2007 Archived from the original on May 10 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 Davis verbally agrees to go to Clippers leave Warriors ESPN July 1 2008 Archived from the original on January 10 2016 Retrieved July 2 2008 Clippers Sign Eric Gordon Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 2 2008 Archived from the original on March 7 2009 Retrieved May 7 2015 Clippers Acquire Marcus Camby Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 15 2008 Archived from the original on March 10 2010 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Acquire Jason Hart From Utah Jazz Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 23 2008 Archived from the original on March 10 2010 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Sign Free Agent Ricky Davis Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 28 2008 Archived from the original on March 16 2021 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Sign Free Agent Guard Jason Williams Clipers com NBA Media Ventures LLC August 7 2008 Archived from the original on March 10 2010 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Acquire Zach Randolph and Mardy Collins From Knicks Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC November 21 2008 Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Add General Manager Role To Head Coach Mike Dunleavy s Duties Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC October 7 2008 Archived from the original on March 10 2010 Retrieved March 3 2010 Dillman Lisa October 8 2008 A power forward no longer Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved March 3 2010 Dillman Lisa October 7 2008 Elgin Baylor retires as Clippers GM Dunleavy takes over Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on January 16 2009 Retrieved March 3 2010 Art Thompson III October 7 2008 Clippers Baylor is out and Dunleavy will be GM coach Orange County Register Archived from the original on December 8 2008 Retrieved May 7 2015 Dillman Lisa October 9 2008 Baylor s attorney exploring options Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 10 2024 Retrieved March 3 2010 2009 10 NBA Regular Season Divisional Standings National Basketball Association ESPN ESPN Archived from the original on March 19 2008 Retrieved March 3 2010 Clippers Acquire Telfair Smith and Madsen from Minnesota for Richardson Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC July 20 2009 Archived from the original on March 10 2010 Retrieved March 3 2010 Los Angeles Clippers Blake Griffin has broken kneecap out weeks ESPN ESPN October 27 2009 Archived from the original on October 30 2009 Retrieved March 3 2010 Dunleavy out as Clippers coach ESPN ESPN February 5 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 Dillman Lisa March 9 2010 Clippers fire Mike Dunleavy The team severs ties with the general manager who had stepped down from coaching duties last month Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved April 20 2010 Heisler Mark April 20 2010 Clippers have stopped paying Mike Dunleavy Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on February 10 2024 Retrieved April 20 2010 Spears Marc J July 6 2010 Clippers to hire Del Negro Yahoo Sports Archived from the original on February 10 2024 Retrieved May 7 2015 New Clippers Uniforms Unveiling Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC August 16 2010 Archived from the original on August 20 2010 Retrieved August 20 2010 Rookie Blake Griffin boosts interest in Clippers games NBA Sporting News sportingnews com Archived from the original on January 13 2011 Retrieved February 3 2011 Griffin Jordan celebrate Paul trade Fox Sports West December 15 2011 Retrieved January 14 2013 permanent dead link Shelburne Ramona April 16 2012 Vinny Del Negro I relished pressure ESPN com Archived from the original on April 17 2012 Retrieved April 17 2012 Los Angeles Clippers Season Comes to an End with 102 99 Loss to San Antonio Spurs Archived from the original on October 22 2012 Retrieved June 29 2012 Blazers hire Olshey after he shuns Clippers Oregon Live June 4 2012 Archived from the original on June 7 2012 Retrieved December 3 2013 Clippers send Evans to Nets for draft pick CBS Sports Archived from the original on May 8 2013 Retrieved July 11 2012 Clippers Blowout Bucks To Claim Franchise Record With 9 Straight Wins Archived from the original on May 9 2013 Retrieved December 16 2012 Clippers set franchise record with 12th straight victory Archived from the original on May 8 2013 Retrieved December 22 2012 Clippers hang on vs Mavericks to hit record home winning streak ESPN LA January 10 2013 Archived from the original on October 8 2013 Retrieved January 13 2013 J J Redick s late 3 pointer snaps Clips 13 game home streak ESPN LA January 12 2013 Archived from the original on February 2 2013 Retrieved January 13 2013 Clippers beat Suns 126 101 for record 50th win The Miami Herald Retrieved April 4 2013 Clippers clinch first division title Fox Sports Archived from the original on April 9 2013 Retrieved April 7 2013 Golliver Ben June 24 2013 Reports Celtics Clippers agree to Doc Rivers deal Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on March 19 2014 Retrieved May 7 2015 Rivers introduced as Clippers new coach and senior VP National Basketball Association Associated Press June 25 2013 Archived from the original on June 28 2013 Retrieved September 6 2013 Celtics Announce Trade Of Doc Rivers To Clippers CBS Boston June 25 2013 Archived from the original on September 4 2013 Retrieved September 6 2013 Doc deal prevents player trades with Clips ESPN Boston June 25 2013 Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 L A Clippers Owner to GF Don t Bring Black People to My Games Including Magic Johnson TMZ com April 29 2014 Archived from the original on April 28 2014 Retrieved April 29 2014 Sponsors pulling support of Los Angeles Clippers USA Today April 29 2014 Archived from the original on April 30 2014 Retrieved April 30 2014 Markazi Arash April 26 2014 Clippers briefly consider boycott ESPN Archived from the original on April 27 2014 Retrieved April 26 2014 Greenberg Chris April 27 2014 Clippers Players Stage Silent Protest Against Donald Sterling With Inside Out Shirts PHOTOS Huffington Post Archived from the original on April 30 2014 Retrieved April 30 2014 Clippers owner Sterling banned for life by the NBA NBA com April 29 2014 Archived from the original on April 30 2014 Retrieved April 29 2014 BEACHAM Greg May 3 2014 NBA To Appoint CEO To Supervise Clippers After Donald Sterling s Lifetime Ban Huffington Post Archived from the original on May 4 2014 Retrieved May 4 2014 Report Donald Sterling says Clippers are not for sale Sports Illustrated April 29 2014 Archived from the original on April 30 2014 Ex Time Warner chairman named interim Clippers CEO NBA com May 9 2014 Archived from the original on May 10 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Scott Cacciola Richard Sandomir May 30 2014 Steve Ballmer Said to Sign 2 Billion Deal to Buy Clippers The New York Times Archived from the original on February 8 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 NBA Sterling family trust announce settlement Press release National Basketball Association May 30 2014 Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved May 30 2014 Lehman Jonathan April 30 2014 Oprah may buy Clippers off Donald Sterling New York Post Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Retrieved August 25 2014 Buy The LA Clippers Tilt com Tilt May 29 2014 Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Retrieved August 26 2014 Rainey James May 30 2014 High bidder Steve Ballmer aims to right the Clippers ship Los Angeles Times Archived from the 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Warriors to take on role as consultant with Clippers Probasketball Talk June 15 2017 Archived from the original on June 30 2018 Retrieved June 29 2018 Wojnarowski Adrian June 30 2018 DeAndre Jordan turns sights toward Mavericks after opting out of Clippers deal ESPN com Archived from the original on July 5 2018 Retrieved July 5 2018 Reports Paul George traded to Clippers NBA com Archived from the original on July 6 2019 Retrieved July 9 2019 NBA Board of Governors approves competitive format to restart 2019 20 season with 22 teams returning to play NBA com NBA com June 4 2020 Archived from the original on October 22 2021 Retrieved December 20 2020 Smith Sekou September 16 2020 Clippers championship dreams crumble in Game 7 loss to Nuggets NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on September 17 2020 Retrieved September 17 2020 Instead of a historic romp to the conference finals for the first time in franchise annals the Clippers exited the NBA bubble on a soggy Tuesday night as punchlines once again Doc Rivers out as LA Clippers coach after disappointing end to season ESPN September 28 2020 Archived from the original on September 29 2020 Retrieved September 29 2020 Aschburner Steve June 21 2021 Next generation of stars step into the spotlight in conference finals NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC Archived from the original on June 28 2021 Retrieved June 28 2021 Medina Mark June 19 2021 Clippers stun Jazz with huge second half rally to reach Western Conference finals for first time USA Today Archived from the original on June 29 2021 Retrieved June 28 2021 Gold Jon January 29 2011 Clippers Becoming Relevant in Los Angeles The New York Times Archived from the original on August 8 2017 Retrieved November 1 2012 Niesen Joan NBA s Western Conference hard to figure Foxsportswest com Retrieved November 2 2012 permanent dead link Kamenetzky Andy Lakers vs Clippers What to watch Los Angeles Lakers Blog ESPN Los Angeles ESPN com Archived from the original on 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Cite web cite web a author1 has generic name help Ballmer Clips forging own identity with arena ESPN com September 17 2021 Archived from the original on September 17 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 a b GearUpLA Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC June 18 2015 Archived from the original on March 1 2019 Retrieved July 22 2015 a b Todd Radom April 21 2015 How the Clippers logo evolved from Buffalo to San Diego to Los Angeles SportingNews com Sporting News Archived from the original on February 6 2021 Retrieved September 5 2020 Blake Harris March 26 2020 Ranking Clippers Jerseys San Diego edition ClippersNation com SB Nation Archived from the original on April 1 2020 Retrieved September 5 2020 a b Blake Harris March 28 2020 Ranking Clippers Jerseys 1984 2000 ClippersNation com SB Nation Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved September 5 2020 a b Blake Harris April 9 2020 Ranking Clippers Jerseys 2000 2014 ClippersNation com SB Nation Archived from the original on June 11 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2021 Retrieved September 5 2020 L A Clippers Unveil New Nike City Edition Jersey and Court Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC November 22 2019 Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved September 5 2020 LA Clippers Unveil 2020 21 Nike City Edition Uniform Clippers com Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC December 1 2020 Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved December 5 2020 2021 2022 CITY EDITION MOMENTS MIXTAPE Clippers com NBA Media Ventures LLC archived from the original on November 6 2021 retrieved November 6 2021 Los Angeles Clippers 22 23 City Edition Uniform No excuse Just produce NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC archived from the original on November 11 2022 retrieved November 10 2022 LA Clippers 2023 24 City Edition Uniform LA X Jonas Wood NBA com NBA Media Ventures LLC archived from the original on November 17 2023 retrieved November 17 2023 Nike Earned Edition Jersey LA Clippers Press release NBA Media Ventures LLC March 6 2021 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Kamagate For Cash HoopsRumors com Retrieved February 10 2024 LA Clippers LAClippers July 1 2023 The LA Clippers traded cash considerations to the Detroit Pistons for the draft rights to Balsa Koprivica Tweet Retrieved July 1 2023 via Twitter Kings Complete Trade With Los Angeles Clippers NBA com November 3 2023 Archived from the original on November 4 2023 Retrieved November 5 2023 Bill Russell s No 6 jersey to be retired throughout NBA NBA com August 11 2022 Archived from the original on August 17 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Golliver Ben August 11 2022 NBA permanently retires Bill Russell s No 6 Washington Post Archived from the original on November 7 2022 Retrieved August 24 2022 Los Angeles Clippers Players Basketball Reference com Basketball Reference com Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved December 20 2020 Grief Andrew October 17 2022 Clippers unveil their vision of future game broadcasts Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 17 2022 Retrieved October 17 2022 Further readingJenkins Lee January 30 2012 Finally It s Hip To Be A Clip Sports Illustrated Retrieved March 17 2012 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Los Angeles Clippers Official website nbsp Portals nbsp Basketball nbsp Los Angeles nbsp California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Los Angeles Clippers amp oldid 1226224852, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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