Did the Clippers really just do what I think they did?
Did
they just trade the best home-grown player in franchise history, their
one real connection with Hollywood, the most glittering mural in the
rafters?
An about-face on the franchise's face? Calling a car for the guy who once dunked over a car?
Works for me.
The
Clippers' trade of Blake Griffin on Monday was stunning but smart, a
gutsy admission of a mistake and a calculated gamble on the future.
Some
of their longtime fans will mourn it, and the city will miss him, but
long-term hopes for anything beyond the second round of the playoffs
demanded it.
Griffin
was traded to the Detroit Pistons with Willie Reed and Brice Johnson
for Avery Bradley, Tobias Harris, Boban Marjanovic, a first-round pick
and second-round pick. Translated, that's one five-time All-Star for two
starters, a potentially starring kid, and cap space for potential free
agents. As an equation, it tilts heavily in the Clippers' favor.
The
Clippers have never really had a trusted personnel guy running the show
before now, so it's understandable if this is all very hard to endorse,
but with Jerry West pushing it and Lawrence Frank making it happen,
their first bold move makes sense.
Remember
when the Dodgers' Andrew Friedman made his first big splash as baseball
boss three years ago by trading Matt Kemp in a controversial move that
helped them build a pennant winner? This feels a lot like that.
As a star, Griffin was fun. But as a foundation, he was shaky.
You
could cheer for him, but you couldn't build on him. He was great in
commercials, but struggled in fourth quarters. His dunks were
breathtaking, but so were his debacles.
He
never should have been made the cornerstone. He was always just a
supporting player. During one of his hot streaks, I once wrote a column
saying this was his team, and smart fans roasted me for it, and they
were right.
Griffin
could have been gone two winters ago when he broke his hand punching
assistant equipment manager Matias Testi. Griffin should have been gone
last summer the minute Chris Paul left town.
Once
the Big Three became the Big Two, the Clippers' chances of contending
became a Big Fat Zero, and Griffin should have been allowed to walk.
The
Clippers panicked. They worried about justifying those incredibly
rising ticket prices. They were in negotiations for a new arena. They
were going through a front-office transition.
They
felt Griffin was their best chance at maintaining the perception of
stability, so last summer they decorated Staples Center and hired a
choir and threw him a party in which the announcer pretended it was 2029
and announced Griffin as a "lifelong Clipper.'' And he bit. And they
bit.
And
they were together for life, at least until Griffin suffered a knee
injury at the end of November and missed 14 games and Frank realized
exactly what they had purchased. Griffin was flashy, but he will not
play a full season for the fifth time in eight years. He was a force,
but the team actually seem to play just as well without him, going 8-8
in games in which he didn't appear, which almost mirrors its 25-24
record.
Frank,
who was named basketball boss shortly after Griffin was signed by owner
Steve Ballmer, knows that the worst thing one can be in the NBA is
mediocre, and that's where the Clippers were headed under Griffin. West,
who was brought in last summer to bend Ballmer's ear, was preaching
that same gospel to the owner.
This
is not the front office that presided over the six-year frustrations of
the Big Three. This is a front office that, with several smart new
hires surrounding Frank and West, have decided to build it differently.
They
agreed that even though Griffin was their guy, he could never be The
Guy, so kudos to them for swallowing their egos, shipping him off to
Detroit for moves that could eventually land them that guy.
It
won't be Harris or Bradley, although both are good players, with Harris
a particularly intriguing young scoring talent. It also won't be
Marjanovic, though he is a 7-foot-3 bundle of fun.
Growing
because, yeah, you know this was coming, this move means DeAndre Jordan
is also in play for next week's trade deadline. This could set them up
not only to make some noise this summer in the Paul George sweepstakes,
but also next summer when players such as Kawhi Leonard and Klay
Thompson could be available. The remodeling also could affect the
coaching staff, depending on Doc Rivers' patience with all the dust.
Clippers
fans are being asked to swallow hard for the next couple of months, but
once Paul left, they had to know this was coming. The last six years
were a blast, but now, as with most NBA teams coming off a stretch of
relative success, the Clippers can't move forward without blowing some
stuff up.
They no longer need someone who can jump over cars. They need somebody to drive one.
Lawrence Frank had to begin his search for that guy, because it was never going to be Blake Griffin.
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