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"We only needed one more guy" - Patrick Beverley says the Clippers lost SGA because Kawhi thought he needed more help

"We only needed one more guy" - Patrick Beverley says the Clippers lost SGA because Kawhi thought he needed more help

Yahoo5 hours ago

"We only needed one more guy" - Patrick Beverley says the Clippers lost SGA because Kawhi thought he needed more help originally appeared on Basketball Network.
In July 2019, the L.A. Clippers infamously traded Shai Gilgeous-Alexander to the Oklahoma City Thunder for Paul George. At that time, it looked like a solid deal because George would give incoming star Kawhi Leonard the support he needed to take the Clippers to the top. But after watching Gilgeous-Alexander turn into the best player in the NBA right now, the Clippers probably wish they never made the trade.
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Former Clippers guard Patrick Beverley thinks that the Clippers had no intention of trading SGA. However, because Kawhi wanted to make sure he got help when he got to L.A. he made the Clippers go after PG before he signed with them.
"I think it was Kawhi, too. I think coming in, you get these star guys. I think that they think they need more help than what they really need. Outside looking in, Kawhi probably didn't know the makeup of our team. And honestly, after that year we took Golden State six games, we starting two rookies, we only needed one more guy. We only needed 'the guy,'" said Beverley.
They gave up too much to acquire George
The Clippers were trying to sign Kawhi Leonard that offseason. However, Kawhi did not want to commit to the Clippers if he did not have a superstar tandem there.
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And so Leonard asked the Clippers to go after SoCal native Paul George, which they did. But in doing so, the Clippers surrendered Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari, five first-round picks, and a pick swap.
According to Beverley, they were thrilled to have two superstars added to their team. However, if it were only up to him, they only needed one - the main guy, because they already had a solid core at hand.
"'The Guy' added with Gallinari, Shai, Sham, me, Lou, and Trez like we was happy as fu– like 'Damn, we got Paul George, too.' Like this is going to be even more crazy. We were just thinking like 'Man, we get one main guy, it's a wrap next year,'" added Pat Bev.
Related: "I ain't like that, that sh– is lame" - Jeff Teague criticizes ESPN's Game 7 coverage for repeatedly replaying the play where Haliburton got injured
The Clippers overachieved in 2018-19
The 2018-19 Clippers team was led by Lou Will's 20.0 points scoring average. He was adequately backed up by Gallinari who averaged 19.8 points and 6.1 rebounds and Montrezl Harrell's 16.6 points and 6.5 rebounds per game. They also acquired SGA's fellow rookie Landry Shamet midseason in the Tobias Harris deal.
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Their starting lineup of SGA, Shamet, Pat Bev, "Big Zu," and Gallo posted an impressive 15-2 record in 17 games. They finished the season with a 44-38 record and were the 8th seed in the West. Although they were eliminated in the first round by the Golden State Warriors, Beverley said all they needed was that leader and superstar.
Kawhi was the perfect choice since he was coming off winning the 2019 NBA championship for Toronto and a Californian. However, he forced the Clippers to give up young assets so that he could take PG with him. Unfortunately for them, one of the players they gave up was rookie SGA and one of the first-round picks they surrendered became Jalen Williams.
Gilgeous-Alexander and Williams became OKC's 1-2 punch and last Sunday, they led the Thunder to a Game 7 win for their first NBA title. Meanwhile, the Clippers let George walk away in free agency last summer. They are still looking for their first NBA title.
Related: "After that second year, no more excuses" - Shaquille O'Neal has an advice for Cooper Flagg if he ends up getting drafted by the Mavericks
This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Jun 24, 2025, where it first appeared.

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Cooper Flagg is the prize player as the Mavericks hold the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft
Cooper Flagg is the prize player as the Mavericks hold the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft

Associated Press

time17 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Cooper Flagg is the prize player as the Mavericks hold the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft

NEW YORK (AP) — Cooper Flagg lived up to every expectation during one season at Duke and has the potential for NBA superstardom. That's why Mavericks fans can't wait to get him to Dallas. The Mavericks are expected to take Flagg with the No. 1 pick in the draft on Wednesday night, quickly adding another franchise-altering player after trading one away last season. The Mavericks fell into the lottery after dealing Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers in February, though they had only a 1.8% chance of winning it. When they did, it gave them the opportunity to add an 18-year-old who was college basketball's best player in 2024-25. Flagg averaged 19.2 points and 7.5 rebounds and led Duke to the Final Four. The 6-foot-8 forward topped the Blue Devils in all five major statistical categories and already has proven he has a game that will more than hold up against the pros when he played well last summer during an invite to the U.S. Olympic team's training camp. If Flagg is the choice, it will end two straight years when an American college player was not the No. 1 pick in the draft, the first time that had happened. The San Antonio Spurs selected Victor Wembanyama in 2023 and the Atlanta Hawks took another French player, Zaccherie Risacher, last season. The Spurs have the No. 2 pick this year. Then it's Philadelphia, Charlotte and Utah. ___ AP NBA:

NBA Draft 2025: Projected top pick Cooper Flagg touts 'positionless' mindset, will to improve
NBA Draft 2025: Projected top pick Cooper Flagg touts 'positionless' mindset, will to improve

UPI

time26 minutes ago

  • UPI

NBA Draft 2025: Projected top pick Cooper Flagg touts 'positionless' mindset, will to improve

Former Duke forward Cooper Flagg is expected to be the first player selected in the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft on Wednesday in Brooklyn. File Photo by Aaron Josefczyk/UPI | License Photo June 25 (UPI) -- Projected No. 1 overall pick Cooper Flagg said he has a "positionless" mentality, is open to multiple roles and prioritizes improvement heading into the first round of the 2025 NBA Draft on Wednesday in Brooklyn. The first round will start at 8 p.m. EDT and air on ABC, ESPN and the ESPN app. Flagg, Rutgers stars Dylan Harper and Ace Bailey, Baylor's V.J. Edgecombe and several of Flagg's former Duke teammates, including Kon Knueppel and Khaman Maluach, are among the projected Top 10 picks. "It's incredible to be her and be in these moments," Flagg told reporters Tuesday. "This is stuff I've dreamed about since I was a little kid. I think being here is surreal. I don't think it's really set in yet. "I'm just trying to go through each moment and enjoy it." The Dallas Mavericks are widely expected to select Flagg to open Wednesday's first round. The former Duke sensation -- who earned multiple National Player of the Year honors as a freshman -- is set to join a lineup led by All-Stars Kyrie Irving, Anthony Davis and Klay Thompson. Flagg said the Mavericks have not yet informed him that he will be the top pick, but called his pre-draft visit with the the team "incredible." The All-American drew comparisons to Kevin Garnett and Kawhi Leonard through the pre-draft process due to his ability to impact games as a two-way player. He also was compared to Jayson Tatum, Scottie Pippen and Lamar Odom, among others. Flagg measured in at 6-foot-7 (without shoes), 221 pounds at the NBA Combine. "I wouldn't look at anything as pressure," Flagg said. "I think me going into whatever situation I go into, I'm just going to try and be myself all the time and I'm going to push myself to be better and better every single day and make the most out of every day. "I'm not worried about living up to certain players' expectations or things like that. I'm just going to be myself and really just try and get better every single day." Because of the Mavericks' versatile roster and Flagg's skillset, the rookie could be plugged in as a point-forward and given ball-handling responsibilities. "I think positionless is a great way to put it," Flagg said. "I'll do whatever coach wants me to do. I'll play any role. For me, it's about just doing a ton of different things on the court, just being an impact player, impacting both sides of the ball at a high level and impacting winning at a high level. "Whether that's getting it off the rim on a rebound and pushing in transition, that's something I feel like i can do at a high level. I would love to do that. Or if it's playing off ball, cutting, slashing, spotting up, I'm ready to do whatever, whatever that may be." The San Antonio Spurs, Philadelphia 76ers, Charlotte Hornets and Utah Jazz are set to follow the Mavericks as the first five teams to select players in the 2025 NBA Draft. The Brooklyn Nets own a league-high five selections in the first round, with the rights to the Nos. 8, 19, 22, 26 and 27 picks. The San Antonio Spurs, Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards, New Orleans Pelicans, Phoenix Suns and reigning champion Oklahoma City Thunder own two picks apiece. The second round of the 2025 NBA Draft will air at 8 p.m. Thursday on ESPN and the ESPN app. NBA Draft order 1. Dallas Mavericks 2. San Antonio Spurs 3. Philadelphia 76ers 4. Charlotte Hornets 5. Utah Jazz 6. Washington Wizards 7. New Orleans Pelicans 8. Brooklyn Nets 9. Houston Rockets 10. Phoenix Suns 11. Portland Trail Blazers 12. Chicago Bulls 13. Atlanta Hawks 14. San Antonio Spurs 15. Oklahoma City Thunder 16. Memphis Grizzlies 17. Minnesota Timberwolves 18. Washington Wizards 19. Brooklyn Nets 20. Miami Heat 21. Utah Jazz 22. Brooklyn Nets 23. New Orleans Pelicans 24. Oklahoma City Thunder 25. Orlando Magic 26. Brooklyn Nets 27. Brooklyn Nets 28. Boston Celtics 29. Phoenix Suns 30. Los Angeles Clippers

Cooper Flagg will be NBA Draft's No. 1 pick, but are you ready for other chaos?
Cooper Flagg will be NBA Draft's No. 1 pick, but are you ready for other chaos?

New York Times

time32 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Cooper Flagg will be NBA Draft's No. 1 pick, but are you ready for other chaos?

The Bounce Newsletter | This is The Athletic's daily NBA newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Bounce directly in your inbox. There will be plenty of smoke and mirrors leading up to the NBA Draft. Let me assure you they are all 100 percent correct and you should believe them – even if they contradict each other. The draft is way more fun when you operate with that chaotic mindset. Plenty of proclamations ahead of draft Tonight at 8 p.m. ET, we're going to get the start of the NBA Draft (follow our live blog for updates throughout the day)! We've been waiting to see Cooper Flagg go first overall for at least a year. Until about a month ago, we just didn't know the Mavericks would be making that selection. After Flagg puts on Dallas' cap and awkwardly daps up commissioner Adam Silver, the Spurs are expected to take Dylan Harper out of Rutgers with the second pick. Advertisement From there? Nobody really knows what will happen. 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Utah should go after him and move Walker Kessler for assets. Maluach hasn't played basketball very long but is already this good. Prediction: Utah takes Jeremiah Fears at No. 5 They haven't caught lightning in a bottle with trying Keyonte George or Isaiah Collier as the lead guard. But Oklahoma's Fears is the best pick-and-roll guard in the draft and will look tremendous at the NBA level. He's the guard they've been looking for. Bold proclamation: Joan Beringer should be top 10 The more I watch Beringer (from France), the more I just see him wrecking the rim on offense and protecting it on defense. He's going to be an incredible presence around the basket, and could very well control the paint. There's a Daniel Gafford-esque quality to him, but he's bigger and more athletic. He's a monster and should be a top-10 pick. Advertisement Prediction: Thunder make us say, 'Oh, what the f—!' They have no open roster spots, but they have the 15th and 24th overall picks. 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