Author Archives: Ronald S Olinger

The Clippers beat the Raptors with dunks from red-hot Kawhi Leonard.

Eyes on the rim, feet at the stripe, Kawhi Leonard set himself to shoot a free throw for the Clippers on Wednesday night against Toronto when a cry arose from Section 112 inside Crypto.com Arena.

“Thank you for the banner!” a row of fans wearing Toronto jerseys yelled.

In an era when superstars don’t stay put long, Leonard’s departure from Toronto, only weeks after claiming the 2019 NBA championship, for Los Angeles and the Clippers can feel like an NBA eternity. But that run, and the imprint it left, still is seen today.

Before the Clippers’ 108-100 victory, Toronto coach Nick Nurse recalled the lasting imprint of Leonard “elevating a lot of people’s confidence and people’s game” during his lone Raptors season. Leonard’s ability to make minute defensive adjustments in the span of a timeout or free throw “was amazing,” Nurse said. And he credited Leonard for the development of Toronto’s Pascal Siakam and Fred VanVleet into stars of their own.

“Kawhi was a 9 to 5, maybe 8:30 to 4:30 guy every day. Pascal is the same,” Nurse said. “He’s the first guy at the gym. He and Freddy, every morning. They learned a lot from the day of work. Not just the shooting, the entire day of work of shooting, eating, take care, lifting, stretching, hot tub, cold tub, all that stuff. And Kawhi did all that stuff without batting an eye.”

This is the version of Leonard the Clippers have seen since Jan. 8, a dominant run two months in the making, a span in which Leonard is shooting 48% on catch-and-shoot three-pointers, 51% on pull-up threes, and 59% of shots inside of 10 feet.

In yet another push toward the Clippers’ playoff goals, Leonard punctuated the victory over Toronto with five dunks, each more powerful than the last, the capper his second-half drive into the chest of Raptors center Jakob Poeltl before his right arm slammed the ball over the big man’s head.

“Even when we lost those games we were confident in ourselves,” Leonard said of the team’s recent five-game losing streak. “And I’m on the floor. Whenever I’m playing, I feel like we can win a basketball game.”

Leonard scored 24 points, adding 12 rebounds.

“This last run he’s been on since January has been unbelievable, one of the highest levels I’ve seen, and that’s how we need him to play to be successful every night,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said. “… That definitely gives us confidence on both sides of the ball that he can be elite.”

Extricating themselves from a potential play-in tournament position will require more players inspiring similar levels of confidence. The Clippers (35-33) remain a work in progress, following a first half filled with turnovers with a snarling, third-quarter defense, allowing 25 points — less than half of the 51 allowed in Sunday’s third quarter against Memphis. Paul George scored 23 points and Lue credited him with setting the strong defensive example the team had pleaded for during two days of practice.

“All our veterans have stepped up,” Lue said, and added, “This should be the blueprint.”

Clippers’ Paul George (13) drives to the basket under defense by Toronto Raptors’ Scottie Barnes (4) and Will Barton (5) during second half on Wednesday at Crypto.com Arena.

(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

With 14 dunks, one of the NBA’s oldest rosters looked spry in attacking the interior of Toronto’s defense. Ivica Zubac’s rim protection was indispensable. Terance Mann’s role as closer, scoring 14 points in 28 minutes, was invaluable as Lue displayed confidence in finishing the game without a “traditional point guard” despite Toronto’s pressure. Before Russell Westbrook checked out a final time with 17 minutes to play, his small contributions setting screens that turned into points were noticeable, indications of the role he is willing to play on his new team.

But just as noticeable was seeing Toronto grab seven of its 15 offensive boards in the fourth quarter and in the process unfurl an 11-1 run. A once-comfortable 15-point Clippers lead with five minutes left was down to four with 54 seconds to play. The difficult ending mirrored their troubled start, a lack of consistency that will continue to be their most difficult challenge to overcome in this season’s final 14 games.

Leonard opened the game pump-faking Toronto’s OG Anunoby into the air at the three-point line before beating Siakam’s help defense to the rim for a dunk. It was one of the rare first-quarter possessions ending in a Clippers shot.

After four turnovers in fewer than five minutes, including two by Westbrook, Lue replaced his starting guard with Eric Gordon. But only 19 seconds later, Leonard threw a pass picked off by Anunoby. One minute after that, Lue took his second timeout of the quarter after Siakam stole a pass thrown by Gordon.

The turnovers had the effect of distilling a game of complex scheme and execution into a straightforward math problem. The Clippers took 25 fewer shots. But as poor as the Clippers held on to the ball, the Raptors proved
just as ineffective at shooting it, just 39% to enter halftime tied. They finished 38% for the game. This time, the Clippers learned their third-quarter lesson, their defense clamping down. That was new.

What was not, for both the Clippers and Raptors, was witnessing another big night from Leonard.

Wednesday’s high school baseball and softball scores

 

BASEBALL

Academy for Academic Excellence 5, Silver Valley 1

Alhambra 3, Montebello 1

Anaheim 5, Garden Grove 3

Arcadia 7, Hoover 0

Arrowhead Christian 8, Linfield Christian 3

Bell Gardens 11, Keppel 2

Bishop Amat 5, Gardena Serra 4

Bishop Montgomery 7, Mary Star 1

Bolsa Grande 6, Rancho Alamitos 4

Buckley 10, Oakwood 0

Buena 2, Oxnard 1

Burbank Burroughs 10, Muir 0

Citrus Valley 5, Cajon 2

Corona Centennial 3, Ramona 0

Costa Mesa 5, Santa Ana 0

Covina 13, Azusa 3

Crean Lutheran 6, Chino Hills 2

Crescenta Valley 6, Pasadena 1

Diamond Bar 4, Katella 1

Diamond Ranch 37, Entrepreneur 0

Downey Calvary Chapel 12, Southlands Christian 2

Elsinore 3, Riverside North 2

Estancia 6, St. Margaret’s 5

Fairfax 2, Arleta 1

Fontana 7, Bosco Tech 5

Fountain Valley 4, Huntington Beach 1

Fullerton 8, Los Altos 5

Ganesha 10, Bassett 0

Garden Grove Pacifica 4, Millikan 3

Glendale 6, Burbank 0

Grace Brethren 8, Hesperia Christian 1

Granada Hills 6, Los Angeles Roosevelt 0

Granada Hills Kennedy 5, North Hollywood 0

Great Oak 6, Maranatha Christian 0

Hacienda Heights Wilson 14, Workman 0

Hart 4, Villa Park 3

Harvard-Westlake 15, Loyola 2

Hawthorne 6, Animo Leadership 5

Hemet 5, Temescal Canyon 3

Heritage 5, Moreno Valley 0

Kaiser 11, Don Lugo 6

Laguna Beach 4, El Toro 0

Lakeside 2, Rancho Christian 1

Lancaster Baptist 20, Lucerne Valley 3

Laton 18, Shandon 2

Legacy 10, Vaughn 2

Loara 7, Los Amigos 5

Long Beach Wilson 9, Bellflower 2

Los Angeles Hamilton 12, Gardena 1

Mountain View 2, South Gate 0

Murrieta Mesa 9, Escondido 2

Newbury Park 3, Flintridge Prep 0

Ontario Christian 6, Woodcrest Christian 2

Orange Vista 6, Vista del Lago 1

Paloma Valley 9, Riverside Poly 3

Pasadena Poly 12, Burbank Providence 2

Patriot 8, Jurupa Hills 5

Pomona 4, Edgewood 3

Rancho Cucamonga 7, La Sierra 0

Ridgecrest Burroughs 19, Bishop 2

Rivera 10, Locke 4

San Clemente 9, Aliso Niguel 5

San Jacinto 11, Arroyo Valley 1

San Marcos 10, Ventura 4

San Marino 5, Royal 0

Santa Barbara 5, Rio Mesa 0

Santa Maria Valley Christian 2, Orcutt Academy 1

Schurr 20, San Gabriel 3

Shadow Hills 12, Palm Springs 2

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 3, Chaminade 1

South Pasadena 8, La Canada 0

St. Anthony 9, St. Monica 1

St. Francis 1, Alemany 0

St. Genevieve 12, Cantwell-Sacred Heart 3

St. John Bosco 8, Servite 4

Sultana 4, Rancho Verde 0

Temecula Prep 14, California Lutheran 4

Thousand Oaks 9, Moorpark 1

Verbum Dei 12, St. Pius X-St. Matthias 2

Victor Valley 6, Oak Hills 5

West Torrance 4, Cerritos Valley Christian 1

Western Christian 16, Bermuda Dunes Desert Christian 7

Whittier Christian 12, Heritage Christian 0

Yucaipa 6, Redlands 3

SOFTBALL

Academy for Academic Excellence 19, Silver Valley 0

Academy for Careers and Exploration 18, Excelsior 3

Alverno 10, Ramona Convent 2

Anaheim Canyon 6, Brea Olinda 0

Angelou 17, Hawkins 6

Apple Valley 8, Boron 0

Ayala 5, Bonita 4

Baldwin Park 12, San Gabriel 5

Beaumont 10, Redlands East Valley 0

Beckman 12, Northwood 5

Bethel Christian 13, Anza Hamilton 3

Bishop Amat 4, Mary Star 0

Bolsa Grande 23, Orange 9

Burbank Burroughs 15, Hoover 0

California 18, Whittier 0

Capistrano Valley 12, San Juan Hills 0

Capistrano Valley Christian 9, Southlands Christian 2

Chaminade 10, Village Christian 0

Chavez 9, Sylmar 0

Colony 10, Claremont 0

Compton Centennial 20, Compton Early College 15

Costa Mesa 12, Whitney 8

Crescenta Valley 19, Glendale 0

Don Lugo 6, San Dimas 2

Duarte 13, El Monte 0

Edgewood 30, Pomona 10

Edison 10, Newport Harbor 0

El Camino Real 6, Alemany 0

Elsinore 14, Paloma Valley 4

Environmental Science/Tech 13, Animo Bunche 0

Esperanza 11, Foothill 0

Faith Baptist 7, Oakwood 3

Fillmore 22, Malibu 0

Fullerton 12, Walnut 6

Ganesha 22, Bassett 0

Gardena 12, Sotomayor 0

Glendora 7, Alta Loma 2

Grace Brethren 4, Vasquez 0

Hawthorne 16, Santee 4

Hawthorne Math/Science 14, Archer 2

Highland 16, Knight 4

Hollywood 12, Bernstein 7

Huntington Park 8, Manual Arts 1

JSerra 9, Dana Hills 0

Jurupa Hills 23, Tahquitz 5

Katella 10, Placentia Valencia 3

King 10, Heritage 7

La Canada 7, South Pasadena 0

La Palma Kennedy 11, Warren 9

La Quinta 5, Palm Desert 1

Laton 23, Shandon 9

Legacy 17, Los Angeles Hamilton 1

Linfield Christian 15, Arrowhead Christian 4

Long Beach Wilson 25, Long Beach Jordan 0

Los Alamitos 11, Fountain Valley 9

Los Osos 16, West Covina 7

Moorpark 9, Simi Valley 5

Nordhoff 3, Hueneme 0

Northview 6, Los Altos 4

Norwalk 3, Hacienda Heights Wilson 2

Oak Hills 20, Victor Valley 6

Oak Park 19, Taft 0

Ontario 23, Fontana 1

Orange Vista 13, Rancho Verde 3

Oxford Academy 11, Magnolia 1

Oxnard 5, Buena 4

Paramount 8, Bell Gardens 4

Port of Los Angeles 7, South Gate 5

Providence 6, Bishop Conaty-Loretto 2

Rancho Cucamonga 5, Citrus Valley 1

Rancho Dominguez 20, Los Angeles Jordan 0

Rancho Mirage 12, Xavier Prep 2

Rio Hondo Prep 13, Westminster La Quinta 3

Rio Mesa 10, Santa Barbara 0

Riverside North 10, Vista del Lago 1

Riverside Prep 9, Arroyo Valley 6

Rowland 20, Workman 9

Roybal 20, Los Angeles Kennedy 7

Rubidoux 18, Riverside Notre Dame 7

Santa Fe 13, El Rancho 3

Santa Paula 12, Channel Islands 0

Schurr 14, Arroyo 4

Shadow Hills 13, Palm Springs 2

South East 28, Dymally 3

South El Monte 18, Nogales 9

St. Bonaventure 19, Carpinteria 0

St. Monica 11, St. Joseph 7

St. Paul 6, St. Anthony 1

Sunny Hills 4, Artesia 1

Temecula Prep 6, California Lutheran 5

Temescal Canyon 7, Vista Murrieta 6

Temple City 4, Monrovia 0

Triumph 22, Community Charter 1

Troy 6, Segerstrom 1

University Prep 19, Hesperia Christian 4

Valencia 1, Saugus 0

Venice 3, Santa Monica 1

Viewpoint 4, Heritage Christian 2

West Torrance 18, Lawndale 0

Western Christian 11, Downey Calvary Chapel 3

Wednesday’s high school baseball and softball scores

 

BASEBALL

Arleta 14, Canoga Park 8

Bell 6, Venice 2

Brentwood 10, Crossroads 0

Camarillo 3, Oak Park 0

Campbell Hall 4, Windward 0

Capistrano Valley 3, Capistrano Valley Christian 0

Castaic 10, Golden Valley 0

Chaminade 4, Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 3

Chaparral 4, Vista Murrieta 2

Citrus Hill 9, Liberty 0

Colony 2, Chaffey 0

Colton 4, San Gorgonio 0

Corona del Mar 2, Tustin 1

Crean Lutheran 3, Trabuco Hills 2

Cypress 5, La Palma Kennedy 0

de Toledo 12, Milken 2

Dominguez 12, Firebaugh 8

Downey 5, Bellflower 1

El Dorado 10, Esperanza 0

El Rancho 3, Santa Fe 0

El Segundo 10, North Torrance 1

Etiwanda 4, Northview 0

Fillmore 6, Hueneme 2

Foothill 14, Canyon Country Canyon 4

Gahr 12, Tesoro 1

Highland 9, Knight 0

Indian Springs 6, Rubidoux 0

Jurupa Hills 15, Carter 6

Jurupa Valley 13, Pacific 0

Kaiser 4, Grand Terrace 1

Katella 6, Placentia Valencia 5

La Habra 3, Charter Oak 1

Lancaster 12, Eastside 1

Los Alamitos 2, San Juan Hills 0

Loyola 6, Harvard-Westlake 2

Magnolia 11, Legacy Prep 1

Mayfair 6, Paramount 0

Miller 8, San Bernardino 3

Millikan 31, Compton 0

Mira Costa 9, Gardena Serra 4

Mission Viejo 11, Aliso Niguel 3

Monroe 3, Van Nuys 1

Newport Harbor 7, Dana Hills 2

Northwood 8, Beckman 5

Oaks Christian 5, Yuma (Ariz.) Kofa 1

Ocean View 6, El Toro 1

Palisades 3, Legacy 2

Palos Verdes 3, Birmingham 0

Pasadena Marshall 9, Pasadena Poly 4

Portola 9, Laguna Hills 4

Quartz Hill 11, Palmdale 5

Rancho Cucamonga 3, Alta Loma 2

Rialto 4, Summit 2

Royal 6, Simi Valley 3

Sage Hill 4, Irvine 2

San Dimas 5, Calabasas 2

San Jacinto 9, Perris 1

Santa Monica 2, Grace Brethren 1

Santa Paula 8, Carpinteria 0

Sierra Canyon 8, Crespi 0

Silverado 6, Granite Hills 2

South El Monte 6, Azusa 0

South Gate 4, Los Angeles Wilson 1

St. Francis 9, Alemany 3

Sun Valley Magnet 13, Central City Value 1

Taft 4, San Fernando 0

Tahquitz 4, West Valley 0

Tarbut V’Torah 9, Fairmont Prep 8

Temecula Valley 9, Murrieta Valley 6

Troy 10, Segerstrom 0

University Prep Value 8, Animo De La Hoya 7

Valencia 7, Saugus 0

Valley Arts/Sciences 12, Triumph 2

West Ranch 9, Canyon Country Canyon 1

Woodbridge 4, Irvine University 0

Xavier Prep 26, United Christian 0

Yucaipa 2, Redlands East Valley 1

SOFTBALL

Barstow 31, Adelanto 3

Bermuda Dunes Desert Christian 19, Desert Mirage 7

Bloomington 15, San Gorgonio 5

Burbank Burroughs 17, Pasadena 2

Corona Santiago 9, Esperanza 8

Covina 13, Garey 3

Crossroads 18, Reseda 4

Diamond Ranch 5, Chino 2

Don Lugo 9, San Dimas 1

Estancia 7, Firebaugh 5

Etiwanda 2, Walnut 0

Flintridge Prep 14, Westridge 2

Foothill Tech 12, Carpinteria 2

Godinez 15, Magnolia 1

Granada Hills 4, Burbank 2

Grand Terrace 14, Jurupa Hills 4

Hemet 6, San Jacinto Valley Academy 2

King/Drew 14, Narbonne 1

La Sierra 8, Patriot 7

Legacy 21, Long Beach Jordan 0

Liberty 9, Canyon Springs 0

Los Angeles Marshall 17, Sylmar 4

Los Angeles Roosevelt 23, Lincoln 0

Louisville 5, Cleveland 3

Marquez 8, Bell 2

Mesa Grande 13, Public Safety 9

Monroe 14, Van Nuys 13

Montclair 2, Ontario 1

Montebello 21, Gabrielino 16

Murrieta Valley 11, Temecula Valley 1

North Torrance 3, El Segundo 2

Northridge 24, Central City Value 0

Oaks Christian 13, Thousand Oaks 2

Ocean View 3, Santa Ana Calvary Chapel 2

Palos Verdes 5, Santa Monica 4

Panorama 17, Fulton 7

Ramona 14, Hillcrest 1

Ramona Convent 8, St. Genevieve 3

Rancho Cucamonga 4, Sultana 1

Rancho Mirage 12, West Valley 4

Redondo 1, Culver City 0

Rio Mesa 8, Valencia 2

Royal 3, Westlake 0

San Diego Cathedral 6, Santa Margarita 3

San Fernando 8, Garfield 7

San Marcos 12, Ventura 7

Santa Ana Valley 20, Saddleback 6

Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 14, Faith Baptist 1

Silverado 4, Granite Hills 3

Troy 13, Placentia Valencia 2

Vista Murrieta 12, Chaparral 2

Whitney 2, Lennox Academy 0

Xavier Prep 19, United Christian 4

Yucaipa 9, Serrano 4

Column: Scapegoating kumbaya interfaith? Huntington Beach!

Bagels and danishes sat largely untouched at the monthly meeting of the Greater Huntington Beach Interfaith Council, which aims to bring peace, love and understanding to a city perpetually in need of each.

About 20 members gathered at tables or Zoomed in last Tuesday, focused intently on the latest intolerant troublemakers to plague Surf City.

Them?

A week earlier, the City Council had decided to reevaluate the invocations offered before every meeting.

For at least 17 years, a handshake agreement has left the task to the Interfaith Council. The only guidelines: No proselytizing, no politics and keep to under a minute.

The resolution passed by the City Council claimed that the interfaith group had turned invocations into “political soapboxing opportunities.”

Republican Mayor Tony Strickland — a former assemblymember and state senator who co-authored the resolution with fellow Republican Gracey Van Der Mark — said he had received “hundreds” of complaints about the matter.

“It has been a problem, and it’s a problem that needs to be fixed,” he said at the council meeting.

Van Der Mark, part of a new conservative council majority, proposed that the city create a list of “certified” religious leaders to handle the invocations. Strickland said this would ensure that no one from a “hate group” could ever participate.

Members of the Interfaith Council learned of the proposal only after someone from the city manager’s office called to let them know.

On Tuesday, their meeting began with — what else? — an invocation.

Elaine Keeley read “First they came …” — the iconic poem by a German Lutheran pastor who bemoaned his own silence as the Nazis came for socialists, trade unionists, Jews and then him.

Keely’s father, former Huntington Beach Mayor Ralph Bauer, helped to found the Interfaith Council in 1996.

“I think this is what he would’ve wanted to read today,” she said.

President Maneck Bhujwala told his colleagues that he had reviewed a year’s worth of their invocations and found nothing remotely objectionable.

“We’ve done a very good job,” asserted the volunteer Zoroastrian priest.

Rabbi Stephen Einstein, a past president and co-founder of the Interfaith Council, saw Strickland’s move as part of an “agenda that is very much at odds with the warm and welcome attitude we have.”

That drew a rebuke by Dave Garofalo, a former Huntington Beach mayor banned from running for office after pleading guilty in 2002 to a felony and 15 misdemeanors for violating conflict-of-interest laws.

“We have contributed to this,” Garofalo said, criticizing what he described as Einstein’s history of “not just passive but aggressive comments” toward council members in past meetings.

The rabbi countered that he had never let his political opinions slip into his invocations. Garofalo continued to insist that the Interfaith Council had “politicized” what should remain apolitical.

“What happened, happened,” Bhujwala said politely but firmly. “We will move forward. This just reminds us of the importance of our mission. We shouldn’t take it personal.”

After the meeting, members still wanted to know which one of them had said the things that Strickland claimed they did.

“I wanted specifics instead of ‘hundreds of complaints,’ ” Bhujwala said. “I want to know what was it, so we ourselves can talk to that person. Right now, we don’t even have the specifics.”

“I have not seen a pattern of the things that have been alleged,” said Don Garrick, who sits on the board of the Orange County Interfaith Council. “If it’s just one incident, is that really fair? You make laws based on a general thing, not a one-time thing.”

I told Garrick that I had reviewed every invocation since the beginning of 2022 — a parade of Catholic deacons, Episcopalian priests, rabbis, evangelical Christians, an imam, a Methodist and others. Only two bordered on the controversial.

One woman mentioned Jesus’ promise to separate the sheep from the goats on the Last Judgment.

The other invocation was delivered by Einstein on Dec. 6, when Strickland, Van Der Mark and two other Republicans were sworn in.

The rabbi decried the “deterioration of kindness and decency, both locally and nationally” and mentioned religious groups that had faced hate crimes in Orange County that year.

“Christians!” some in the crowd angrily yelled, drawing a puzzled look from Einstein.

The rest of the invocations, I told Garrick, were well-meaning pablum.

“Hey!” joked past Interfaith Council President Charlie Neiderman. “I put a lot of deliberation into mine!”

“The city can never tell us how to pray,” said Vice President Jynene Johnson.

She’s right that Huntington Beach legally can’t do that — but the city can choose who prays before meetings. A 2014 Supreme Court ruling allowed governing bodies to pick who does invocations, provided it’s not just one faith’s viewpoint all the time.

Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of UC Berkeley School of Law and a constitutional law scholar, said Huntington Beach “can certainly take [invocation duties] away, and they can give it to someone else. That doesn’t violate the 1st Amendment. But if they only had it from one faith or one political ideology, that would be unconstitutional.”

Until recently, Huntington Beach had been slowly turning from Orange County’s too-tanned crucible of conservative kookiness into something more … normal?

The council — including MMA legend and arch-pandejo Tito Ortiz — voted in 2021 to allow the Pride flag to fly in front of City Hall. That same year, Rhonda Bolton became the city’s first Black council member, as the council turned — gasp! — majority liberal.

That was then. After Einstein’s invocation, the new conservative majority voted to appoint Strickland mayor over Democratic Councilmember Dan Kalmick.

They also invited Calvary Chapel of the Harbour pastor Joe Pedick — who addressed an H.B. Stop the Steal rally in late 2020 — to give a second invocation. In his four-minute spiel, Pedick looked at the council members and said, “Lord, we know that each one up here, they’re under attack.”

Soon after, the council majority banned the Pride flag and other non-governmental banners from flying on city property. They also vowed to rumble with Gov. Gavin Newsom yet again over what they said was a conspiracy to urbanize Surf City.

But scapegoating a kumbaya interfaith group? Stay classy, Huntington Beach!

Huntington Beach Mayor Tony Strickland, left, and Councilmember Gracey Van Der Mark at a “meet and greet” event. The two Republicans co-authored a resolution claiming that the interfaith group had turned invocations into “political soapboxing opportunities.”

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

“We have very important matters to manage in the city, and I don’t know why they [the council majority] focus on it,” said Democratic Councilmember Natalie Moser, who attended the Interfaith Council gathering and had a tense exchange with Strickland about the invocations at the Feb. 21 council meeting. “All it does is that it makes us look like a city that’s exclusionary and bigoted — and this is an ongoing thing.”

Strickland admitted that Huntington Beach has “bigger issues to fry.”

The invocations became a priority because “this is just something that came to me from the community,” he said. He described Einstein’s Dec. 6 comments as a “very, very political invocation that I had never seen before.”

When I asked for more examples, the mayor replied, “It’s hard to describe, but just look and hear them. You’ll see they have a political nature.”

When I told them I had reviewed a year’s worth and found only two nebulously problematic ones — one of which quoted Christ — Strickland paused, then said, “Everyone can look at different things and come with a different perspective.”

He also didn’t find it appropriate that Einstein has been “very open in attacking” Van Der Mark — Huntington Beach’s first Latina council member.

In 2018, Einstein and others had demanded that Van Der Mark resign from Huntington Beach school district and City Council commissions for creating a YouTube playlist titled “Holocaust Hoax?” that featured antisemitic videos. She left a comment on another video about an anti-racism workshop in Santa Monica, saying that “colored people were there doing what the elderly Jewish people instructed them to do.” (Van Der Mark said then that her words were taken out of context, that the playlist was for “research purposes,” and that she wasn’t antisemitic.)

When I pointed out that Einstein had criticized Van Der Mark during public comments and not during invocations, Strickland said, “That’s true, but again, this is an issue.”

The mayor said he would meet with Bhujwala soon. “Maybe we just have a heart-to-heart and say, ‘Try to be a bit more careful and really make it apolitical.’”

In an interview before the Interfaith Council meeting, Bhujwala told me, “I feel that if the city takes over [invocations], then it will be a lot of extra work for them to manage this kind of diversity and continue the peace we have helped in the city.”

He then chuckled.

“If they think they can do a better job, good luck to them.”

Arellano is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Mookie Betts’ WBC second base “natural”

 

Team USA’s starting second baseman Thursday took his position for some work a few hours before the first pitch against the Angels and looked the part.

He fielded groundballs with fluidity. He snapped throws from various arm angles. He shifted up the middle, over to the shortstop side of the bag, and back to shallow right field, all spots he could find himself in during the World Baseball Classic.

Mookie Betts appeared at home because second base was once home.

“It’s in my roots,” Betts, 30, said Thursday. “It’s what I grew up doing and it’s hard to kind of get rid of that.”

The Boston Red Sox selected Betts in the fifth round of the 2011 draft out of high school as a second baseman. He played there, with occasional innings at shortstop, his first two full minor-league seasons. Then, in 2014, the Red Sox, with Dustin Pedroia entrenched at second base, converted Betts to the outfield in the minors.

He’s been on a Hall of Fame track as a right fielder since, accumulating six All-Star Game appearances, six Gold Glove awards, two World Series titles, an MVP award and one of the richest contracts in professional sports history along the way.

But Betts’ time as a second baseman never ended. He’s moonlighted at the position in the majors — he started 11 games and logged 100 innings in his first three seasons with the Dodgers — and his time there figures to grow in 2023.

Team USA manager Mark DeRosa confirmed Betts will occasionally play second base during the tournament to spell starter Jeff McNeil. Betts is also expected to play more second base for the Dodgers this season after shortstop Gavin Lux’s season-ending knee injury hurt the club’s middle infield depth.

“My brain’s in it more,” Betts said, comparing second base to right field, where he started for the U.S. against the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday. “There are certain intricacies that make you a good right fielder. You’re just not in every play and whatnot like you are in the middle of the infield.

“But I definitely enjoy playing right. I don’t want to make it seem like I don’t enjoy it. I love going out there and playing and trying to be the best that I can be.”

In preparation for his dual role, Betts participated in outfield and infield drills during Team USA’s first workout Tuesday. DeRosa had heard about Betts’ infield prowess. Seeing it was another story.

“I’m blown away by his preparation, to be honest with you,” DeRosa said. “Watching him in the first couple of workouts, he can certainly handle it.”

Team USA shortstop Trea Turner and third base coach Dino Ebel already knew that. Turner watched Betts work at second base before nearly every game over the last season and a half as Dodgers teammates. He quickly noticed Betts — a superstar right fielder, talented basketball player, and professional bowler — was a skilled infielder.

“I’m not surprised because he’s good at everything,” Turner said. “He’s a freak.”

Ebel, the Dodgers’ third base and infield coach, has led most of the work with Betts in his three years as a Dodger, hitting him fungos and putting him through drills on his knees. He is convinced Betts would win a Gold Glove if he focused solely on second base. For now, he believes Betts is more than good enough to handle the position so he pushed Team USA officials to have him play there in the WBC.

“He’s got the hand-eye coordination,” Ebel said. “He moves his feet well. He reads the spin of the ball. He just has all the baseball instincts and he’s a tremendous athlete that adjusts well.”

Betts was immediately tested in the first inning Thursday; he turned a 5-4-3 double play without a hitch. That came moments after he singled as Team USA’s No. 2 hitter. He singled again in the third inning before he was pulled. He went three for three with two walks in Team USA’s exhibition games.

“He looked natural over there,” Team USA center fielder Mike Trout said. “He can play anywhere on the field — maybe not catcher.”

The talent will be on display on the nascent WBC stage, one of the few unchecked boxes remaining in Betts’ career, for the first time starting Saturday against Great Britain.

In a way, the tournament will be a return to life before stardom. A return to second base. A return to No. 3, his high school basketball number, because veteran pitcher Adam Wainwright called dibs on No. 50.

A return to his roots.

No. 8 Arizona beats a late run by No. 1 USC.

For the past two weeks, as the pieces finally started to fit for USC, Boogie Ellis had been the glue, a once-streaky point guard finally coming into his own as the engine of a suddenly soaring offense.

But as those pieces began to come apart Thursday for USC, its senior point guard was left to hold them together by himself, firing one three-pointer after another, emptying his tank until only fumes remained and a fifth foul sent him to the bench for good.

It would go down as yet another standout effort for Ellis, who set a career high in scoring for the second time in four games. But it wasn’t nearly enough for USC, as the Trojans were trampled by No. 8 Arizona in an 87-81 loss.

The Wildcats once again pushed them around, outmuscling the Trojans underneath and exploiting every part of a USC defense that suddenly seemed vulnerable against Arizona’s size and strength.

It was a similar script to USC’s defeat in Tucson earlier this season. Even 35 points from Ellis could take the Trojans only so far in a matchup that looked nightmarish on paper — and even more so afterward.

With each answer from Ellis, Arizona would offer its own full-throated response, using all of the weapons at its disposal to overpower USC, which has now officially locked in the No. 3 seed in next week’s Pac-12 tournament in Las Vegas.

“When we play Arizona, every possession matters,” said Ellis, who set his career high while dealing with a cold. “We tried to cut it to 10, and they hit a big three. We’re about to cut it to nine, they hit another big three. So we just have to lock in as a team.”

A back injury to Drew Peterson would make matching up with Arizona especially difficult. As the Trojans’ second-leading scorer labored through 29 minutes, he was far less effective than usual, scoring only five points.

“He just couldn’t move, couldn’t get by people,” USC coach Andy Enfield said.

Arizona had little trouble getting by USC’s defense, which gave up 34 points in the paint. Even as Enfield set out to counter Arizona’s size, the Trojans still struggled to find an answer, cycling through different lineups, including several with two big men on the court at the same time.

It was no use, especially with multiple Trojans in early foul trouble. Arizona’s Azuolas Tubelis took advantage in the meantime, scoring 25 points and pulling down 10 rebounds, once again punishing USC at every level of its defense.

It was hardly the kind of performance the Trojans would’ve hoped for, with a chance to make a major statement on its tournament resume.

USC forward Vincent Iwuchukwu, below, and Arizona forward Azuolas Tubelis reach for a loose ball during the second half Thursday at Galen Center.

(Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Everything had been clicking for USC coming into Thursday. The Trojans rolled into the final week of the regular season on a four-game win streak, finally firing on all cylinders and sitting on the right side of the NCAA tournament bubble.

They were scorching from deep during that stretch, knocking down nearly half of their last 100 attempts from three-point range. They were dominating on defense, holding those four opponents to 37% shooting. And their senior point guard was playing some of the best basketball of his college career, just as it was winding down.

But this week, Ellis still couldn’t shake the bitter taste left over from USC’s defeat at Arizona. He vowed to be more aggressive, carrying the Trojans on his back if he had to.

He wasted no time in carrying out that vow Thursday. Ellis came out firing confidently, scoring 11 of USC’s first 16 points.

The problem for USC was no one else stepped up. Peterson had zero points at halftime. The rest of USC’s starting lineup had combined to shoot one for nine from the field.

And by that time, Ellis’ aggressive approach was already having unintended consequences. He picked up his third foul with more than two minutes left in the first half.

“Did not make it easy to beat a team like Arizona,” Enfield said.

The Trojans might get another shot in short order. With USC locked in as second seed in the tournament, it’s likely to face Arizona in the semifinals, assuming it can survive its second-round matchup Thursday.

Ellis was already champing at the bit for that third chance.

“We’re gonna see these guys again,” Ellis said. “That was a great team, the No. 8 team in the country. But I feel like we can beat them. I don’t feel like they’re that much better than us. We just have to regroup.”

Column: Scapegoating a kumbaya interfaith group? Huntington Beach, be elegant.

Bagels and danishes sat largely untouched at the monthly meeting of the Greater Huntington Beach Interfaith Council, which aims to bring peace, love and understanding to a city perpetually in need of each.

About 20 members gathered at tables or Zoomed in last Tuesday, focused intently on the latest intolerant troublemakers to plague Surf City.

Them?

A week earlier, the City Council had decided to reevaluate the invocations offered before every meeting.

For at least 17 years, a handshake agreement has left the task to the Interfaith Council. The only guidelines: No proselytizing, no politics and keep to under a minute.

The resolution passed by the City Council claimed that the interfaith group had turned invocations into “political soapboxing opportunities.”

Republican Mayor Tony Strickland — a former assemblymember and state senator who co-authored the resolution with fellow Republican Gracey Van Der Mark — said he had received “hundreds” of complaints about the matter.

“It has been a problem, and it’s a problem that needs to be fixed,” he said at the council meeting.

Van Der Mark, part of a new conservative council majority, proposed that the city create a list of “certified” religious leaders to handle the invocations. Strickland said this would ensure that no one from a “hate group” could ever participate.

Members of the Interfaith Council learned of the proposal only after someone from the city manager’s office called to let them know.

On Tuesday, their meeting began with — what else? — an invocation.

Elaine Keeley read “First they came …” — the iconic poem by a German Lutheran pastor who bemoaned his own silence as the Nazis came for socialists, trade unionists, Jews and then him.

Keely’s father, former Huntington Beach Mayor Ralph Bauer, helped to found the Interfaith Council in 1996.

“I think this is what he would’ve wanted to read today,” she said.

President Maneck Bhujwala told his colleagues that he had reviewed a year’s worth of their invocations and found nothing remotely objectionable.

“We’ve done a very good job,” asserted the volunteer Zoroastrian priest.

Rabbi Stephen Einstein, a past president and co-founder of the Interfaith Council, saw Strickland’s move as part of an “agenda that is very much at odds with the warm and welcome attitude we have.”

That drew a rebuke by Dave Garofalo, a former Huntington Beach mayor banned from running for office after pleading guilty in 2002 to a felony and 15 misdemeanors for violating conflict-of-interest laws.

“We have contributed to this,” Garofalo said, criticizing what he described as Einstein’s history of “not just passive but aggressive comments” toward council members in past meetings.

The rabbi countered that he had never let his political opinions slip into his invocations. Garofalo continued to insist that the Interfaith Council had “politicized” what should remain apolitical.

“What happened, happened,” Bhujwala said politely but firmly. “We will move forward. This just reminds us of the importance of our mission. We shouldn’t take it personal.”

After the meeting, members still wanted to know which one of them had said the things that Strickland claimed they did.

“I wanted specifics instead of ‘hundreds of complaints,’ ” Bhujwala said. “I want to know what was it, so we ourselves can talk to that person. Right now, we don’t even have the specifics.”

“I have not seen a pattern of the things that have been alleged,” said Don Garrick, who sits on the board of the Orange County Interfaith Council. “If it’s just one incident, is that really fair? You make laws based on a general thing, not a one-time thing.”

I told Garrick that I had reviewed every invocation since the beginning of 2022 — a parade of Catholic deacons, Episcopalian priests, rabbis, evangelical Christians, an imam, a Methodist and others. Only two bordered on the controversial.

One woman mentioned Jesus’ promise to separate the sheep from the goats on the Last Judgment.

The other invocation was delivered by Einstein on Dec. 6, when Strickland, Van Der Mark and two other Republicans were sworn in.

The rabbi decried the “deterioration of kindness and decency, both locally and nationally” and mentioned religious groups that had faced hate crimes in Orange County that year.

“Christians!” some in the crowd angrily yelled, drawing a puzzled look from Einstein.

The rest of the invocations, I told Garrick, were well-meaning pablum.

“Hey!” joked past Interfaith Council President Charlie Neiderman. “I put a lot of deliberation into mine!”

“The city can never tell us how to pray,” said Vice President Jynene Johnson.

She’s right that Huntington Beach legally can’t do that — but the city can choose who prays before meetings. A 2014 Supreme Court ruling allowed governing bodies to pick who does invocations, provided it’s not just one faith’s viewpoint all the time.

Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of UC Berkeley School of Law and a constitutional law scholar, said Huntington Beach “can certainly take [invocation duties] away, and they can give it to someone else. That doesn’t violate the 1st Amendment. But if they only had it from one faith or one political ideology, that would be unconstitutional.”

Until recently, Huntington Beach had been slowly turning from Orange County’s too-tanned crucible of conservative kookiness into something more … normal?

The council — including MMA legend and arch-pandejo Tito Ortiz — voted in 2021 to allow the Pride flag to fly in front of City Hall. That same year, Rhonda Bolton became the city’s first Black council member, as the council turned — gasp! — majority liberal.

That was then. After Einstein’s invocation, the new conservative majority voted to appoint Strickland mayor over Democratic Councilmember Dan Kalmick.

They also invited Calvary Chapel of the Harbour pastor Joe Pedick — who addressed an H.B. Stop the Steal rally in late 2020 — to give a second invocation. In his four-minute spiel, Pedick looked at the council members and said, “Lord, we know that each one up here, they’re under attack.”

Soon after, the council majority banned the Pride flag and other non-governmental banners from flying on city property. They also vowed to rumble with Gov. Gavin Newsom yet again over what they said was a conspiracy to urbanize Surf City.

But scapegoating a kumbaya interfaith group? Stay classy, Huntington Beach!

Huntington Beach Mayor Tony Strickland, left, and Councilmember Gracey Van Der Mark at a “meet and greet” event. The two Republicans co-authored a resolution claiming that the interfaith group had turned invocations into “political soapboxing opportunities.”

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

“We have very important matters to manage in the city, and I don’t know why they [the council majority] focus on it,” said Democratic Councilmember Natalie Moser, who attended the Interfaith Council gathering and had a tense exchange with Strickland about the invocations at the Feb. 21 council meeting. “All it does is that it makes us look like a city that’s exclusionary and bigoted — and this is an ongoing thing.”

Strickland admitted that Huntington Beach has “bigger issues to fry.”

The invocations became a priority because “this is just something that came to me from the community,” he said. He described Einstein’s Dec. 6 comments as a “very, very political invocation that I had never seen before.”

When I asked for more examples, the mayor replied, “It’s hard to describe, but just look and hear them. You’ll see they have a political nature.”

When I told them I had reviewed a year’s worth and found only two nebulously problematic ones — one of which quoted Christ — Strickland paused, then said, “Everyone can look at different things and come with a different perspective.”

He also didn’t find it appropriate that Einstein has been “very open in attacking” Van Der Mark — Huntington Beach’s first Latina council member.

In 2018, Einstein and others had demanded that Van Der Mark resign from Huntington Beach school district and City Council commissions for creating a YouTube playlist titled “Holocaust Hoax?” that featured antisemitic videos. She left a comment on another video about an anti-racism workshop in Santa Monica, saying that “colored people were there doing what the elderly Jewish people instructed them to do.” (Van Der Mark said then that her words were taken out of context, that the playlist was for “research purposes,” and that she wasn’t antisemitic.)

When I pointed out that Einstein had criticized Van Der Mark during public comments and not during invocations, Strickland said, “That’s true, but again, this is an issue.”

The mayor said he would meet with Bhujwala soon. “Maybe we just have a heart-to-heart and say, ‘Try to be a bit more careful and really make it apolitical.’”

In an interview before the Interfaith Council meeting, Bhujwala told me, “I feel that if the city takes over [invocations], then it will be a lot of extra work for them to manage this kind of diversity and continue the peace we have helped in the city.”

He then chuckled.

“If they think they can do a better job, good luck to them.”

Former Dodger Justin Turner is struck with a pitch to the face.

 

Former Dodgers star Justin Turner was hit in the face by a pitch Monday while playing in a spring training game for his new team, the Boston Red Sox.

According to the Red Sox, Turner is at a Fort Myers, Fla., hospital, where he is receiving treatment for soft tissue injuries and is being monitored for a concussion.

“Justin is stable, alert, and in good spirits given the circumstances,” the Red Sox said in a statement.

The team added that Turner will undergo further testing and that it would provide updates as they become available.

Turner was facing Detroit Tigers pitcher Matt Manning with two runners on, no outs and a 2-1 count when the incident occurred in the bottom of the first inning.

Video footage shows Turner bleeding from his face onto home plate. Turner walked off the field under his own power but was helped by a member of the Red Sox training staff, who held a towel over the veteran player’s face.

Turner spent nine seasons with the Dodgers, becoming a beloved player among fans and a team leader who helped L.A. win a World Series title in 2020, the team’s first since 1988.

The Dodgers declined his $16-million option for 2023, then signed J.D. Martinez on Dec. 17 to effectively replace Turner’s right-handed bat in a predominantly designated hitting role. Turner signed a two-year, $22-million contract with the Red Sox the next day.

Theresa Runstedtler talks about Kareem and the 1970s NBA in her book “Black Ball.”

On the Shelf

Black Ball: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Spencer Haywood, and the Generation That Saved the Soul of the NBA

By Theresa Runstedtler
Bold Type: 368 pages, $29

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Young Black men on drugs! Starting fights! Looking to get paid! This was the collective NBA boogeyman of the 1970s and early ‘80s, a transitional period in professional basketball and in society. As a majority-Black league embracing a flashy style of play and reflecting the gains of the civil rights movement and Black Power, the NBA entered a new era of visibility. The stars expected to be compensated and taken seriously as human beings. Not surprisingly, the backlash was considerable — among management reluctant to give up absolute control and among a largely white fan base resentful of these new players pulling in big piles of cash (which, by today’s standards, would appear to be a pittance).

Oscar Robertson, who fought to remove the reserve clause from NBA contracts, is swarmed by fans of as he searches for his luggage at the airport in Milwaukee in 1971.

(Paul Shane / Associated Press)

This is the world of “Black Ball: Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Spencer Haywood, and the Generation that Saved the Soul of the NBA,” Theresa Runstedtler’s wise, engaging and frankly overdue survey of a crucial moment in sports history. This is primarily a story of labor and race and America, told through the prism of a league approaching but not yet arriving at its current level of mass-produced, carefully packaged popularity. It’s a story of anti-drug hysteria set in the Me Decade of rampant cocaine use and of a product struggling with its close proximity to the streets. And it’s a study of institutionalized racism in a culture changing so fast that its old, white guard could scarcely keep up.

“This is the same period in which the Bronx was burning, and the quote-unquote inner cities were recovering from all of the uprisings that happened in the mid-’60s forward,” Runstedtler says from her home office in Baltimore. “There is this anxiety about young Black men being given too much freedom — that this probably is going to lead to some kind of violence … or criminal activity.”

Runstedtler, a professor and historian of race and sport at American University, took a circuitous but illustrative path to her latest subject. An Ontario native, she was a member of the Toronto Raptors Dance Pak in the ‘90s. A new expansion team, the Raptors began with a youthful startup approach under Black co-founder, general manager and former NBA star Isiah Thomas.

“We didn’t look like the typical NBA dance team,” Runstedtler writes. “We were more urban athletic than sexy glamour. There was no fixation on weight. Paying homage to African American hip-hop culture, we wore coveralls, bandannas, and sequined jerseys, and we danced to the latest rap and R&B hits.”

But then the team was sold to the more corporate-minded Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment. The dance crew changed: “skinnier, whiter, blonder.” The hip-hop was replaced by Motown. As Runstedtler writes, “It became apparent that we were performing for the wealthy white season-ticket holders on the floor rather than the regular (often nonwhite) fans in the nosebleeds. In some respects this book has been more than two decades in the making — a way for me to make sense of what I became a part of in the late 1990s.”

After studying history and African American studies at Yale, Runstedtler began thinking about and researching what are sometimes called the NBA’s “dark ages.” The plotlines are many.

There’s superstar Oscar Robertson’s legal battle against the NBA’s option (or reserve) clause, which bound a player to one team for life at the team’s discretion. There’s the arrival of the upstart, razzle-dazzle ABA, which briefly gave players more choices — a freedom the NBA feared so much it forced a merger in 1976.

There’s also Abdul-Jabbar, the cerebral UCLA and Lakers great, who baffled the media by refusing to play its game of feigned politeness and canned answers. There’s the hysteria over players’ use of cocaine, a drug popular among many people with disposable income in the ‘70s and ‘80s, which somehow terrified and enraged the league and the media when rich Black guys were indulging. (An innuendo-driven Los Angeles Times article helped drive the panic).

‘Black Ball’ author Theresa Runstedrler is a historian of race and sports.

(Britt Ecker-Olsen Photography)

Runstedtler makes it clear that she’s aware the NBA wasn’t angelic in the ‘70s. “I’m not saying in the book that nobody was doing coke, but that we need to think about that as a racialized narrative, a moral panic that became this major story about Black basketball players in the years leading up to what eventually becomes a crack-cocaine crisis,“ she says. “Everybody just falls into lockstep and says, ‘Yes, we must punish these guys. We must control them. We must surveil them using police.’” It’s the same kind of rhetoric that was used in the increasingly draconian War on Drugs.

The stroke of honesty that guides “Black Ball” is its insistence that our perceptions of race affect how we view the game, and that you simply can’t divorce sports from the times in which they are played — and the audiences for whom they’re played. Today’s NBA has mastered the art of having it both ways, harnessing the league’s cool and its Black style without ruffling too many feathers. (This is largely the subject of another fine basketball book, Pete Croatto’s “From Hang Time to Prime Time”).

“Black Ball” is a timely read at a moment when professional athletes are more outspoken than ever on social issues, and when it’s clear that sports and society are inextricably linked. Without the advances chronicled here it’s hard to imagine, for example, the NFL pledging $250 million to combat systemic racism (after basically blackballing Colin Kaepernick for his silent sideline protests against police brutality).

Members of the Milwaukee Bucks and the Boston Celtics kneel around a Black Lives Matter logo before the start of an NBA basketball game in 2020 in Lake Buena Vista, Fla.

(Ashley Landis / Pool / Getty Images)

It’s also important to note that NBA players have been told to “shut up and dribble,” or some equivalent, for decades. Runstedtler represents a school of sportswriting and scholarship that recognizes the most important action takes place off the court.

Chris Vognar is a freelance writer based in Houston.

Kawhi Leonard is an NBA leading man. Can Clippers catch up?

The Clippers’ confounding incompetence in recent weeks has obscured a major development unfolding in plain sight.

Kawhi Leonard has reclaimed his place as one of the best players in the NBA.

He’s averaged 28.4 points in the 22 games he’s played since Jan. 8, converting 52.6% of his field goals, including 49.6% of his threes. Equally important: He missed only four games in that stretch and averaged nearly 37 minutes per contest.

Leonard produced his most recent masterpiece on Sunday night when the Clippers ended a five-game losing streak. Leonard scored 15 of his 34 points in the fourth quarter of the Clippers’ 135-129 victory over a severely short-handed Memphis Grizzlies team.

This wasn’t a blueprint for success or a roadmap to a championship, however. Leonard’s heroics were a bandage that covered up the Clippers’ wounds.

To be clear: The Clippers don’t have a Russell Westbrook problem. The Clippers have a Clippers problem.

They entered the season as projected title contenders, yet here they are, one game over .500 and barely hanging on for a spot in the play-in tournament. What other franchise underwhelms like this, year after year?

As much as the comeback win over the Grizzlies showcased the individual talents of Leonard and Paul George, the game also exposed some alarming issues, which could explain why the two stars refrained from making any predictions about the future.

Could the win lead to some positive changes in mentality or confidence?

Kawhi Leonard is fouled by the Grizzlies’ David Roddy.

(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

“Don’t know yet,” Leonard said.

Did the win save the Clippers’ season?

“We’ll see,” said George, who scored a game-high 42 points.

The Clippers weren’t in a position to make any promises, and Leonard and George knew this. The team had just given up 51 points in the third quarter to a version of the Grizzlies who didn’t have Ja Morant.

“Again, this means nothing if we don’t buy into what we can do and what we can be,” George said. “So we’ll see. If we don’t treat the next games with the same [urgency] that we treated that fourth quarter tonight, then what are we doing here? Yeah, we’ll see.”

The Clippers had to win this game, which looked on paper like a gimme. Morant was under league investigation for a video he livestreamed on his Instagram account in which he flashed what looked like a gun while at a nightclub. Dillon Brooks was suspended for picking up too many technical fouls. Brandon Clarke and Steve Adams were unavailable because of injuries.

And how did the Clippers start? By missing eight of their first 12 shots and falling behind, 20-13. So much for their recent declarations about playing with more intensity.

The lack of energy resulted in a nightmare third quarter that was the defensively-challenged team’s worst defensive quarter of the season.

“It’s got to be a record in some sort of capacity,” coach Tyronn Lue said.

The Clippers were down by as many as 16 points in the third quarter. They entered the fourth with a 15-point deficit.

Leonard said, ever succinctly, “We can’t do that.”

The Clippers also looked out of sorts offensively for most of the game, a byproduct of their decision to double down on having a point guard for the sake of having a point guard. As a tempo-pushing guard who can’t shoot, John Wall wasn’t the right playmaker for the Clippers, who are built around a player in Leonard who prefers to play at a more leisurely pace. The Clippers traded Wall, only to replace him with a player with a similar profile in Westbrook.

The play of Westbrook is less problematic than why the Clippers thought they needed him to begin with. Westbrook is a symptom. The cause was their purported depth’s failure to amplify Leonard’s and George’s talents the way they envisioned, Leonard’s dominant performances over the last couple of months unable to change the team’s fortunes.

The Clippers were cautiously optimistic they found something during a furious comeback in which they outscored the Grizzlies in the fourth quarter, 38-17.

“I mean, we just played harder,” George said. “We just brought another level. We played with some grit. I just felt tonight we just had a winning spirit.”

Playing like this has been a season-long aspiration. What made the game on Sunday different from their 66 previous games?

“I think it’s 51 points,” George said, recalling the number of points the Clippers gave up in the third quarter. “Fifty-one points will do that to you.”

There’s something disconcerting about a team that has to give up 51 points in a quarter to finally take a look in the mirror. Then again, what else do the Clippers have to build on? Nothing else has worked, and they now have only 15 games remaining in the regular season.