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After ‘roller coaster’ week, Clippers are thankful for a couple days off

Clippers guard Reggie Jackson takes it to the basket past Dallas Mavericks center Kristaps Porzingis
Clippers guard Reggie Jackson takes it to the basket past Dallas Mavericks center Kristaps Porzingis (6) on Nov. 23 at Staples Center.
(Brian van der Brug /Los Angeles Times)
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Once he’d finished discussing a dispiriting Clippers overtime loss to Dallas, Reggie Jackson’s mood brightened late Tuesday night inside Staples Center. It was Jackson’s turn to play questioner.

Pointing his finger as he moved around a room that hosts postgame news conferences, the guard surveyed a dozen or so people for their favorite Thanksgiving dishes. He asked reporters. He asked arena workers holding microphones. He asked the team’s public relations employees. Only when he was almost to the door was Jackson asked about his own holiday preferences.

“I ain’t going to lie, my go-tos are stuffing,” Jackson said, “and straight to the pie.”

He departed smiling. The prospect of two days off before Friday’s 12:30 p.m. tipoff against Detroit was appetizing and not only because of the food. After a past week leading scorer Paul George likened to a “roller coaster,” the break was needed.

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Road losses on consecutive days in Memphis and New Orleans last week ended a stretch of five games in seven days. Nicolas Batum on Sunday entered the league’s health and safety protocols and could miss most of the team’s six-game homestand. George and a few teammates had already arrived at the team’s Playa Vista practice facility Tuesday morning when a scheduled shootaround was abruptly canceled out of precautions related to coronavirus. Then, later that night, the ultimate up-and-down: A furious 10-point rally in the fourth quarter’s final 1 minute 38 seconds to force overtime against the Mavericks when George made a buzzer-beating, tying three-pointer in the final second.

Paul George made a three at the buzzer to force overtime, but the Clippers fall to the Dallas Mavericks 112-104 on Tuesday at Staples Center.

Coach Tyronn Lue described that final play as “perfect.” The extra period during which they mustered one point, not so much. It was so weird that on two of Jackson’s overtime shots, the ball became wedged between the rim and backboard.

It underscored the highs and lows that could be awaiting the Clippers if they can’t shore up weaknesses that contributed to a third loss in the last four games to leave them 10-8. Leading by 11 in the first half, they failed to put away a Dallas team that made only one of its 14 three-point attempts before halftime through a series of errors that began with a series of forced lobs at the rim that defied Lue’s repeated request to make the easy pass.

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Center Ivica Zubac’s behind-the-back assist for a Terance Mann dunk was one of few transition highlights on a night when they made only 12 of 25 inside four feet against the Mavericks, including four such misses in overtime. This season, more than one out of every six Clippers possessions has started from a transition opportunity, the league’s fourth-highest rate. And yet they rank in the league’s bottom six in points per play generated out of transition, according to the advanced statistics site Cleaning The Glass.

“Taking care of the basketball and capitalizing in transition, that’s our biggest Achilles’ heel right now,” Lue said.

Since starting guard Eric Bledsoe averaged 5.6 points on 49% shooting, including 39% from deep, in a five-game stretch that ended Nov. 16, he’s averaged 5.2 points on 36% shooting, including just 11% on three-point tries, in his last five games. The production doesn’t reflect his defensive contributions, but is symptomatic of a Clippers offense that, already struggling to score easily in transition, can make life hard for itself in the half court, where it ranks 22nd in points per 100 possessions.

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Clippers guard Eric Bledsoe grabs a rebound between Dallas Mavericks' Luka Doncic (77) and Dorian Finney-Smith.
(Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)

“We’re still learning on the fly, still figuring each other out being short-handed little bit,” Jackson said. “I can’t imagine being the coach, being T Lue and the coaching staff, they’re trying to figure it out. Make sure that we’re as healthy as possible, as recovered as possible, as well as they’re trying to teach us as much as possible with our new units and everything going on.

“So we’re just trying to pick it up but yeah, I agree, I’m a little frustrated, just because they’re easy baskets that we’re passing up especially with the great defense that we’ve been playing.”

Reintegrating starting forward Marcus Morris and backup center Serge Ibaka after weeks away from the team while recovering from knee and back injuries qualifies as a good problem for a roster riddled at times by attrition. Still, it is a challenge nonetheless. In the case of Ibaka, Lue said he might play all three centers, including starter Zubac and reserve Isaiah Hartenstein, in first halves before going with the hotter hand after halftime. Ibaka played six first-half minutes against Dallas before Hartenstein played all 10 of his minutes after halftime and Lue noted the energy he provided by pointing out his four offensive rebounds.

“That’s been the toughest thing, because Isaiah’s been doing a great job with that second unit,” Lue said. “They kind of had the first 15, 16 games, they’ve had a good chemistry. So it’s my job is to make sure to kind of work Serge back into it slowly but also can’t forget how good Isaiah is.”

Two days after a Clippers player entered the league’s COVID-19 protocols, the team canceled its scheduled shootaround for ‘precautionary reasons.’

It could very well lead to a situation the Clippers never expected upon signing Ibaka to a free-agent deal in 2020: potentially sitting an NBA champion and veteran in high-leverage minutes in favor of a player who had to win a roster spot in training camp. The Clippers outscore opponents by 15.7 points per 100 possessions with Hartenstein on the floor, the team’s second-highest on-off difference behind Luke Kennard, while Ibaka — in a comparatively miniscule sample size — has drawn a minus-4.4 rating.

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Morris, who played the season’s first two games before sitting the next 15 because he felt “my movement just wasn’t right” on his knee, was encouraged by his 10 points and 31 minutes.

“Take a month off, I think I looked good myself,” he said. “Shots will come, rhythm will come, I’m a veteran, just felt great to be out there.”

UP NEXT

VS. DETROIT

When: 12:30 p.m., Friday

On the air: TV: Bally Sports; Radio: 570, 1330

Update: Detroit (4-14) has lost four consecutive games. Cade Cunningham, the top overall pick in July’s draft, is shooting only 33% but has led the Pistons in assists in five of the last six games and rebounds in three of the last four. He’s averaging 13.1 points, 6.2 rebounds and 4.9 assists overall. Former Clipper Rodney McGruder is averaging 5.4 minutes off Detroit’s bench. More than 16% of Detroit’s points this season have come from free throws, the highest share in the league. The Clippers (10-8) rank 26th in the same category.

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