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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Sport
Andrew Greif

Paul George, Kawhi Leonard top 40 points as Clippers hold off Timberwolves

MINNEAPOLIS _ On the same night a Los Angeles Clippers duo put on a stunning offensive display, their team barely avoided a defeat of equal measure.

Paul George finished with 46 points and Kawhi Leonard scored 42 at Target Center, the 21st time in NBA history that teammates had each scored 40 or more in the same game, the first time Clippers teammates had ever accomplished the feat and the first time George and Leonard had fully unleashed their offensive arsenal since joining forces 11 games ago.

And the Clippers needed every one of their 88 combined points to escape with a 124-117 victory, their fourth consecutive.

"Every play was basically for those two guys and they came up big," coach Doc Rivers said. "They made the right plays for the most part, until down the stretch when we start turning the ball over. But that was fantastic."

With their 27-point second-half lead whittled to just four with 40 seconds to play, thanks in part to nine Clippers turnovers in the final quarter, Leonard drove into the key and was fouled. He made his 18th and 19th free throws of the night, the most any Clipper has ever made in a game without a miss. Twenty seconds later, with the Clippers' lead up to five after a missed free throw by Derrick Walton Jr., a once-quiet crowd was on its feet as Timberwolves guard Robert Covington collected the rebound and dribbled upcourt.

Then he fired a pass too hard and too wide of its intended receiver, out of bounds, and the Clippers finally secured the win that had appeared easily in hand at various points during the night. Such moments included when George and Leonard combined to score their team's first 23 points and led Minnesota by 12.

Or, the time late in the third quarter, when they'd outscored the entire Minnesota roster by themselves, 70-68.

"It's great," Leonard said. "Just have someone else out there to help score the ball, making the game easier for myself, you know we're still trying to build our chemistry out there. We didn't close that fourth quarter too great and the end of that third. We've still got improvements to make."

With few reserves available because of injuries to Patrick Beverley (concussion), Lou Williams (sore calf), Landry Shamet (ankle) and JaMychal Green (bruised tailbone), Rivers staggered his lineups to keep either Leonard or George on the court at all times to ensure some sort of scoring punch for a roster temporarily bereft of playmakers.

The lineups weren't without their droughts.

Minnesota trailed by just four points after one quarter after an 11-3 run with Leonard off the floor in the final minutes. Trailing by 12 in the second quarter, the Timberwolves' much-maligned defense held the Clippers scoreless during a four-minute stretch that saw Minnesota tie the score.

But unlike the first quarter, Leonard was on the court to close the first half and the Clippers' two-man offense became a one-man show of force. In the final 3:53 before halftime, Leonard scored 15 of the Clippers' 17 points. During its dreadful defensive display of the past week-plus, the Timberwolves had struggled to contain opponents from dribbling where they wanted to go, and Leonard took advantage, driving to draw, and make, nine free throws in that stretch.

Leonard played 37 minutes and George 39. Their production was enough to offset a fourth quarter in which the Clippers were outscored by 15 and Leonard and George combined to make three of their 12 field goal attempts.

The offense came from a mixture of called plays, with Leonard and George operating on their own against a Timberwolves defense that was by far the worst in the league during the five previous games.

George and Leonard became the first pair of teammates to each score 35 or more points through the first three quarters of a game in the last 20 seasons. George took the stretch as "a good indication" of their potential together after a start in which the stars have rarely produced efficient offensive performances in the same game as they learn to play with one another.

"Both of us were aggressive to start, our defense got us going and down the stretch, you saw there was still some slippage, still some opportunities where we can grow," George said. "But I thought overall we did a great job of just playing off one another, both being aggressive tonight, looking to score and attack and then finding plays to make our teammates better, as well."

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