Just got back from Staples Center on the foggiest day in downtown Los Angeles that I can remember in 20 years. Some thoughts from my perspective seeing this one in person:
First of all, I'm not sure that anything which happened in this game should actually count as legit NBA statistics. Both teams looked they were going through the motions for all 4 quarters and this Clippers roster without PG or Kawhi is tanktastically awful. Despite the big numbers they put up tonight, the Kings offense remains a befuddling mystery. Haliburton is basically a whole mini offense unto himself but the rest of the team was just dribbling up into three pointers or throwing the ball aimlessly around the perimeter without accomplishing much of anything.
Fox, Buddy, and Davion would occasionally drive in to walls of defenders and have to pick up their dribble and throw it back out. Metu had a nice first half but couldn't sustain it. Alex Len was a big part of that 3OT win last week but I think he may have turned back into a pumpkin. The scouting report is definitely out on Buddy. He was smothered every time he touched the ball on the perimeter, as he should be. I don't think we bothered setting a pick to free him up for a catch and shoot even once though. The ghost of Coach Walton lives on in our all-out commitment to 4 guard lineups and a weave offense which only Tyrese Haliburton is actually able to execute effectively.
I agree that something is wrong with Fox. He looks like he's coasting at about 20% effort right now. More than once he had a fast break opportunity and pulled the ball back out to run the half court offense instead. For a large chunk of the 3rd quarter he was just standing in the corner while everyone else tried to create something from the perimeter. He got stripped or mishandled the ball several times down the floor and even airballed a midrange pull-up (granted that was a tough shot at the end of the shot clock). He played better than this in college. I don't think it's a physical issue. He seems distracted by something or maybe he doesn't like that he's been turned into a spot-up shooter.
Davion had some very nice moments defensively but the team defense is kindof a mess. The other team's big will come up and set one pick to free up the ballhandler and the result is almost always an open shot for somebody. Everybody in the arena knows that players are going to take a three if you give it to them so why are so many of our players setting their defensive stance too far away to effectively contest? It's maddening to see players catch the ball, hold it for 2 seconds, and then throw up an uncontested three over the lunging reach of whichever Kings player is supposedly guarding them. Fox finally started playing defense after the Clippers cut the lead in the least 4 minutes. It was the first time all game he started to look like he cared about the outcome.
Richaun is so automatic with his push shot right now that they should just call that shot the "Richaun Holmes". 20 years ago he would have been the cornerstone of an NBA offense with his current level of efficiency.
Jay Scrubb on the Clippers might be the most aptly named player in the league. If you play NBA 2K and manually decrease every attribute to the lowest level the game will allow for, I think you would get Jay Scrubb.
Mitchell and Davis both put up big numbers but I don't think they played better than they have been, they just made shots that they'd been missing. Reversion to the mean taking effect perhaps?
I'm not sure that Louis King is an NBA player right now. He stood out on both ends for us, and not in a good way.