- Apr 23, 2015
- 8,705
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Clippers also have been the product of some serious bad luck during the past five seasons. (The Houston series to me isn't bad luck. That's just...Yeah...That's not what I mean from bad luck)
The best team in the CP / DJ / Blake era was the 12'-13' squad. 17 wins in a row that year, was very elite. Vinny's last season w/us. First year with Jamal, had ebled, Ghill, Ronny, etc. coming off the bench. Go up 2-0, Grizz battle back, but Blake Griffin freaking breaks his ankle in the MIDDLE of a playoff series b. Can you imagine Steph Curry or Draymond essentially breaking their ankle in R1? Like, that is legit PEAK CLIPPERS. We lost that series that I feel we would have won and from there who knows but that's bad luck right there.
Then in the middle of a heated 7 game series the year after tapes leak confirming that your Owner is an idiot and a racist.
Then the Clippers are in a heated battle w/the Spurs in a playoff series, you get to game 7, and your star PG pulls his hamstring after playing all 82 games
again, PEAK CLIPPERS man. Yeah they ended up winning the game, but if CP isn't injured maybe that series ends in four? I don't know, but your best player pulling his hamstring is never a good thing obviously, especially in the playoffs.
Beyond that, the regular season bad luck has really altered the Clippers chances in the playoffs. They haven't been able to get homecourt past the first round in these past five years, but they've consistently ran into HUGE problems w/injuries to their best players. One season it's CP missing 18+ games due to injury, the next season it's Blake catching a staph infection forcing him to miss 15+ games, the next season it's your star PF missing over 41 games due to a torn quad muscle and a broken hand. So what you're looking at here is back to back to back to back years of your best players missing significant time due to injury (luck) and while the Clippers are good enough to remain afloat when one of their best players is out, they aren't good enough to secure a top two seed w/their best players missing that much time. (Although they came very close last season) So they've failed in the playoffs but the bad cards they've been dealt during the regular season has played a significant part in all of this.
The best team in the CP / DJ / Blake era was the 12'-13' squad. 17 wins in a row that year, was very elite. Vinny's last season w/us. First year with Jamal, had ebled, Ghill, Ronny, etc. coming off the bench. Go up 2-0, Grizz battle back, but Blake Griffin freaking breaks his ankle in the MIDDLE of a playoff series b. Can you imagine Steph Curry or Draymond essentially breaking their ankle in R1? Like, that is legit PEAK CLIPPERS. We lost that series that I feel we would have won and from there who knows but that's bad luck right there.
Then in the middle of a heated 7 game series the year after tapes leak confirming that your Owner is an idiot and a racist.
Then the Clippers are in a heated battle w/the Spurs in a playoff series, you get to game 7, and your star PG pulls his hamstring after playing all 82 games
Beyond that, the regular season bad luck has really altered the Clippers chances in the playoffs. They haven't been able to get homecourt past the first round in these past five years, but they've consistently ran into HUGE problems w/injuries to their best players. One season it's CP missing 18+ games due to injury, the next season it's Blake catching a staph infection forcing him to miss 15+ games, the next season it's your star PF missing over 41 games due to a torn quad muscle and a broken hand. So what you're looking at here is back to back to back to back years of your best players missing significant time due to injury (luck) and while the Clippers are good enough to remain afloat when one of their best players is out, they aren't good enough to secure a top two seed w/their best players missing that much time. (Although they came very close last season) So they've failed in the playoffs but the bad cards they've been dealt during the regular season has played a significant part in all of this.