The Clippers beat the Brooklyn Nets 126-89 for their 15th win in 18 games. They’re still 20-24 overall and sitting 10th in the Western Conference. The trade deadline is February 5, and LA’s options are constrained by cap rules and limited draft capital.
The recent run is real. So is the overall record
Kawhi Leonard scored 28 against Brooklyn and has been playing at an All-Star level during this stretch. A 15-3 run is significant. But the Clippers started the season poorly enough that they’re still below .500 and barely holding onto the 10th spot in the West. The hot streak matters. So does the hole they dug before it started.
The cap situation limits trade options
LA is hard-capped at the first apron, which restricts what trades are possible. Chris Paul has been mentioned in trade discussions. Anfernee Simons and Collin Sexton are potential guard targets. Keon Ellis from Sacramento is another name circulating. The problem is draft capital—the Clippers’ next tradable first-round picks aren’t available until 2030 and 2032. Any significant acquisition requires giving up players, not picks.
The injury situation is stabilizing
Kris Dunn’s ankle injury isn’t severe. Derrick Jones is recovering ahead of schedule from his knee sprain. Bogdan Bogdanovic is close to returning. Tyronn Lue played eight reserves against Brooklyn, which suggests the rotation has enough depth for regular season purposes. Playoff rotations are different—Lue will shorten the bench, and the question is whether the top seven or eight are good enough.
The case for standing pat
The 15-3 stretch suggests the current roster works when healthy. Any trade risks disrupting chemistry that’s producing results. With limited draft capital and hard cap restrictions, the Clippers can’t make a major move without giving up rotation players. Staying put means betting this group can sustain its recent level through the play-in and potentially into the playoffs. Given the constraints, that might be the most reasonable path.
















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