Strategic Tendencies
Core NBA tactical principles for this team
Pick-and-Roll Actions
Ball screen actions remain the dominant source of offense in the modern NBA — managing coverages and creating advantages is central to every team's offensive plan.
Three-Point Spacing
Modern NBA offenses are built on three-point spacing — stretching the defense to create driving lanes and kick-out opportunities.
Switching Defense
Switch-capable rosters have become a priority — the ability to guard multiple positions reduces communication breakdowns and eliminates switch exploitation.
Pace and Transition
Transition basketball generates the highest-quality shots in the game — elite teams convert defensive stops into fast breaks to minimize half-court defensive preparation.
Second-Chance Offense
Offensive rebounding creates free possessions — teams that generate second-chance points consistently outperform their shooting percentages over a season.
Tactical Breakdown
A Three-Headed Summer: How Potential Kawhi, LeBron, and Giannis Movement Could Redraw Contender Geometry
The on-court consequence of a Kawhi/LeBron/Giannis shuffle is that each star demands a different supporting cast—and therefore forces different tactical trade-offs.
Leonard tilts an offense toward wing isolations and controlled, turnover-light possessions. He’s devastating when you can clear a side, force a switch, and let him live in the mid-post against smaller defenders or in the elbow area against bigs in drop. But his best versions need spacing that holds help at the nail and corners. Put him with two non-shooters and the playbook shrinks: teams stunt from the strong-side corner, send late doubles from the top, and dare skip passes to low-confidence shooters. Defensively, Kawhi enables a “switch 1–4, peel-switch on drives” scheme because he can contain on the ball without immediate scram help; that lets the back line stay home and reduces the rotations that create corner threes.
LeBron is still a coverage magnet in pick-and-roll: if you play drop, he’ll turn the corner into paint touch kickouts; if you switch, he’ll hunt your smallest defender and force your low man into an impossible tag decision. The key is the ecosystem around him—rim pressure from a vertical spacer, plus shooting that punishes his cross-court reads. Without that, opponents load the strong side and live with late-clock pull-ups. He also changes your transition profile: defensive rebounds become instant hit-aheads, and your wings must run wide lanes to stretch the floor early.
Latest Analysis
All analysis →A Three-Headed Summer: How Potential Kawhi, LeBron, and Giannis Movement Could Redraw Contender Geometry
If Leonard, James, and Antetokounmpo all hit the market in some form, the ripple won’t just be star power—it’ll be lineup math: spacing, matchup hunting, and defensive coverage choices for every team trying to survive four rounds.
Kidd’s ‘move on’ message is a systems directive: Dallas must re-engineer its offense without Luka-level on-ball gravity
Accusations about the Luka trade are noise; the signal is how Dallas replaces a heliocentric creator with structure—more committee creation, stricter defensive rules, and lineups built to win margins without a singular bailout option.
If the NBA sanctions the Clippers’ Kawhi arrangement, the real leverage point is roster-building — not headlines
A delayed league decision on alleged cap circumvention isn’t just a governance story. It hangs over Los Angeles’ minute allocation, lineup continuity, and deadline-level risk tolerance for a team built around Kawhi Leonard’s two-way gravity.
Concepts Used by Clippers
Extracted from tactical analysis articles