LA Clippers Cut Ties with Chris Paul Amid Disastrous Season Start


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The LA Clippers wrapped up the 2024-25 season having won 50 games and pushed the mighty Denver Nuggets in an eventual seven-game first-round playoff series defeat.

This offseason, they brought in some incredibly decorated help in an effort to remain at least a tough postseason out next spring.

Unfortunately, LA forgot perhaps the most obvious rule in sports: don’t sign a bunch of washed-up old guys.

Now, the Clippers are already cutting ties with the oldest of those guys, 12-time All-Star point guard Chris Paul, less than two months into the new NBA season, according to a new report from NBA insider Chris Haynes.

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Paul, 40, has looked borderline unplayable for LA this year — and that’s saying something, since LA has been saddled with several perimeter injuries and is looking like a lottery team. At 5-16 on the young season, the Clippers are already among the worst squads in the Western Conference, and sinking fast.

The 6-footer out of Wake Forest had played six of his most productive seasons in a first-ballot Hall of Fame career during the Clippers’ “Lob City” era, alongside All-Stars Blake Griffin and Deandre Jordan, from 2011-12 through 2016-17. Across 409 regular season games, Paul averaged 18.8 points on .475/.378/.881 shooting splits, 9.8 assists, 3.6 rebounds, and 2.2 steals a night.

During his LA run, he was named to six straight All-Defensive First Teams and five All-Star and All-NBA teams. He finished among the top seven in MVP voting in five of seasons. His Clippers clubs won 51 or more games across five of those seasons, although they never advanced beyond the second round.

Paul enjoyed deeper playoff success later, leading the Houston Rockets to a seven-game 2018 Western Conference Finals loss against the eventual champion Golden State Warriors and powering the Phoenix Suns to a 2-0 lead in the 2021 NBA Finals… before the Suns dropped their next four games and fell to the Milwaukee Bucks.

But his family is based in Los Angeles, and Paul probably reached the apex of his celebrity while playing at the then-Staples Center.

After starting all 82 games for the lottery-bound San Antonio Spurs last season, Paul decided to sign a veteran’s minimum deal to return home.

It hasn’t worked out.

This story will be updated…

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