Tag Archives: Leonard

After LA Clippers are eliminated, Paul George says team would ‘be going on’ if Kawhi Leonard was healthy for Western Conference finals

LOS ANGELES — Not long after Chris Paul and the Phoenix Suns celebrated their Western Conference championship on the Staples Center floor, Paul George wondered “what if” Kawhi Leonard had been healthy.

The LA Clippers ran out of gas and comebacks as their resilient playoff run came to an end with a 130-103 loss to the Suns in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals.

After the game, George allowed himself to think about the possibilities had Leonard not sprained his right knee in Game 4 in the previous round against the Utah Jazz.

“We’d be going on,” George said when asked what would have happened had Leonard played in the conference finals. “This series would be a lot different. Talk about one of the best players in the league being out, yet we were inches away from getting to the next round.

“So definitely it’s a ‘what if’ on this. Fact of the matter is we didn’t do enough to win, and that’s the reason we’re going home.”

The Clippers, the only team to overcome a 2-0 deficit twice in the same postseason, could not force a Game 7. Injuries and tired legs caught up to them. Besides Leonard missing the final eight games with his knee injury, the Clippers were without centers Ivica Zubac (sprained right MCL) and Serge Ibaka (back surgery).

And they were playing their 15th game in 29 days, as all three of their rounds went six games or more.

Still, Clippers coach Ty Lue said players were stunned once the realization set in the locker room that the season was finally over only two wins away from the NBA Finals.

“It is a shock,” Lue said. “I think it’s a shock to a lot of guys in that locker room. It just tells you a lot about the team. Like no matter who is playing, we still feel like every night we have a chance to win no matter who is on the floor. I thought we ran out of gas and first thing goes when you get tired and fatigued is mentally. That first half, we made a lot of mistakes defensively, a lot of mistakes coming out of time-outs or just play calls in general, just not there mentally.”

The Clippers had their share of defensive breakdowns and Paul made his old team pay for each of them. Paul delivered a masterful second-half performance that was classic CP3, complete with all the things that makes him such a pain for opponents. He buried 12-of-16 shots, including all five of his 3-point attempts, and scored 31 of his 41 points in the second half.

After he drilled a 3-pointer to push the Suns’ lead to 118-92 with 5:49 left, the Clippers called for timeout. As Paul walked back to the Suns bench, a frustrated Patrick Beverley shoved the Suns point guard in the back and was ejected.

Knowing that he had gotten under the Clippers’ skin, Paul would celebrate moments later by pumping both of his fists in the air.

All George and Leonard could do was watch from the bench; he was terrific this postseason, especially once Leonard went down. The Suns sent some double teams at George, who finished with 21 points and nine rebounds. Still, George answered even his harshest critics with his finest postseason, lifting the Clippers to their first-ever Western Conference Finals.

“Nothing that I didn’t know already,” George said of what he learned from his postseason. “The narrative of me not being postseason player or all that, I never understood it.”

“[But] I came up short again,” George later added. “I’m proud of what we did as a team. I wasn’t out to prove nothing to nobody but to show up as a leader for this team and to put us in position to get to where we got to. Again, came up short. My good wasn’t enough. There’s room for improvement… I’ll look back. I’ll reflect.”

Moving forward, the Clippers will see what Leonard will do with his player option for the 2021-22 season.

There is also the future of point guard Reggie Jackson, who emerged this season as a clutch scorer for the Clippers in the postseason. The Clippers have early Bird rights on Jackson. George, though, says his good friend likely has played himself into having plenty of options for his future.

An emotional Jackson, who has revived his career here, had tears rolling down his face when asked about his future with the Clippers.

“This year was my best year,” said Jackson, who averaged 18.1 points and 41.5% 3-point shooting in the postseason entering Game 6. “… First thing I told these guys was thank you for saving me. I appreciate every guy in that locker room, I appreciate Paul for getting on that phone last year, at the end the season — was talking a buyout with Detroit.

“I’m thankful for everything I’ve experienced being here, this city making me feel at home. This organization welcoming me, my quirks, my strengths, my weaknesses, I wonder if I would still be playing without this team.”

George says the Clippers have all the pieces to make another title run next season if they are healthy. After melting down and blowing a 3-1 lead in the bubble in the second round last year, the Clippers’ resiliency this postseason put all the “bubble talk” behind them as Lue said.

And George and Leonard saw what they are capable of doing when healthy.

“We’ve made great connections,” George said. “I think we’ve both grown, myself and Kawhi together. I think we really enjoy being teammates, and we see what we can be and with a we can do.”

George later added about the team’s injuries: “I thought this team squeezed everything we could out of what we had. We squeezed everything out of one another, and I thought we got stronger and better as the season went on.”

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Colts All-Pro Darius Leonard laments Indy’s loss of LB Anthony Walker to the Browns: ‘I wouldn’t be me without him’

CLEVELAND, Ohio — Colts two-time All-Pro linebacker Darius Leonard took the departure of Colts middle linebacker Anthony Walker to the Browns extremely hard Friday.

“Well, I’m about to cry,’’ Leonard tweeted right after news broke that Walker, 25, agreed to a one-year deal with the Browns worth up to $3.5 million with bonuses and incentives. “If y’all actually understood the impact he has a on a locker room.’’

Walker, who started 48 games for the Colts, will likely replace Browns free agent middle linebacker B.J. Goodson, unless he’s re-signed by the club soon. He’ll also replace some of Goodson’s inspirational leadership.

“Amazing player man, he does everything the right way! It sucks that he’s leaving but Cleveland is gaining a Dawg!’’ Leonard tweeted. “He’s a great leader and he’s going to lead your defense to be great! I will truly miss him! I give him a lot of credit for my success! I wouldn’t be me without him!’’

And, “Crazy to see such an amazing person, leader, player and a friend leave a locker room!’’

Colts cornerback Kenny Moore II weighed in too.

“You’ll never understand the affect a teammate can have on another,’’ he tweeted. “We all signed up for this and that’s okay. But talking about this moment then it actually happening is totally different.’’

Walker, who visited the Browns Thursday, made his mark on the Browns last season during their 32-23 victory over the Colts when he picked off Baker Mayfield with 7:05 left to make things tense at FirstEnergy Stadium.

A fifth-round pick of the Colts out of Northwestern in 2017, Walker (6-foot-1, 230), has amassed 343 tackles, 19 for a loss, 3.5 sacks, 11 passes defensed, three interceptions and two fumble recoveries in his four seasons. He started all 16 games last season and recorded 92 tackles, but third-year linebacker Bobby Okereke is set to take over that spot.

According to Pro Football Focus, Walker had the 16th-best tackling efficiency and was 20th in tackling grade among qualifying linebackers in 2020.

The Browns re-signed 11th-year linebacker Malcolm Smith to a one-year deal on Wednesday, and will continue to try to upgrade the position.

More Browns coverage

Browns agree to terms with former Rams CB Troy Hill on multi-year deal

3 things to know about the new Browns cornerback

Why Takk McKinley might be ideal DE to learn from Myles Garrett: Lesmerises

LB Malcolm Smith is happy to still have an opportunity — and still learning

Six weeks until 2021 NFL Draft and Cleveland officials have released few details

Agreement on one-year deal with return specialist JoJo Natson

Former Colts LB Anthony Walker makes free agent visit

Higgins comes back to Browns and I’m happy – Pluto



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Heat trade Meyers Leonard, second-round pick to Thunder for Trevor Ariza

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The Thunder and Heat completed a trade on Wednesday that will send Trevor Ariza to Miami in exchange for Meyers Leonard and a 2027 second-round pick, Oklahoma City announced. Leonard will not be reporting to Oklahoma City and will not be an active member of the organization. Ariza has not played in a game since the 2019-20 season, when he was still on the Portland Trail Blazers, so it’s unclear when he’ll be ready to suit up for Miami.

However, despite being past his prime at 35 years old, Ariza is a still a decent 3-and-D player for the right price. Miami isn’t giving up much of anything here, considering Leonard has played in just three games this season due to left shoulder surgery, and the use of an anti-Semitic slur caused him to be suspended from all team activities for a week and a $50,000 fine. 

For OKC, this was more about gaining draft compensation and continuing its rebuild instead of getting anything worth immediate value. That 2027 pick is just another draft selection that the Thunder can add to its treasure trove its acquired after trading away several star players in the last three years.

As for the Heat, Ariza’s value will determine on what version of him they’re getting. In his 21-game stint with the Trail Blazers last season he averaged 11 points and four boards on 40 percent from deep. But earlier in the season, when he was on the Kings, he put up just six points a game and shot 38 percent from the field in 22 appearances. He’s hopped around from team-to-team after leaving Houston in 2018, and has had varying levels of success in different environments. 

If Ariza’s able to perform like he did in Portland, then Miami will be adding another defensive-minded wing player to its arsenal as the Heat continue to climb up the rankings in the East after a slow start at the beginning of the season. In their last 10 games, Miami has gone 9-1 and is on a give-game win streak which has the Heat fourth in the East. After overcoming a COVID-19 outbreak and some injuries to the roster, Miami is finally starting to look like the team we saw in the Orlando bubble last year.

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Kawhi Leonard says LA Clippers’ inconsistency ‘very concerning’ after rout by New Orleans Pelicans

After the LA Clippers failed to respond and were routed by a more aggressive and hungrier New Orleans Pelicans squad on Sunday night, Kawhi Leonard said his team’s lack of consistency is “very concerning.”

The Clippers never led and trailed by 33 points before falling 135-115 to the up-and-down Pelicans in New Orleans. While the Clippers were without Patrick Beverley (knee) and lost a second starter in Serge Ibaka for the second half due to lower back tightness, Leonard has not liked what he has seen.

The Clippers, a team expected to contend for a championship, have lost five of their past seven games. After starting the season 21-8, the Clippers are just 4-7 since.

“It’s very concerning,” Leonard said when asked what his level of concern is at over the slippage. “[If] we want to have a chance at anything, you gotta be consistent. You know, that’s what the great teams do, they’re consistent. They have their nights when, you know, the energy’s not there. But it’s all about consistency, from teams to players to coaches. That’s what makes a team great, players great, coaches great. A consistency of being, wanting to win, and doing pretty much the same habits of winning.”

Clippers coach Ty Lue was as angry as he has been this season following a loss. The Clippers (25-15) allowed New Orleans (17-22) to score 36 points and shoot 14-for-21 in the first quarter to fall behind by 12. Lonzo Ball, Zion Williamson and Brandon Ingram combined to outscore the entire Clippers team 25-24 in the first quarter.

“Teams are going at us, and we got to put up more resistance,” Lue said. “I am not discouraged, because we have shown what we can do, and we can play at a high level. But we got to do it every single night. We can’t keep talking about it. We got to f—ing … sorry, we got to do it.”

The only other time the even-keeled Lue was this frustrated after a loss was when the Clippers were drilled by a more physical and aggressive Grizzlies team in Memphis during a 122-94 defeat on Feb. 25. That loss not only marked the start of this current stretch of poor play, but the Clippers opened that game and this latest loss in New Orleans in similar fashion.

“That’s exactly what it felt like,” Lue said of the defeat at Memphis. “That’s what our coaching staff was talking about. They were more physical than us, they were tougher than us, and you saw the results. We just gotta be better.

“We gotta be more physical, gotta have defensive mindset at the start of every game, I don’t give a hell, I don’t care who you playing.”

After that 28-point loss to the Grizzlies, the Clippers bounced back and beat Memphis by 20 the next game. But the Clippers followed that with three straight losses entering the All-Star break.

The Clippers appeared to get back on track by blowing out the Golden State Warriors 130-104 at home on Thursday. But then came Sunday night’s dismal effort without Beverley, who often gives the Clippers an attitude and energy.

“If [Beverley is] here or not … everybody has to do it,” Leonard said of bringing the energy. “Can’t rely on one person.”

The Clippers will play Monday against Luka Doncic and the Mavericks in Dallas for the first time since the Mavs destroyed them 124-73 in Los Angeles during the third game of the season.

“If we play like this again tomorrow, it can be another 50-point loss,” a frustrated Lue said. “So we got to be ready, got to be prepared. And we got to have our stuff together, man.”

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Miami Heat player Meyers Leonard will be away from team ‘indefinitely’ after using slur

Miami Heat player Meyers Leonard will be “away from the team indefinitely” after he used an anti-Semitic slur while playing a video game, according to the NBA franchise.

Video started circulating online Tuesday of Leonard playing “Call of Duty” on Twitch, a livestreaming platform for gamers and content creators. In the video, Leonard can be heard saying: “F—— cowards. Don’t f—— snipe me, you f—— k— b—-.”

Criticism was swift. The Anti-Defamation League said in a Twitter post that it was “shocked and disappointed to see @MeyersLeonard use this ugly, offensive #antisemtic slur.”

Tech companies Astro Gaming, Origin PC and Scuf Gaming, ended their relationships with Leonard, an avid gamer.

By Tuesday night, the Heat offered its own rebuke of him, saying the organization “vehemently condemns the use of any form of hate speech.”

“The words used by Meyers Leonard were wrong and we will not tolerate hateful language from anyone associated with our franchise,” the team said on its official Twitter page. “To hear it from a Miami Heat player is especially disappointing and hurtful to all those who work here, as well as the larger South Florida, Miami Heat and NBA communities.”

Heat owner Mickey Arison and his son, Nick, the organization’s CEO, are Jewish.

Leonard later apologized to them, saying in an Instagram post that he did not know what the word meant.

“I am deeply sorry for using an anti-Semitic slur during a livestream yesterday,” he said. “While I didn’t know what the word meant at the time, my ignorance about its history and how offensive it is to the Jewish community is absolutely not an excuse and I was just wrong. I am now more aware of its meaning and I am committed to properly seeking out people who can help educate me about this type of hate and how we can fight it.”

The NBA is “in the process of gathering more information,” league spokesman Mike Bass said in a statement. “The NBA unequivocally condemns all forms of hate speech.”

The Heat said it will cooperate with the investigation.

Leonard is a center in his ninth NBA season. In January, he sustained a shoulder injury and appeared in only three games for the Heat this year, The Associated Press reported.

Last summer, before the Miami Heat kicked off their season playing against the Denver Nuggets at Walt Disney World in Central Florida, Leonard stood, hand over his heart, while most players and coaches chose to kneel during the U.S. national anthem.

Leonard told The Associated Press at the time that he could not bring himself to kneel because he supported the military. He added that his brother was a U.S. Marine veteran who served two tours in Afghanistan, and said he still supported the Black Lives Matter movement.

“I am a compassionate human being and I truly love all people,” Leonard said. “I will continue to use my platform, my voice and my actions to show how much I care about the African American culture and for everyone. I live my life to serve and impact others in a positive way.”



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Meyers Leonard Will Be Away From Heat ‘Indefinitely’ After Use of Anti-Semitic Slur

Meyers Leonard, a reserve center for the Miami Heat, will be “away from the team indefinitely,” the team said Tuesday night, following his use of an anti-Semitic slur while he was playing a video game on a public livestream.

“The Miami HEAT vehemently condemns the use of any form of hate speech,” the team said in a statement. “The words used by Meyers Leonard were wrong and we will not tolerate hateful language from anyone associated with our franchise. To hear it from a Miami Heat player is especially disappointing and hurtful to all those who work here, as well as the larger South Florida, Miami Heat and N.B.A. communities.”

Leonard, 29, was playing “Call Of Duty: Warzone,” a popular multiplayer video game, on Twitch, a livestreaming platform populated mostly by gamers.

Leonard said the slur, followed by a sexist vulgarity, after calling another player a “coward” because of how they tried to kill his character in the game. The video was recorded Monday but did not receive widespread attention until Tuesday, after the clip of Leonard uttering the slur was posted to social media. By the afternoon, it was the top trending topic on Twitter in the United States.

As the video of Leonard saying the slur was circulating, Leonard was livestreaming a different session of “Call of Duty: Warzone,” an event he promoted Tuesday on his Twitter account, which has more than 177,000 followers. The live chat on that stream began to fill with comments about the slur, and Leonard hastily ended his participation after receiving a phone call.

“My wife needs me. She just called. I’ve got to roll, brother,” Leonard said as he signed off.

The Twitter post advertising his livestream was soon deleted, as were dozens of past videos of him gaming on Twitch. Leonard’s words were soon condemned by the Anti-Defamation League, which wrote in a statement that it was “shocked and disappointed to see @MeyersLeonard use this ugly, offensive #antisemitic slur. We have reached out to the @MiamiHEAT and @NBA about this and urge Mr. Leonard to issue an apology immediately for this egregious and hateful rhetoric.”

Leonard apologized Tuesday night in a statement posted to Instagram, writing that he was “deeply sorry for using an anti-Semitic slur during a livestream yesterday.” He claimed to not know what the word he used meant, but said that his “ignorance about its history and how offensive it is to the Jewish community is absolutely not an excuse and I was just wrong.”

It is not yet known what discipline, if any, Leonard will face from the N.B.A. Mike Bass, an N.B.A. spokesman, said in an afternoon statement: “We just became aware of the video and are in the process of gathering more information. The N.B.A. unequivocally condemns all forms of hate speech.” The Heat said they would cooperate with the N.B.A.’s investigation.

Leonard is a huge fan of video games. In 2019 he invested in FaZe Clan, a popular e-sports team, writing that he was “excited to be a part of the premier organization in the space and continue building my brand in the world of gaming/esports.”

But that brand was unquestionably tarnished on Tuesday. Leonard’s channel was suspended by Twitch — “We do not allow the use of hateful slurs on Twitch,” the company said in a statement — and a number of gaming companies affiliated with Leonard denounced him.

In a statement posted to Twitter, FaZe Clan said that it was “incredibly disappointed to hear Meyers’ stream today” and that “while Meyers is not a member of FaZe, we are cutting ties with him.” A spokeswoman for FaZe Clan did not respond to an email asking what cutting ties with Leonard meant and whether FaZe Clan was returning his investment.

Three gaming companies that sponsored Leonard, and had their logos visible on the stream where he used the slur, cut ties with him.

Origin PC and Scuf Gaming, which are both owned by the computer hardware company Corsair, released identical statements Tuesday that said they “decided to cease our working relationship with Meyers.” Astro Gaming, whose gaming headsets Leonard was giving away as a promotion on his Twitch channel, said it was ending its relationship with him “effective immediately.”

Leonard, a 2012 first-round pick of the Portland Trail Blazers, is in his ninth N.B.A. season but has appeared in only three games this campaign. He is expected to miss the rest of the season after having a shoulder operation last month. Last season, Leonard started 49 games for the Heat, averaging 6.1 points and 5.1 rebounds per game as the team made it to the finals.

He also received attention last summer for being one of the few N.B.A. players who declined to kneel during the playing of the national anthem, in protest of racial injustice, when the league resumed the 2019-20 season at Walt Disney World. Leonard, who is white, said that he supported the Black Lives Matter movement and did not see kneeling as disrespectful, but that he also wanted to honor his brother, who served in the military.

Leonard is being paid around $9.4 million this season. The Heat hold the option of whether to extend his contract for next season.

Online video game streaming — and its rapidly expanding audience — has turned gamers into celebrities, but has also become a site of controversy. The audio and text chat functions in many video games are notorious for frequent utterances of slurs and a culture in which gamers will say anything to get a reaction. In 2017, Felix Kjellberg, a popular video gamer known as PewDiePie who currently has over 109 million subscribers to his YouTube channel, was dropped by many mainstream sponsors, like Disney, after it was reported that he had used anti-Semitic slurs in at least nine videos.

Later that year, after he used a different slur while livestreaming a game, the phrase “heated gaming moment” entered the lexicon as an excuse for using derogatory language while livestreaming video games.

Celebrities, and especially athletes like Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker and San Diego Padres pitcher Blake Snell, have been attracted to livestreaming video games. But some have also gotten into trouble for what they have said. Last spring, Kyle Larson, a popular NASCAR driver, was dismissed from his team and suspended by the organization after using a racial slur during a livestream of a virtual race.

Marc Stein contributed reporting.



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Meyers Leonard: NBA player apologizes for using anti-Semitic slur while livestreaming ‘Call of Duty’

Leonard, a forward for the Miami Heat, was playing “Call of Duty: Warzone” on Monday when he said: “F**king cowards. Don’t f**king snipe at me. You k*** b*tch.”

The video was never posted to Leonard’s verified Twitch channel, but the individual in the video appears to be the same person shown in other videos posted to Leonard’s channel on Monday.

“I am deeply sorry for using an anti-Semitic slur during a livestream yesterday,” Leonard wrote in an Instagram post, adding that he didn’t know what the word meant at the time. “My ignorance about its history and how offensive it is to the Jewish community is absolutely not an excuse and I was just wrong.”

Leonard says he’s “committed to properly seeking out” those who can educate him on “this type of hate and how we can fight it.”

“I acknowledge and own my mistake and there’s no running from something like this that is so hurtful to someone else,” Leonard said.

Leonard did not allude to the sexist part of his remark in the apology.

NBA spokesman Mike Bass told CNN in an email the league “just became aware of the video and are in the process of gathering more information.”

“The NBA unequivocally condemns all forms of hate speech,” Bass’ email said.

The Heat released a statement saying the organization “vehemently condemns the use of any form of hate speech.”

“The words used by Meyers Leonard were wrong and we will not tolerate hateful language from anyone associated with our franchise,” the team’s statement read. “Meyers Leonard will be away from the team indefinitely. The Miami HEAT will cooperate with the NBA while it conducts its investigation.”

CNN Sports has reached out to Leonard’s agent, but has not heard back.

Three of Leonard’s business partners have severed their relationship with him, including Origin PC, SCUF Gaming and ASTRO Gaming. Both Origin and SCUF say Leonard’s comments do not reflect their values or views.

“ASTRO is committed to creating an inclusive gaming environment and one that combats racism and other forms of discrimination, retaliation and harassment. For that reason, we are ending our relationship with Meyers Leonard, effective immediately,” ASTRO Gaming’s statement read.

The Portland Trail Blazers drafted Leonard in the 2012 NBA draft. He played seven seasons with the Trail Blazers and the last two with the Heat.

Leonard has played in three games for the Heat this season. He underwent left shoulder stabilization surgery on February 2 and is expected to miss the rest of the season.



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Giants place franchise tag on Leonard Williams

Williams’ team-leading 11.5 sacks were the most by a Giants’ player since Jason Pierre-Paul’s 14.5 in 2014 and were 7.5 more than any of his teammates, 4.5 more than his previous best total (in 2016) and 11.0 more than he had in 2019. He was third in the NFL with 30 quarterback hits and tied for sixth with 14 tackles for loss. Williams was fifth on the Giants with 57 tackles (29 solo).

In the season’s final five weeks, Williams was twice named the NFC Defensive Player of the Week.

He was first honored following the Giants’ 17-12 defeat of the NFC West champion Seahawks in Seattle on Dec. 6. Williams tied his then career high with 2.5 sacks – all in the second half – for 25.5 yards and was credited with five of the Giants’ 10 pressures of Russell Wilson. In the third quarter, Williams sacked Wilson for a 15-yard loss to help force a Seattle punt. Midway through the fourth quarter, Williams teamed with Jabaal Sheard for a 5-yard sack. And with the Seahawks trying to drive for the go-ahead touchdown, Williams sacked Wilson for a 10-yard loss on third down with 48 seconds remaining, all but ending Seattle’s chances to win the game.

The NFL again cited Williams following the Giants’ season-ending 23-19 victory against Dallas on Jan. 3. In that game, he had a season-high seven tackles (five solo), a career-best 3.0 sacks for 20 yards, five quarterback hits and two critical pressures in the Giants’ 23-19 victory. With 1:53 remaining, the Cowboys had a first-and-goal at the Giants’ 7-yard line when Williams sacked Andy Dalton for a 10-yard loss. Two plays later, on third down from the 17, Williams pressured Dalton into throwing a pass that floated into the end zone, where rookie safety Xavier McKinney made a game-saving interception.

Williams, the sixth overall selection in the 2015 NFL Draft by the Jets, was acquired by the Giants on Oct. 29, 2019 for a third-round selection in the 2020 draft and a fifth rounder this year.

Williams, 6-5 and 302 pounds, has played in 95 career games with 87 starts for the Jets and Giants. His career totals include 323 tackles (164 solo), 29.0 sacks, 131 quarterback hits, 48 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles, one fumble recovery, seven passes defensed and one interception.

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LA Clippers stars Kawhi Leonard, Paul George return vs. Utah Jazz

LOS ANGELES — The LA Clippers will have their superstar duo available when they face the league-leading Utah Jazz on Friday night, with both Kawhi Leonard and Paul George set to return from injuries.

Both are back in the starting lineup after George missed the previous seven games with a swollen right toe and Leonard sat out the previous three with a lower left leg contusion.

“They’ve been good and the body has been reacting good to the workouts they have been doing,” coach Tyronn Lue said. “Tonight’s the night.”

The Clippers’ starting lineup is whole again with Nic Batum also returning after missing the previous two games with a concussion. Reserve shooting guard Luke Kennard also is available to play after missing the last game with a sore knee.

George remained out until the pain and swelling subsided in his toe.

“I just know [George] has no pain and the swelling has gone down,” Lue said. “He has done some full-court basketball stuff the last few days and he has been feeling good. No pain, no issues… both [pain and swelling] have gone away.”

Utah blew out the short-handed Clippers on Wednesday and enters Friday’s game having won 20 of its past 21.

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Paul George ‘super relieved’ he and Kawhi Leonard healthy after COVID-19 protocol

Paul George said he was “super relieved” that he and Kawhi Leonard are healthy after having to enter the NBA’s health and safety protocols.

George and Leonard were cleared from protocol and returned to help the visiting LA Clippers cruise past the Orlando Magic 116-90 on Friday.

“We were playing so well, it was unfortunate that we had to take a hiatus, but safety’s first,” George said. “We acknowledge that first and foremost.”

Because of contact tracing, George and Leonard were in protocol for only four days. They entered quarantine on Monday as the team departed Los Angeles for Atlanta to start a six-game road swing. The two stars missed two games before rejoining the team in Orlando, Florida.

“It was a bummer because we were on a good roll, and me and PG go out,” Leonard said, referring to the Clippers being on a seven-game winning streak when he and George entered protocol. “That’s my mindset around it. Just want to play basketball and wanting to keep building on our chemistry and get better, but understand what the protocols are, and it was a chance for guys to step up and play a bigger role.”

With their two best players back, the Clippers won their second straight game after losing in Atlanta on Tuesday. George scored 26 points in 28 minutes and became the first player in franchise history with at least 26 points, 9 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 steals in under 30 minutes played.

Leonard scored 24 points in 29 minutes and said he spent the time away from the team maintaining his conditioning at home and staying in touch with coaches to go over the game plans even for the games he missed.

“Still trying to follow game plans with the Hawks and the last game, Miami,” Leonard said of what he did during quarantine. “Just talking to the coaches, trying to see just what our coverages are, just keeping my mind in the game.”

Coach Ty Lue said he had both players on a minutes restriction to be cautious with his stars coming out of quarantine. But George and Leonard both showed how fresh their legs were early, each throwing down a big dunk in the first half against Orlando.

“I think on a night when guys were a little tired, just having their presence was big for us,” Lue said. “It was huge. Just making plays for everybody else, making the game easy. When teams double-team Kawhi or PG on the post-ups or pick-and-roll, it just makes it easier because our guys are getting open shots, so we need those guys tonight.”

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