Kobe Sanders found out just minutes before tip-off that he would be starting against Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors.

With James Harden ruled out at the last minute due to shoulder stiffness, not only did Ty Lue decide to put Sanders on the court for the opening tip — the rookie was facing the daunting task of defending the best shooter in NBA history.

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Sanders responded with the best performance of his young career: 20 points, seven rebounds in 36 minutes in the Clippers’ 103-102 victory.

A Rookie Moment the Clippers Don’t Usually Allow

The Clippers have long been defined by their experience. Under Lue, rotations are based on veterans, reliability, and playoff-proven habits. Young players usually wait seated on the benches during games while they develop in the G-League and in training.

In the Los Angeles franchise, rookies rarely play consistently. They rarely close out games. And they almost never find themselves starting against elite opponents without a long track record.

Team / Group

Avg. Rookie Minutes Per Game

Comment

NBA Average (1st-year rookies)

~14.5–16 MPG

Across the league, teams regularly gave first-year rookies consistent rotation minutes, especially those with defined roles or lottery-level expectations. Source: 2024-25 NBA Rookies – Season Stats.

LA Clippers (rookies + 2nd-year players)

~5–8 MPG

The Clippers’ combined usage of rookies and sophomores was significantly lower than the league average, reinforcing the franchise’s tendency to rely on veterans over young players. Source: Clippers player game logs.

Sanders’ emergence breaks directly with that history. This shift occurred not because the Clippers changed their philosophy overnight, but rather because circumstance —and Sanders’ recent performances — left them with few other options.

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An Opportunity Created By Injury

Sanders’ opportunity to gain weight in the team’s rotation began after Bradley Beal‘s season-ending injury. Derrick Jones Jr.‘s injury created another opportunity the Clippers hadn’t anticipated. Harden’s last-minute withdrawal in anticipation of the Warriors game expanded it.

With these absences, even Ty Lue acknowledged that Sanders’ role was going to be extremely crucial.

Suddenly, there were minutes available on a short roster for a rookie who has been proving all season that he is a high-level player and deserves a bigger role. Sanders wasn’t just filling space and padding minutes that needed to be distributed; he was taking on responsibility. He defended multiple positions, handled the ball under pressure, and stayed on the court in clutch moments.

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More Minutes, Better Sanders

The numbers reinforce what the visual evidence suggests. In four starts this season, Sanders has averaged 13.5 points in more than 30 minutes per game, shooting effectively both from the field and from beyond the arc.

Off the bench, his role has been smaller and more limited, but he still gets the job done. As a starter, his confidence and impact have grown with the workload.

For a rookie on a team with many veterans, that trend is important. It suggests that Sanders is not overwhelmed by responsibility, but rather thrives on it.

Breakout Game — From Unknown to Reliable

Against Golden State, Sanders looked comfortable from the first possession. He attacked the closeouts, scored shots, and held his own on defense.

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At the post-game press conference, Ty Lue praised his game. “Yeah, I mean, I didn’t imagine that,” Lue said regarding whether he’d think a rookie would come through for the Clippers this season. “I knew he was a good player. But just his poise, his ability to understand what we are doing defensively and offensively, and just get more and more confident.”

Lue went on to praise how far Sanders has come, even from the start of the season, where he was seeing action in the middle of November consistently. Additionally, even though the team finished with 20 turnovers, he praised Sanders for stepping up as a ball-handler along with Kris Dunn.

Why It Matters for the Clippers

This season was never supposed to be about development. The Clippers began the year focused on winning the long-awaited ring. Surviving injuries, maximizing the contributions of their veterans, and staying competitive. However, circumstances in Inglewood have pushed so that rookies can have more influence in the rotation. 

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With limited draft capital and an aging core, moments like this carry weight. Sanders isn’t saving the season. He’s not rewriting the rotation overnight. What he is doing, quietly, is changing the calculus.

For a franchise built on experience, Kobe Sanders is proving that trusting a rookie doesn’t have to mean sacrificing stability. Sometimes, it simply means recognizing what already works. And once that door is opened, it’s hard to close it again. The Clippers didn’t plan to trust a rookie. Kobe Sanders made it unavoidable.

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