INGLEWOOD, Calif. — The Battle of Los Angeles always carries extra meaning, but Thursday night at Intuit Dome came wrapped in history and emotion.
On the 20-year anniversary of the late, great Kobe Bryant dropping 81 points, the Clippers held on to defeat the Lakers, 112–104, in a game that felt steady, shaky, and then sealed by a familiar star doing what he does best.
Kawhi Leonard didn’t score 81 — no one was asking him to — but he answered plenty of questions.
After missing the last three games with a bruised left knee, Leonard returned to the lineup and finished with 24 points, delivering calm, control, and late-game execution when the Clippers needed it most. The noise around his absence faded quickly as the night wore on.
The Clippers appeared to have this one wrapped up early. They dominated the second half and stretched their lead to 26 points, overwhelming the Lakers with physicality, rebounding, and pace. For a stretch, it looked like the rivalry wouldn’t get its usual drama.
Then Luka Dončić happened.
Dončić single-handedly breathed life into the Lakers, attacking relentlessly despite a frustrating night with the officials. Calls never seemed to come, but the production did. He finished with 32 points, 11 rebounds, and eight assists, willing the Lakers back into the game and turning a blowout into a tense finish.
LeBron James, still defying logic at 41 years old, added 23 points, five rebounds, and six assists in 36 minutes, steady as ever while pushing the Lakers’ comeback.
With 42.5 seconds remaining and the Clippers clinging to a 107–102 lead, Leonard delivered the defining play of the night. He drove hard into the paint, drew the defense, and calmly kicked the ball to the corner. John Collins caught it, rose up, and buried a contested three right in front of James. The crowd erupted as the lead ballooned to 110–102 — the final blow in a rivalry game that suddenly went silent on the Lakers’ side.
Since the Lakers last saw the Clippers during Christmas week, this team has flipped a switch. The win marked the Clippers’ 14th victory in their last 17 games, a stretch that has quietly reshaped their season.
“The feeling has always been there,” James Harden said of the run. “We can continue to grow as a team.”
Harden’s night was anything but smooth. He finished with 18 points on 6-of-21 shooting, adding seven rebounds and 10 assists, but also committing seven turnovers as the Lakers’ defense made life difficult. At times, it nearly cost the Clippers, but the team survived the bumps.
Ivica Zubac was a pillar all night long, posting 18 points and 19 rebounds in one of his most efficient performances of the season. Dončić was the only other player to reach double digits on the glass with 11. The Clippers dominated the boards, outrebounding the Lakers 49–34 and grabbing 13 offensive rebounds.
Zubac also etched his name deeper into franchise history. With his 4,711th rebound as a Clipper, he passed Elton Brand for sole possession of second place on the team’s all-time rebounding list — a significant milestone for a player who has quietly become foundational to this franchise.
To their credit, the Lakers never folded. After falling behind by 26, they battled with defensive energy, finishing with eight blocks and 14 steals, numbers that kept the Clippers uncomfortable late.
The Clippers’ bench, however, proved to be the difference. They poured in 35 points, led by Jordan Miller’s 14 points while going 7-of-8 from the free-throw line. Brook Lopez added 10 points, and Kobe Sanders chipped in 11, giving the Clippers timely scoring when the starters needed help.
The win moves the Clippers to 20–24 on the season and 12–9 at home. They’ll look to keep the momentum rolling Sunday night when they host the Brooklyn Nets at Intuit Dome.
On a night meant to remember Kobe, the Clippers honored the moment the only way a rival can — by surviving the battle and walking away with the win.