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The Oklahoma City Thunder could get a major break if the Los Angeles Clippers fail to survive the play-in tournament.
That is the scenario Daily Thunder reporter Brandon Rahbar highlighted in a pair of posts, noting that the Clippers entered the play-in in the No. 9 spot and would need to win twice just to reach the postseason. If Los Angeles loses before claiming a playoff berth, Rahbar pointed out that Oklahoma City would wind up with a lottery pick. And if the Clippers do make it through, the twist is that they would apparently do so as the Thunder’s first-round opponent.
For Thunder fans, that makes the Clippers’ play-in path worth watching almost as closely as Oklahoma City’s own postseason setup.
Clippers have the #9 spot going into the play-in.
LAC has to beat the Warriors in LA AND either the Suns or Blazers on the road to make the playoffs.
If the Clippers do not win both play-in games, OKC will get a lottery pick.
Brandon Rahbar Points to a High-Stakes Clippers Outcome for Thunder
Rahbar laid out the stakes clearly: the Clippers would need to beat the Warriors in Los Angeles and then win another road play-in game against either the Suns or Trail Blazers to qualify for the playoffs. If they fail to win both, Oklahoma City would benefit with a lottery selection tied to Los Angeles’ outcome.
That is the kind of late-season wrinkle Thunder fans know well by now. Oklahoma City has spent years stockpiling draft capital, and any result that improves the value of an incoming pick matters. A pick merely landing in the lottery is one thing. A pick attached to a team that falls short after entering the play-in with pressure already rising is another.
It is not just abstract future value, either. Lottery positioning can shape how much flexibility the Thunder have moving forward, whether that means making a selection, packaging assets in a trade, or simply adding another premium piece to an already loaded young core.
Ironically if the Clippers do make the playoffs, the only way is as OKC’s 1st round opponent.
Why a Clippers Loss Would Matter Beyond the Obvious
The easy takeaway is that a Clippers loss would help Oklahoma City’s draft outlook. The bigger point is what that says about where the two teams stand.
The Thunder have moved into the kind of position where they can chase playoff success while still keeping one eye on asset value around the league. That is a luxury most contenders do not have. Oklahoma City is not sitting around hoping ping-pong balls save its future. The franchise already has a foundation. A favorable Clippers outcome would simply add one more advantage to a team that has built itself to win now and later.
That is why this scenario stands out. It is not just that the Thunder might get a better draft outcome. It is that another Western Conference team’s stumble could strengthen Oklahoma City without the Thunder needing to do anything at all.
For a front office that has carefully protected flexibility, these are exactly the kinds of outcomes that can quietly matter in a big way once the offseason begins.
Why Thunder Fans Should Watch the Play-In Closely
For Oklahoma City, this is what makes the Western Conference race so compelling. The Thunder are not only tracking seeding and matchups. They also have real investment in outcomes beyond their own games.
That makes the Clippers one of the most interesting teams on the board.
A loss would boost the Thunder’s asset picture. A pair of wins would set up a playoff series with obvious intrigue, especially given the history between the franchises and the long shadow still cast by the blockbuster deal that helped Oklahoma City assemble so much of its draft stockpile in the first place.
Either way, the Clippers’ play-in run is not just Clippers news. It is Thunder news, too.
And if Los Angeles does the one thing Oklahoma City is hoping for most — lose before punching its playoff ticket — the Thunder could walk away with the kind of unexpected bonus that contenders almost never get this late in the season.
Erik Anderson is an award-winning sports journalist covering the NBA, MLB and NFL for Heavy.com. He also focuses on the trading card market. His work has appeared in nationally-recognized outlets including The New York Times, Associated Press , USA Today, and ESPN. More about Erik Anderson
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