The Clippers got a much-needed win in Dallas last week — a double-overtime survival act powered by a historic James Harden performance — but it didn’t change the truth. Now at 4-10, Los Angeles looks nothing like the contender they were projected to be.
This team isn’t just underperforming. They’re collapsing in slow motion, and every new issue is making the previous one worse.
What are the problems that are defining this disastrous start?
The Signing That Was Never Really a Solution
The Clippers believed Bradley Beal could be their third scorer — a reliable shot-creator next to Harden and Kawhi. Instead, they got a player whose best years are behind him.
The name still sells jerseys and hype, but the game no longer matches. And now, things are worse. Beal is out for the season with a fractured hip. His stint with the Clippers lasted six games.
This isn’t “addition by subtraction,” as some may have suggested. The Clippers need a self-creator on the wing — something Cam Christie (too young) and Bogdan Bogdanovic (too inconsistent) can’t reliably give them. This injury all but guarantees L.A. will need to chase a scoring guard at the deadline, even if it costs them a pick or a key role player.
Bradley Beal’s stats so far this season:
7.4 points
1.4 assists
44.4 TS%
The continuous fall-off in Beal’s production since originally signing a $251 million contract in 2022 is bordering on historic. pic.twitter.com/bm5AXKFwns
— Evan Sidery (@esidery) November 7, 2025
The Offseason “Steal” That Backfired Instantly
Brook Lopez fooled everyone in the preseason, looking sharp and efficient. The regular season has revealed the truth. So far, he is averaging 6.6 points and 2.2 rebounds per game. That’s not a backup center. That’s a liability.
Lopez hasn’t been a presence inside, hasn’t rebounded, and hasn’t stretched the floor consistently — the exact opposite of what he was signed to do.
Because of this, Ty Lue has had to abandon the long-anticipated Zubac–Lopez frontcourt. Lopez simply isn’t playable next to Zubac, and at times, not playable at all. It’s one of the most damaging moves of the Clippers’ offseason.
Slow, Tired, and Error-Prone
Everyone knew the Clippers were old. But no one thought it would look this bad. L.A. struggles to run, defend, maintain pace and stay locked in for 48 minutes. And the worst part?
For a team with as much NBA experience as them, they’re turning the ball over at the 11th-worst rate in the league.
Ivica Zubac mentioned issues with communication and transparency — a rare public admission that something deeper isn’t working.
Ivica Zubac gave a long and honest answer last night about the Clippers having problems beyond Kawhi Leonard’s absence — including not knowing the plays at times.
“These games that we’re losing, they were all winnable. We could’ve won all of those. We just keep doing the same… pic.twitter.com/ox2JDSjyPS
— Joey Linn (@joeylinn_) November 11, 2025
Part of the problem is Lue experimenting with endless lineups. When nothing works, chemistry never forms. When chemistry never forms, the mistakes multiply. Right now, the Clippers often look as lost as the Wizards or Hornets — not exactly the company a veteran contender wants to keep.
The Defensive Nightmare No One Can Fix
In theory, John Collins was a perfect offseason addition. In practice, his presence has created an unavoidable dilemma. With Beal out and Kawhi injured, Collins has become essential for offensive creation. But pairing him with Harden has been a defensive disaster. Together, they post a 115.5 defensive rating, one of the worst on the team in high-minute duos.
The Clippers must play them for offense. But doing so torpedoes their defense. And alternatives like Batum or Bogdanovic slow the game to a crawl without solving anything. This defense won’t improve — not until after the trade deadline, and only if L.A. actually moves pieces.
What Comes Next
The Clippers believed the additions of Beal and Lopez would elevate their depth and stabilize their rotation. Instead, their roles pushed Derrick Jones Jr., Kris Dunn, and Bogdan Bogdanovic into uncertainty — and the team is significantly worse because of it.
On top of it all, Jones Jr. is hurt for an extended period of time, just when he had molded into a truly reliable piece for the team.
Now, L.A. must: survive without Beal and Jones Jr., hide Lopez, rely on Harden nightly, hope for Kawhi’s quick return, and prepare to buy at the deadline.
Because the contender window didn’t just shrink — it may have officially closed. The problems are real. The flaws are structural. And unless something changes fast, the Clippers’ season will be defined not by expectations but by regret.