Lamar Odom grabs the last spot over a few other players who didn’t spend a long time with the team. Odom played four seasons for the Clippers, proving to be one of the game’s more versatile young forwards at the time. His seven triple-doubles are tied for the most in franchise history.
As a mid-second round pick, Terance Mann gets on here as someone who started 168 games with the Clippers. He averaged double figures in scoring in 2021-22 and shot 49.8% from the field (37.1% on threes) while with LA. Mann had 15 outings of at least 20 points with the team.
Ken Norman’s first six seasons in the NBA were with the Clippers. The 6-foot-8 forward averaged at least 15 poults in four of them while also shooting over 50% from the field each time. On March 25, 1989, Norman recorded a triple-double of 20 points, 14 rebounds, and 12 assists.
An All-Star in 2008-09, Chris Kaman spent eight seasons with the Clippers. The 7-foot center averaged a double-double in 2007-08 as well as a career-best 2.8 blocks. He is fourth in team history with 707 rejections and eighth with 4,109 rebounds.
A 6-foot-10 forward, Danny Manning became an All-Star in the 1992-93 and 1993-94 seasons. He averaged 19.1 points with the Clippers on solid efficiency (51.8% field goal shooting). He’s seventh in franchise history with 7,120 points.
In 1996-97 and 1997-98, Loy Vaught averaged a double-double in points and rebounds. He is top-10 in franchise history in points (6,614 – ninth) and rebounds (4,471 – fourth). From 1994-95 until 1996-97, Vaught posted averages of 16.2 points (on 51.3% shooting), 9.9 rebounds, and 1.1 steals.
A success story as a second round pick, DeAndre Jordan was named to the All-NBA first team in 2015-16 (also made two third teams). In his 10 seasons with the Clippers, he led the league in rebounding twice and field goal percentage five times. Jordan is the all-time franchise leader in games played (750), rebounds (7,988), and blocks (1,277).
The 2010-11 Rookie of the Year, Blake Griffin helped bring excitement back to a Clippers franchise. The high-flyer averaged 20+ points and 10+ rebounds in his first two seasons while earning four All-NBA nods with LA. The Clippers advanced to the second round three times with Griffin, an infrequent occurrence prior to his arrival.
Look at the franchise’s all-time scoring list, and Randy Smith’s name is atop it with 12,735 points. Pretty good for a player not even selected top-100 in his draft. He also had a then-record 902 consecutive games played (mostly done with Buffalo/San Diego) and was named an All-Star twice.
While Bob McAdoo spent just four-plus years with Buffalo, they were dominant ones. He won the franchise’s only MVP in 1974-75, and was runner-up in the two seasons sandwiched around it. The 1972-73 Rookie of the Year won three straight scoring titles from 1973-74 until 1975-76.
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