
When the NBA announced its All-Star reserves, the conversation immediately turned to who didn't make it. Los Angeles Clippers star Kawhi Leonard's name came up more than most.
Leonard getting left off caught attention for a few reasons. He's having a career year in scoring and from the free-throw line. The game is at the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles. His team's building is hosting the event, and he won't be playing in it.
This would've been Leonard's seventh All-Star nod. Instead, he'll be watching from home.
ESPN's Brian Windhorst shared his insider information on "NBA Today" on Monday and connected the snub to something that's been floating around the league for months, the Aspiration scandal.
"The reaction in the league has been kind of universal between the executives that I've talked to, which is, Kawhi Leonard doesn't make the team. So, okay, that happens, players get snubbed. Kawhi's numbers are phenomenal; the game is obviously at Intuit Dome. And the wonder is, did he not make this team because the coaches didn't vote for him because of the accusations of the improper contract?" Windhorst said.
Through 35 games, Leonard is averaging 27.6 points, along with 6.2 rebounds and 3.6 assists per game. Moreover, he is converting 49.5 percent of his shots overall, knocking down 39.1 percent from three and hitting a career-high 92.1 percent of his free throws this year.
Brian Windhorst: People around the NBA believe coaches may have snubbed Kawhi Leonard from the West All-Star team because of the Aspiration scandal pic.twitter.com/nK6WETcfW9
— Awful Announcing (@awfulannouncing) February 2, 2026
The NBA hasn't put out any findings from its investigation into possible improper benefits involving Leonard and the Clippers. But there's a growing sense around the league that Leonard may have already taken a hit because of it.
The issue first came up last year when Leonard got tied to alleged benefits from Aspiration, a climate-focused company that later filed for bankruptcy. Aspiration sponsored the Clippers and has financial backing from owners Steve Ballmer and Dennis Wong.
Greetings.
— Pablo Torre (@PabloTorre) September 13, 2025
In response to Aspiration co-founder Andrei Cherny — who now claims that Kawhi Leonard’s secret, $28M endorsement deal was not a “no-show job” — @pablofindsout has just obtained the following statement.
It is signed by Aspiration’s ex-CFO; ex-COO and CLO; and ex-CTO. pic.twitter.com/bwqKu5fEY5
Multiple reporters have since added details, saying Leonard made similar requests during his 2019 free agency.
The endorsement deal was reportedly worth up to $50 million. If that checks out, it would be one of the biggest salary-cap violations in league history.
Leonard and the Clippers have both said it's not true. The league started looking into it, but there's been no decision yet.
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