Clippers Questioning Building Around Kawhi Leonard After this Huge Investigation has Blown Up Everywhere in 2025
It was supposed to be a coronation. When Kawhi Leonard, fresh off a heroic, franchise-altering championship run with the Toronto Raptors, chose to come home to Los Angeles in 2019, it felt like the dawn of a new dynasty. The Clippers, long the city’s “other” team, had finally landed their king. They paid a king’s ransom, too, trading away a promising young star in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and a treasure chest of draft picks to acquire Paul George at Leonard’s behest. The message was clear: this was their time. The future was now.
But the future, as it often does, had other plans. The kingdom never materialized. The crown jewel, Kawhi Leonard, spent more time in street clothes than in uniform, his tenure defined not by banners but by bewildering injuries and a growing sense of frustration that has now reached a boiling point. The dream has curdled into a slow-motion nightmare, and the Clippers are finally waking up.
The whispers have turned into roars. According to a scathing report from ESPN’s Baxter Holmes, the Clippers organization has had enough. The era of building around the enigmatic superstar is over. “They’re done building around [Kawhi],” a former staffer bluntly told Holmes. “They know that and he knows that.”
It’s a stunning, yet somehow inevitable, admission. The grand experiment has failed. The team is now entangled in a web of controversy, including an NBA investigation into a “no-show” endorsement deal that reeks of salary cap circumvention. The foundation of the franchise, once thought to be solid rock, now feels like quicksand.
A Reign Defined by Absence
How did it all go so wrong? You can’t tell the story of Kawhi Leonard and his time with the Clippers without talking about the games he didn’t play. The man who once seemed indestructible has become frustratingly fragile. Out of a possible 472 regular-season games since his arrival, Leonard has missed a staggering 206. His body has betrayed him, and by extension, it has betrayed the team that mortgaged its future for him.
He missed the entire 2021-2022 season. He was absent for most of the 2023 playoffs and virtually all of the 2024 postseason. The team’s most crucial moments have been played without its most crucial player. It’s a bitter pill to swallow for a franchise and a fanbase that has been starved for success. The constant ambiguity surrounding his health, the misleading updates, and the sudden shutdowns have eroded trust and bred a deep-seated fatigue within the organization.
The frustration peaked during his contract extension talks. Kawhi Leonard was eligible for a four-year, $220 million max deal, but the Clippers held firm. They were tired of the uncertainty. The leverage had shifted. They prioritized future cap flexibility over recommitting to a star they could no longer depend on. The message was sent, loud and clear.
The Ghost of What Could Have Been
The sting of this failed era is made even more painful by the success of the player they gave away. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the centerpiece of the trade to acquire Paul George, has blossomed into an MVP-caliber force for the Oklahoma City Thunder, leading them to an NBA championship. Every one of SGA’s triumphs is a dagger in the heart of the Clippers, a painful reminder of the path not taken. They traded a future king for a phantom one.

Now, with Kawhi Leonard and his contract set to expire after the 2026-27 season, the Clippers are looking to turn the page. They are quietly maneuvering to create cap space, with rumored eyes on superstars like Giannis Antetokounmpo and Nikola Jokic. They are desperate to wash away the bitter taste of the last five years and start anew.
For now, they are stuck. They will ride out the next two seasons, playing out the string on a partnership that has long since soured. Kawhi Leonard will remain a Clipper, a ghost of the savior he was meant to be, haunting a team that once bet everything on him. The dynasty that never was is coming to its unceremonious end, not with a bang, but with the quiet, weary sigh of regret. The king is dead. The kingdom is in ruins.
