Clippers' Patrick Beverley mentors Ivica Zubac, even when he's playing well - Los Angeles Times
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Clippers’ Patrick Beverley mentors Ivica Zubac, even when he’s playing well

Clippers center Ivica Zubac battles Lakers forward Kyle Kuzma for the ball under the basket during the first half of a game Dec. 25, 2019.
Clippers center Ivica Zubac battles Lakers forward Kyle Kuzma for the ball under the basket during their game Wednesday.
(Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Getty Images)
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A unique relationship has developed between the Clippers’ super-passionate veteran Patrick Beverley and young center Ivica Zubac.

Their lockers at Staples Center are next to each other, allowing Beverley to become a mentor. The 6-foot-1 guard from Chicago is always demanding that Zubac be well prepared for that night’s opponent, pushing the 7-foot center from Croatia to maximize his potential.

“He’s been phenomenal all year,” Beverley said of Zubac after the Clippers practiced Friday. “I kind of made an emphasis to kind of stay on him even when he’s playing well. But he’s been protecting the rim. The minutes that he’s been playing, he’s been making the most out of it. He’s here working on his game. He’s always in the weight room.

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“Zu’s been …. hooping this year for sure.”

The 22-year-old Zubac, who is averaging 8.3 points and 6.4 rebounds in 17 minutes per game, has been a willing listener.

He’s making a career-best 59.1% of his shots from the field and 72.6% of his free throws.

“It’s great. He keeps me focused all the time,” the former Laker said about Beverley. “Every time I try in the locker room, when I say something outside of basketball, he will be like, ‘C’mon Zu, we got to focus. We got a game.’ He’s always on me and I love it. A guy that is always locked in. He don’t care about anything else in the pregame and that stuff. When you got a guy like that, you got to return the energy, can’t be messing around and doing other stuff. You got to be locked in.”

Zubac’s size and ability to get to the basket on pick-and-roll plays has been beneficial to what the Clippers seek to do on offense.

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He has good hands and has been adept at finishing around the basket.

So when the Clippers face a team like the Utah Jazz on Saturday at Staples Center, Zubac’s height and offensive skills might be able to keep 7-1 center Rudy Gobert, a two-time defensive player of the year, occupied.

The billion-dollar arena complex the Clippers want to build in Inglewood might create a “large number of significant and unavoidable transportation impacts.”

Dec. 27, 2019

“First of all, shooting is beneficial against the length. That’s really important,” coach Doc Rivers said. “Because the more you can get, the more you can have. But Zu’s been phenomenal against it. He’s handled all the size they’ve put against him. He’s still rolling, he’s still scoring and that’s still beneficial to us.”

In a 111-106 victory over the Lakers on Christmas Day, Zubac’s 11 points and eight rebounds were helpful in keeping rival centers JaVale McGee and Dwight Howard from protecting the key.

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“They’re caught, you know? You’ve got Kawhi [Leonard] coming off the pick,” Rivers said. “That’s what happened the other night. They obviously told Dwight and those guys to get up, but then you got Zu rolling and there’s nobody back there to stop Zu. So the fact that he does it every time is good for us.”

Etc.

Leonard has been selected Associated Press’ male athlete of 2019 after he helped lead the Toronto Raptors to their first NBA title and won his second NBA Finals MVP award. He becomes the fifth NBA player to earn the honor in voting from AP sports editors and beat writers, joining Larry Bird (1986), three-time recipient Michael Jordan (1991-93), three-time recipient LeBron James (2013, 2016, 2018) and Stephen Curry (2015).

UP NEXT

VS. UTAH

When: 7:30, p.m., Saturday

On the air: TV: Prime Ticket; Radio: 570

Update: Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell is ranked 12th in the NBA in scoring at 25.1 points per game. Gobert is third in the league in rebounding (14.3) and 10th in blocked shots (1.9). The Jazz allow 106.6 points per game, seventh-best in the league.

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