According to Jake Fischer of The Stein Line, the LA Clippers have interest in Brandon Ingram as part of a trade package for Kawhi Leonard, and that possibility makes more sense than it might look at first.
On paper, the idea is a little surprising. Ingram is on a lucrative deal, he is not viewed as a legitimate playoff performer, and he just turned 29. But the appeal for the Clippers is that he gives them something rare: a chance to stay competitive while still keeping a youth movement alive.
That is the real contrast with RJ Barrett. Barrett does not offer that same balance, and bringing him in would likely push the Clippers back a few seasons as they try to rebuild their way back into contention. For a franchise that has been competitive in the Western Conference for over a decade, that kind of reset is not an easy sell.
Ingram, by comparison, gives LA a cleaner path. Along with draft capital and a young player or two such as Gradey Dick or Collin Murray-Boyles, he would be a solid return for Leonard from the Toronto Raptors.
The case for Ingram starts with his production. He is coming off the second All-Star season of his career after averaging 21.5 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 3.7 assists while shooting 47.7% from the field and 38.2% from three across 77 games.
That kind of season gives the Clippers something they have needed more of over the years: a dependable sample of availability paired with efficient scoring at multiple levels.
It also helps that Ingram would fit well in LA under Tyronn Lue alongside Darius Garland. Offensively, the two would make a strong pairing, with each covering ground the other can use. As long as Ingram and Garland are in LA, scoring and playmaking would not be hard to find.
And if the Clippers go that route, they could keep building around younger pieces like Keaton Wagler, Baba Miller, Kobe Sanders, and Yanic Konan Niederhauser while still trying to win.
The simple truth is that no other realistic Raptors option gives them that same combination. That is why Ingram stands out as such a strong fit for the Clippers, and why he looks like one of the most natural choices for the post-Leonard era.
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For now, the larger issue is not just whether Leonard stays put, but how the sides bridge the gap in extension talks that are still moving along without much visible momentum. That leaves the Clippers in a familiar holding pattern, balancing urgency with caution while the rest of the league keeps checking in, and while the front office tries to protect its leverage without closing the door on a future that still hinges on Leonards next contract. [Read more 🡒]
