Clippers Blew Best Chance at Championship in 2020 NBA Bubble, Says Lou Williams

The Los Angeles Clippers, title favorites at the start of the 2020 season, were eliminated by the Denver Nuggets in the Western Conference Semifinals in seven games.
Clippers Blew Best Chance at Championship in 2020 NBA Bubble, Says Lou Williams
Clippers Blew Best Chance at Championship in 2020 NBA Bubble, Says Lou Williams /
In this story:

Former Clippers guard Lou Williams shared a wild reason why Los Angeles didn’t win the 2020 NBA Championship while appearing on a recent episode of Trae Young’s From The Point podcast.

The Clippers, title favorites at the start of the 2020 season, were eliminated by the  Nuggets after blowing a 3–1 series lead in the Western Conference Semifinals.

The three-time NBA Sixth Man of the Year stated that the COVID-19 pandemic that season, which led to the NBA playing games in isolation at Walt Disney World, impacted the mindset and drive of his former club.

“We didn’t even want to go,” said Williams. “Mentally, we came into it without the right mindset to finish the job. We didn’t even want to be there and I think once we got there, we were in it.”

“I think I was in the ‘bubble’ for 97 days and on day 67, I was like let’s get out of here,” Williams continued. “Mentally, we were not in it for the long game. We didn’t really see the pot of gold at the end of it. We started to hear the rumblings that nobody is going to respect this ‘chip so we kind of just took our foot off the gas.”

The NBA setup based in Bay Lake, Fla., which became known as “the bubble,” was played without fans, and several players opted out due to health concerns.

Playing under those conditions, many fans and media alike believed that the team that won it all that season shouldn’t be labeled an NBA champion.

Williams making this admission is disappointing for Clippers fans who have never witnessed their team win an NBA title.


Published
Frankie Taddeo
FRANKIE TADDEO

Frankie Taddeo is a successful high-stakes fantasy football player who created the first-ever DFS program offered in a Las Vegas sportsbook. Besides contributing NFL fantasy analysis with a Vegas slant, Frankie primarily performs as Sports Illustrated's Senior Betting Analyst providing his significant experience and resources in the sports betting scene.