Paul George efficiently potent as Clippers storm past Hawks

AP photo by Kelvin Kuo / Los Angeles Clippers forward Paul George, center, drives to the basket between Atlanta Hawks forward De'Andre Hunter, right, and forward Cam Reddish during the first half of Saturday night's game in Los Angeles.
AP photo by Kelvin Kuo / Los Angeles Clippers forward Paul George, center, drives to the basket between Atlanta Hawks forward De'Andre Hunter, right, and forward Cam Reddish during the first half of Saturday night's game in Los Angeles.

LOS ANGELES - Paul George made history in his home debut for the Los Angeles Clippers, even though he considered it mere practice after missing the first 11 games of the season.

George scored 37 points in 20 minutes, becoming the first NBA player to score that many in fewer than 21 minutes, and Los Angeles led all the way in routing the Atlanta Hawks 150-101 Saturday night.

"He knows I had him on a time limit, so he's trying to get it all in," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said.

It was the team's largest margin of victory ever and its total points scored rank second in franchise history.

"We had another 30, 40 points that didn't play tonight," George said, referring to Kawhi Leonard.

The anticipated first game with George and Leonard in the lineup together didn't happen when Leonard sat out with a left knee contusion, but the Clippers didn't need both of their new superstars on a night when George tied his career high with six 3-pointers and made all 11 of his free throws.

"It's a dream come true to be able to do this at home in front of family and friends," said George, who is from Palmdale, north of Los Angeles. "I'm just happy to be playing basketball again."

George was clearly having fun in the fourth quarter when he stole the ball, dribbled down and tossed it off the glass, setting up Montrezl Harrell for a two-handed dunk that ignited the crowd and pushed the Clippers' lead to 36 points.

"This is practice for me to get in time with my guys and a catch a rhythm out there," said George, who spent the first couple weeks of the season rehabbing from offseason shoulder surgeries. "I've got new shoulders. They haven't felt this healthy in a long time."

George started the fourth quarter and hit a 3-pointer, having asked to accumulate more minutes because the team has had little practice time lately.

When George tripped, though, Rivers had seen enough and removed him.

It wasn't soon enough for the Hawks.

"You saw a guy step out on the court that had no rust," Atlanta coach Lloyd Pierce said.

Two nights after scoring 33 in his Clippers debut against the New Orleans Pelicans, George scored 15 of his team's first 22 points in a six-minute span. Los Angeles led by 17 and shot 59% in the opening quarter.

George is the first player in franchise history to score 30-plus points in his first two games with the team.

The Hawks scored 11 straight to close within four early in the second quarter, the closest they would come the rest of the game. The Clippers answered with an 18-6 run, fueled by George's nine points, to go back up by 17 again.

George had 25 points at halftime when the Clippers led 74-62, having shot 52% and made all 16 of their free throws.

Trae Young had 20 points for the Hawks, who dropped their second in a row. They trailed by 52 points in the fourth.

"It was just bad effort," Young said, "and you can't do it in this league or you'll get killed every night."

The Clippers dominated in nearly every category, with their bench outscoring the Hawks' reserves 81-35. Los Angeles made 17 3-pointers and hit 33 of 35 free throws.

Young's run of consecutive games with double-doubles ended after four.

Rivers, the Hawks' career assists leader, joked about the talented young star in his second NBA season: "He's clearly the second-best point guard to ever play for the Hawks."

Atlanta's Vince Carter missed his fourth game in a row for personal reasons.

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