If not for an infamous summertime change of heart, DeAndre Jordan would have been wearing Mavericks blue at Staples Center on Thursday night instead of Clippers white.
Jordan is grateful he stayed true to his original colors, and his teammates helped him secure a big win over his spurned suitors.
Blake Griffin had 26 points and 10 rebounds, and Jamal Crawford added 15 points in the Clippers' 104-88 victory over Dallas on Thursday night in Los Angeles' home opener.
Jordan had six points, 15 rebounds and four blocked shots in his first game against the Mavericks since his summer misadventures in Dallas. Jordan tentatively agreed to join the Mavs as a free agent before the Clippers' top brass and players descended on his Houston home and persuaded him to return to Los Angeles, infuriating owner Mark Cuban and Dallas fans.
"It's definitely an emotional game," said Jordan, who declined to address the Dallas debacle directly. "The emotions were high obviously because it was our home opener. We wanted to give the fans what they missed."
The Mavs know what they missed with Jordan. From the opening minutes, it was clear that the clubs' offseason conflict over Jordan only amped up the feelings in this lively Western Conference rivalry.
Cuban disparaged the Clippers in pregame remarks, saying that "you can change the owner, you can change the players, but the Clippers are still the franchise that they've been for the last 30 years."
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Trash talk was abundant on the court and from both benches. The teams combined for four technical fouls and a series of hard personal fouls, including a heavy foul from Nowitzki that left Jordan flexing and yelling instead of fighting.
"We didn't look at it that way, but obviously there's got to be something there from all the (offseason) stuff," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said.
The Mavs engaged in Hack-a-DJ tactics late in the first half, sending the inept Jordan to the free-throw line eight times.
Austin Rivers scored 14 points for the Clippers, who pulled away easily in the second half with a strong bench performance.
Dirk Nowitzki scored 16 points for the Mavericks, who played without injured starting guards Deron Williams and Wesley Matthews.
"The (lack of) manpower made it tougher," Dallas coach Rick Carlisle said. "We really would have had to play a perfect game. I thought we did a lot of things well, but in the end, from a shooting standpoint, we couldn't hit a bull in the (rear) with a bass fiddle."
Nowitzki is still surprised by the decision made by Jordan, who abruptly stopped texting with the German star during the process.
"I think we were disappointed, but we still have to move on as a franchise, and that's what we did," Nowitzki said. "That happens in free agency sometimes."
HACK-A-JOSH
While slipping behind in the third quarter, the Mavs also resorted to intentional fouls against Clippers newcomer Josh Smith, who hasn't made 54 percent of his free throws in any of the past four seasons.
WAY BACK
The Mavericks had to play without both halves of their projected starting backcourt, but they're hoping the absences aren't long. Williams has a sprained left knee that shows no structural damage, while Matthews is returning to action slowly after surgery on his heel.
TIP-INS
Mavericks: John Jenkins scored 17 points in his first start for Dallas, which signed him from Atlanta in the offseason. ... Former Utah forward Jeremy Evans made his first start for the Mavs, scoring two late points in 24 minutes.
Clippers: Doc Rivers used all 13 players on his roster, and 11 scored. Argentina's Pablo Prigioni and UCLA's Luc Mbah a Moute made their Clippers debuts, and Cole Aldrich scored his first basket for Los Angeles on a sweet assist from Prigioni.
UP NEXT
Mavericks: Dallas is at the Lakers on Sunday.
Clippers: Los Angeles hosts Sacramento on Saturday.