What began as a historic night for Kawhi Leonard ended with the Clippers star hobbling to the locker room and Los Angeles watching a four-game winning streak come to an end. The Clippers fell to the Sacramento Kings 118-109 on Saturday, a loss that felt secondary to the question of how much time Leonard might now miss.
Record falls in the fourth quarter
Leonard had already made history before the injury changed everything. His performance Saturday marked his 45th consecutive game scoring at least 20 points, surpassing the franchise record set by Bob McAdoo during the 1974-75 season when the organization was based in Buffalo and known as the Braves. Leonard finished with 31 points before leaving the game.
The record arrived during one of the finest seasons of Leonard’s 15-year career. He is averaging a career-best 28.3 points per game across 52 appearances in 2025-26, having already far exceeded the 37 games he played last season due to health concerns. At 34, he has averaged 6.3 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 2.0 steals per game while shooting 50.1% from the field and 37.8% from three-point range.
How the injury happened
The ankle gave way with 9:27 remaining in the fourth quarter. Leonard was guarding Kings forward DeMar DeRozan when he contested a play, landed awkwardly on DeRozan’s foot and stumbled backward before going down to the court. He got up quickly but the limp was visible as he made his way to the Clippers bench and then to the locker room.
The team confirmed after the game that the injury is a left ankle sprain. Leonard did not return, and the Clippers did not offer any timeline for his return following the loss.
What his absence means for Los Angeles
The timing is difficult for a Clippers team still working to secure its playoff footing in the Western Conference. Los Angeles entered Saturday looking to close ground on the seventh-seeded Phoenix Suns while holding its grip on the No. 8 seed. The loss to Sacramento, the worst team in the Western Conference at 17-51, complicated that effort.
Leonard’s value to the team goes well beyond his scoring. The Clippers post a plus-4.1 net rating with him on the floor and a minus-5.9 mark without him, a 10-point swing that reflects how much the offense and defense both depend on his presence. If he misses games, the drop-off will be felt on both ends.
Bennedict Mathurin is expected to take on a larger role while Leonard’s status is evaluated.
A demanding schedule ahead
The Clippers do not have time to ease into the situation. They host the San Antonio Spurs on Monday before heading out on a three-game road trip that includes two games in New Orleans on Wednesday and Thursday and a trip to Dallas on Saturday. Missing Leonard for any portion of that stretch would put meaningful pressure on a roster that has built its recent momentum around his availability and performance.
The team has not indicated whether additional imaging or evaluation was planned for Sunday, and no updated timeline had been provided as of Saturday night.

