LOS ANGELES — To go from being the oldest team in the NBA to a younger version, the Los Angeles Clippers traded away two-fifths of their starting lineup in 11-time All-Star James Harden and Ivica Zubac.
The duo was the most reliable and available on the team during their tenures.
Unloading them wasn't in the plans. At least not until the team received what Lawrence Frank called ''a Godfather-type offer'' — one too good to refuse — from the Indiana Pacers for Zubac. And the Cleveland Cavaliers called asking for Harden.
''Not only did we want to win today,'' Frank, the team's president of basketball operations, said, ''we also need to build a quote unquote better tomorrow.''
It came with an emotional cost, though.
Zubac grew up with the Clippers after coming over from the Los Angeles Lakers. He set career highs last season and became one of the league's top defensive big men as the longest-tenured active player on the team.
The night before trading Zubac, Frank told him a team ''was getting very, very aggressive'' in pursuing him. At the same time, Frank ''was kind of hoping they wouldn't'' meet the Clippers' threshold for doing the deal.
In the end, the Pacers did. Zubac called to ask if he could still come into the Clippers practice facility. His final visit turned into a six-to-eight hour lovefest, with teammates, coaches, staff and business operations employees saying goodbye.