Clippers to trade Kawhi Leonard back to Raptors The Toronto Raptors are nearing a trade with the LA Clippers to acquire Kawhi Leonard, according to a team source who spoke on condition of anonymity so he wouldnt jeopardize the deal.
The deal to reunite the superstar with the franchise for which he won the 2019 NBA title, which has not been finalized, is expected to include Brandon Ingram, Gradey Dick and at least two first-round picks going to the Clippers.
Leonard who will be in the final year of three-year, $149 million contract is willing to sign an extension with the Raptors, which played a significant role in Torontos decision to attempt to trade for him, according to league sources.
The 2025-26 campaign was arguably Leonards finest offensive season.
The six-time All-Star earned his seventh All-Star selection and seventh All-NBA honor, making the All-NBA Second Team.
He averaged a career-high 27.9 points per game while shooting 50.5 percent from the field and making a career-best 2.6 3-pointers per contest.
The two-time Defensive Player of the Year also averaged 1.9 steals per game, his highest mark in eight seasons.
Ingram is coming off of his first All-Star appearance, averaging 21.5 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.7 assist for a Raptors team that lost to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs.
The Raptors traded for the 28-year-old in February 2025.
Dick has played in 190 games since Toronto drafted him 13th overall in the 2023 NBA draft, but he saw his playing time and points per game cut by more than half last season.
Leonards potential departure would end a seven-year tenure that extended the Clippers run of winning seasons and bridged the franchise into the era of its new arena in Inglewood.
Ultimately, however, the partnership was defined as much by injuries and playoff absences as it was by regular-season success and concluded amid a league investigation into allegations of salary-cap circumvention.
When Leonard joined the Clippers in 2019, he arrived as the reigning NBA Finals MVP after leading the Toronto Raptors to a championship.
To pair Leonard with Oklahoma City Thunder star Paul George, the Clippers executed one of the most consequential trades in franchise history, sending 2018 lottery pick Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Danilo Gallinari and control of seven first-round picks to Oklahoma City.
The expectation was clear: The Clippers would immediately contend for championships throughout the primes of two Southern California natives, with Leonard from Moreno Valley and George from Palmdale.
Seven years later, the 35-year-old Leonard was the last remaining player from the 2019-20 roster.
The Clippers won just three playoff series during his tenure.
Their lone trip to the Western Conference finals came in 2021, when they fell to the Phoenix Suns while Leonard was sidelined with a torn right ACL that cost him the entire 2021-22 season.
The Clippers have not won a playoff series since.
In hindsight, the outcome is even more painful considering Gilgeous-Alexander went on to win two NBA MVP awards, a finals MVP and lead the Thunder to the 2025 NBA title.
For years, the Clippers prioritized surrounding Leonard and George with veteran talent.
Whether it was trading for Rajon Rondo in 2021, signing Russell Westbrook during the 2022-23 season or acquiring James Harden in a blockbuster deal, the franchise consistently pushed its chips toward the center of the table in pursuit of a championship.
But age, injuries and the collective bargaining agreement ratified in 2023 gradually forced the Clippers out of the so-called 213 Era, named after Leonards and Georges jersey numbers while also referencing one of Los Angeles most recognizable area codes.
George left for the Philadelphia 76ers in 2024.
Westbrook was traded later that offseason despite exercising his player option.
Norman Powell was dealt in the summer of 2025 with one year remaining on his contract.
Harden followed ahead of the 2026 trade deadline, a move that was soon accompanied by the departure of longtime starting center Ivica Zubac.
Weve kind of gone all in, all in, all in, Clippers basketball president Lawrence Frank said after the February 2026 deadline that saw Harden and Zubac traded in separate deals that netted point guard Darius Garland, shooting guard Bennedict Mathurin, center Isaiah Jackson and several draft picks, one that wound up giving LA the fifth pick of the 2026 NBA Draft.
Weve made a bunch of trades to kind of please todays team.
..
how are we gonna bridge this era to the next era? And with it is, guys who are part of the team now can also be part of the next era.
But if everyone is part of the team, theres a cliff, and you can it could take years, years to get out of it.
Naturally, questions about Leonards future intensified after the Clippers traded Harden and Zubac at the February deadline.
At the time, Frank emphasized the organizations strong relationship with Leonard and said the team would continue communicating its long-term vision.
Frank reiterated that stance in April, when Leonard became extension-eligible while entering the final season of the contract extension he signed in January 2024.
The questions came basically once we traded James and Zu, Frank said after the Clippers squandered a double-digit fourth-quarter lead at home in Leonards first career Play-In Tournament appearance.
Our plan is to win with Kawhi.
Weve obviously shown as an organization that we want to continue, and we are driven to win.
So at the appropriate time, well sit down with Kawhi and, very similar to 2024, lay out our plan.
If our goals are aligned, then wed like to win with Kawhi.
Instead, the Clippers and Leonard are likely headed in separate directions.
The Raptors wanted to keep Leonard in an attempt to make a run at a repeat in 2019, but could not compete with the Clippers ability to acquire George and the allure of returning to his native California.
Raptors general manager and executive vice-president Bobby Webster, who was then second in command to Masai Ujiri in the Toronto front office, is now the top basketball decision-maker with the organization.
Webster was a key player in helping the Raptors acquire Leonard from the Spurs a summer earlier.
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.