Kawhi Leonard kept his move to the Clippers under wraps until the last possible second.

And those who claimed to know otherwise were quickly proven wrong, chief among them Chris Broussard.

Broussard, who works for FS1, has a history of questionable reporting and added to it here, repeatedly saying Leonard was “Laker-bound” and the Clippers were out of the running. Obviously, that was completely wrong.

Though Broussard wasn’t the only one who peddled false goods in this case — Jalen Rose and others did as well — it’s an especially bad look for him given his history. Former Fox colleague Jay Onrait, now with TSN, blasted Broussard on his podcast.

“Everyone knew nothing, nothing! And they were saying that they knew everything!” Onrait said on the “Jay and Dan Show.” “Chris Broussard, who worked at Fox and is the biggest f–king fraud in the history of sports media, ever — ESPN kicked him out, Fox kicked him out, I don’t know what he’s doing now — saying that the Clippers were out of it for sure and it was down to the Lakers and Raptors. He knew nothing. They knew nothing. It’s all bulls–t.

“And I know it’s all bulls–t. I get it. All those shows in the daytime, ‘First Take,’ and again, I like all these people personally. I like them all. And I understand why they’re doing those shows. It works. It gets numbers. People like them, it’s entertaining. I’m not criticizing that side of it. I’m just saying, if anyone in the history of the world takes anything the daytime guys say seriously, and I’m including [ESPN’s] Stephen A. [Smith] in this. I know Stephen A. has a lot of connections, but he says a lot of stuff that’s completely 100% f–king false. … If anyone tells me, ‘Stephen A. said something,’ or, ‘Max Kellerman said something,’ no. It’s all bulls–t. Nobody knows anything. And they should have known that Kawhi was the kind of person that this would backfire on them about.”

It’s worth noting that Onrait is wrong about Fox kicking Broussard out — he still works there. But his history speaks for itself.

Broussard got his reporting on a Tristan Thompson contract extension completely wrong in September 2015, jumping from saying that an extension had been signed to Thompson having lowered his demands. He’s repeatedly cited sources in reports of news that already has been reported, including by players themselves, most famously saying on ESPN that he had confirmation of LeBron James returning to Cleveland after James penned a first-person Sports Illustrated piece announcing so.