Injuries have significantly impacted the NBA playoffs, with key players like Victor Wembanyama and Jalen Williams sidelined. The ongoing trend raises concerns about player health and the integrity of the competition.
Key points
Injuries dominate the NBA playoffs this season.
Victor Wembanyama suffered a concussion.
Jalen Williams is out with hamstring injuries.
The Boston Celtics lost Game 7 due to injuries.
Boston CelticsPhiladelphia 76ersOklahoma City ThunderMinnesota Timberwolves
Victor Wembanyama suffered a concussion during his teamâs first round series. Photograph: Eric Gay/APVictor Wembanyama suffered a concussion during his teamâs first round series. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP
(Photograph: Eric Gay/AP)
Should we just cancel the rest of the NBA playoffs and declare injuries the winner? Theyâve already dominated this postseason far more than a team possibly could. The Oklahoma City Thunder are playing without their second-best player, Jalen Williams, after what feels like his 10th hamstring injury. In the series against the Denver Nuggets, the Minnesota Timberwolvesâ Donte DiVincenzo tore his achilles, and Anthony Edwards gruesomely hyperextended his knee. Wolvesâ backup Ayo Dosunmuput up a heroic 43 points in Game 4, then returned to the bench two games later to nurse an injured calf. The Nuggets lost Aaron Gordon to a calf strain midway through the series and played entirely without Peyton Watson, who was sidelined by a hamstring strain.
Jayson Tatumâs record-quick comeback from an achilles tear was the feelgood story of the season, at least until he hurt his leg, which ruled him out of a vital Game 7 that his . The â starting rotation and played four of six games against the without another of their stars, . The Rocketsâ played 78 of 82 regular season games, then missed every game of the Lakers series but one thanks to a bad knee and a bone bruise in his ankle. We of course had to save the most ridiculous injury for last: Victor Wembanyama itself after tripping on a drive and whacking his jaw on the hardwood. (He missed all of one game and .) Perhaps it was an omen.
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This is how the NBA is now. Ten hyper-athletic men powered by modern training regimens share a 94-by-50-foot rectangle, sprinting back and forth and leaping into the air and often crashing into each other as they do. An unconscionably long 82-game regular season sands down the playersâ durability. Mix in the extra dose of vigor and roughness that comes with the heightened stakes of the playoffs, and bodies break down. Injuries that affect the outcome of games and series, that make you want to turn off the TV, are a constant risk.
This isnât to say that this postseason has lacked drama or dopamine. Among the relatively uninjured, somehow, , who continues to find escape routes from the bounds of time. The Sixers pulled off a miraculous comeback from 3-1 down to eliminate the Celtics, the did the same against the Magic. The â hit a game-winning three-pointer that kicked high, high off the back of the rim . (I immediately thought of âs shot against the last year, the most indelible memory from one of the best runs of clutch plays in history â before Haliburton tore his achilles in the next series.) The shorthanded Wolves banded together to topple the Nuggets; I wanted their scrappy crew to win so badly that it hurt a little bit. But all this brilliance canât be worth the trail of broken bodies left in the wake. These playoffs feel like a stay-healthy contest rather than a way to determine the best team in the league, which hurts the viewing experience. Far worse is the intensifying feeling that professional basketball itself is incompatible with health.
There are sports, like boxing, in which physical damage is inextricable from the appeal. Basketball is different, or should be. The attraction is in the manipulation of space required to splash a three-pointer, in the precision and explosiveness that goes into a chase-down block. One player bodying another via dunk or block is satisfying, but we donât want the other player to be *hurt*. caving his knee in while jumping for a dunk is not supposed to be part of the experience, nor is the epidemic of achilles and calf injuries. Fans should not be wincing every time their favorite player clatters to the ground and is slow to get up, which seems to happen a dozen times per game. No superstar escaped this season unscathed: had the luxury of not playing many fourth quarters thanks to his team usually putting the game away by then, but still missed time in February because of an abdominal strain. hyperextended his knee, after which his searing form from early in the season failed to fully return. suffered a . DonÄiÄâs hamstring betrayed him in the middle of one of the hottest runs of form of his career. The latter two MVP candidates had to seek exemptions for the leagueâs 65-game rule to be considered for the honor.
That weâre only one round into the playoffs feels impossible. After his team finished off the Nuggets, Wolves coach Chris Finch looked tired rather than triumphant: the younger, healthier were already waiting in the conference semi-finals.
âBefore the series started, I figured the real winner of this series was gonna be , because both these teams were gonna take a lot of pieces out of each other, and they did,â Finch said. âSo Iâm not sure what we have left standing before we go down there.â Itâs easy to envision the Spurs essentially winning by TKO over what remains of the Wolves, or the Thunder forcing James into debilitating exhaustion midway through their series.
Thereâs a lot to be excited about for the rest of the playoffs, a likely Spurs-Thunder showdown in the Western Conference finals at the top of the list. Still, itâs hard to be too jazzed when more injuries are almost certain to join the pile. Last yearâs NBA finals, brilliant through six games, will forever be blemished by early in Game 7. In the 2024 finals, DonÄiÄ, the best player on the floor, was clearly carrying an injury. We can hope that injuries wonât insert themselves into this yearâs finals, but recent history suggests mercy is unlikely.
Practically everybody agrees that the season needs to shorten, perhaps by a lot. Maybe the games do, too. Reverting first-round playoff series to best-of-five, as was the case before 2003, could keep players healthy a little bit longer. Maybe a seven-game series is too much punishment on a human body under any circumstances. For as long as the NBA resists change, its players will pay the price.
After the Lakers mercifully ended the Rocketsâ bizarre, injury-marred season on Friday, the agony of defeat appeared tempered by exhaustion. The camaraderie between the players was also striking. Durant, , hugged James tightly. He giggled with DonÄiÄ on the sidelines. , the Rocketsâ vital point guard who sat out the whole season with a torn ACL, mingled with the players. It looked like everybody had finally been relieved of the burden of the game: the faces atop those beaten bodies, at last, smiling.
Q&A
What injuries have affected key NBA players during the playoffs?
Notable injuries include Victor Wembanyama's concussion, Jalen Williams' hamstring issues, and Anthony Edwards' knee hyperextension.
How are injuries influencing the outcome of the NBA playoffs?
Injuries are leading to key players missing games, which affects team performance and the overall competitiveness of the playoffs.
What is the current status of the Boston Celtics in the playoffs?
The Boston Celtics lost a crucial Game 7 against the Philadelphia 76ers, partly due to Jayson Tatum's leg injury.
How does the NBA's regular season impact player injuries during the playoffs?
The lengthy 82-game regular season contributes to player fatigue and increased injury risk, especially during the high-stakes playoff games.
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