NBA

Pelicans stars Ingram, Williamson dealing with injuries

By Sports Desk October 24, 2022

New Orleans Pelicans forward Brandon Ingram suffered a concussion on Sunday, the team announced Monday, and the 2019-20 All-Star is in the NBA’s concussion protocol.  

The injury occurred in the first quarter of the Pelicans’ 122-121 overtime loss to the Utah Jazz Sunday when Ingram took a blow to the face from teammate Naji Marshall while reaching for a steal.  

Ingram was removed from the game and evaluated. He returned to the court midway through the second quarter but exited less than a minute later and did not return.  

Ingram is now subject to the NBA’s return-to-participation process, which cannot begin until 24 hours after the injury. There is no timetable for Ingram’s return, but the Pelicans have already ruled him out for Tuesday’s game against the Dallas Mavericks.  

Zion Williamson was also unable to finish Sunday’s game after suffering a posterior hip contusion during a fall to the floor. He is listed as questionable ahead of Tuesday’s game, as is Herb Jones, who is dealing with knee soreness.  

"Z's fall could've been much worse and doesn't seem like it is. Sore. Bruises," New Orleans coach Willie Green told reporters on Monday. "Brandon gets hit in the face. Herb's knee. Nothing catastrophic, but something we have to monitor over the next few days." 

Ingram, Williamson and Jones are part of a Pelicans core that entered the season with lofty expectations and appears ready to challenge some of the established powers in the Western Conference.  

New Orleans won its first two games of the season – at Brooklyn and at Charlotte – and dropped its home opener Sunday only after losing the team’s two best players.  

The Pelicans are third in scoring in this young NBA season at 125 points per game.  

Williamson is averaging 22 points and 6.7 rebounds after missing all last season with a fractured right foot.  

Related items

  • Celtics star Tatum aims for NBA Finals redemption Celtics star Tatum aims for NBA Finals redemption

    Jayson Tatum views the upcoming NBA Finals as a chance at redemption for the Boston Celtics after falling short two years ago.

    The Celtics swept the Indiana Pacers to reach the showpiece seven-game series, where they face the Dallas Mavericks.

    With Game 1 of the much-anticipated series coming on Friday, Tatum looked back at the 2022 Finals defeat to the Golden State Warriors, using the disappointment as motivation this time around.

    "It's a lot that myself, and we, can learn from that experience being in the Finals, and this time, this go-around is a lot different," Tatum said after Saturday's practice.

    "Obviously, we've been there before, we came up short. And a great opportunity to make it to the Finals again.

    "You don't always get a second chance, so really just looking at it as a second chance and trying to simplify things as much as we can."

    The Celtics were eliminated in the Eastern Conference finals against the Miami Heat last year, losing in seven games.

    That has prevented Boston from avenging their finals defeat to Golden State the year before, though Tatum is keen to make up for lost time.

    He will have to do so against former team-mate Kyrie Irving, however.

    "Obviously there were some ups and downs, but I think, for me, being a first-, second-year player, being around a superstar, essentially, every day and seeing how to navigate that space," Tatum said.

    "And then obviously on the court, he's one of the most talented guys I've ever seen.

    "So it seems like a very long time ago, but I've got a lot of great memories from having [Irving] as a team-mate."

  • Kings extend head coach Brown through 2026-27 Kings extend head coach Brown through 2026-27

    The Sacramento Kings and head coach Mike Brown have agreed to a contract extension through 2026-27.

    According to multiple reports, the deal is worth $30 million with Brown’s base salary to be $8.5 million annually. He will have the opportunity to earn $10 million per year with bonuses.

    In his first year with the Kings a season ago, Brown led the team to a 48-34 record and its first playoff appearance in 16 years. He was named 2022-23 NBA Coach of the Year.

    Sacramento went 46-36 this past season and beat Golden State in its first game before losing a play-in game for the eighth seed to New Orleans.

    Brown and Rick Adelman are the only Kings coaches to lead the team to a winning record in any season since the franchise moved to Sacramento in 1985.

    Brown has a 441-226 record as head coach with Cleveland, the Los Angeles Lakers and Sacramento.

  • 'It was Luka magic mode', Kidd revels as Doncic-inspired Mavs reach NBA Finals 'It was Luka magic mode', Kidd revels as Doncic-inspired Mavs reach NBA Finals

    Luka Doncic was in "magic mode" after his starring role helped the Dallas Mavericks to their first NBA Finals since 2011, coach Jason Kidd said.

    The Mavs and the Boston Celtics will battle it out for this season's NBA championship after Dallas wrapped up a 4-1 Western Conference finals series victory over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

    A 124-103 win did the trick at Target Center on Thursday, with Doncic and Kyrie Irving leading the way for the Mavs with 36 points apiece.

    Doncic was quick out of the blocks, scoring 20 of his points during the first half on the way to notching up his highest-scoring contributions of the postseason, with his performances earning the Western Conference finals MVP award.

    "It was Luka magic mode," Kidd said. "He set the tone, and then he made it easier for everyone else. Everybody else stepped up."

    "You're just watching a special performance take place," Irving added. "When Luka starts off a game like that, we're a tough team to beat."

    Indeed, they are. The Mavs are 7-2 on the road during the playoffs - winning the last five - matching the franchise record for such victories during a single postseason, set in their title-winning campaign of 2010-11.

    A EuroBasket champion with Slovenia and EuroLeague winner during his final season with Real Madrid, Doncic is now gearing up for his first crack at an NBA title, with the Finals series commencing on June 6.

    And he insists his team-mates cannot afford to rest on their laurels.

    "It was a very hard road, very hard," Doncic said. "But we're not done. We have four more [victories to achieve]."

© 2023 SportsMaxTV All Rights Reserved.