Month: January 2026

Northwest Notes: Valanciunas, Murray, Edwards, Lillard

The Nuggets‘ unfortunate run of injuries continued as Jonas Valanciunas limped off the court in the third quarter of Wednesday’s win at Toronto, writes Bennett Durando of The Denver Post. It was a non-contact calf strain for the 33-year-old center, who was making his first start of the season due to a knee injury that will sideline Nikola Jokic for at least the next four weeks. Starters Aaron Gordon, Cameron Johnson and Christian Braun are also recovering from injuries.

“I don’t know how serious it is. We’re just getting used to this,” coach David Adelman told reporters. “It just seems like every night, somebody has something. The cool thing about it is there’s somebody else to get an opportunity from it. And that’s how you have to look at it. Hopefully Jonas heals up correctly. Hopefully it’s not serious, just like I’ve said the other 19 times this month.”

Valanciunas was turning in a strong performance before being forced out of the game, with 17 points, nine rebounds, four assists and three blocks in 23 minutes. He wore a walking boot as he left the arena, according to Durando, but was able to move under his own power.

“He was great. … He’s been sick,” Adelman said. “I saw a much different energy from him tonight. … If he ends up playing the 32 minutes I thought I was going to play him, you’re probably looking at 25 (points) and 12 (rebounds). That’s what he can do, especially when teams have small-ball lineups like (the Raptors) do.”

DaRon Holmes II played 22 minutes in just his fourth career game as Adelman only used eight players. He figures to see extended minutes if Valanciunas has to miss time.

There’s more from the Northwest Division:

  • With their roster currently depleted, the Nuggets are relying more than ever on Jamal Murray, who posted 21 points, seven rebounds and six assists. Murray, who’s among the NBA’s best players to never make an All-Star team, talked about the possibility of being selected for this year’s game, according to Michael Grange of Sportsnet. “Obviously I’d love to be an all-star, all-NBA, scoring champ, MVP,” he said. “I want to be all of them, right? But winning matters … if we win a championship but I don’t make all-star … we win a championship …. that’s my mindset.”
  • Anthony Edwards showed his displeasure during the Timberwolves‘ 24-point loss at Atlanta by throwing a towel in the air and walking to the locker room with about eight minutes remaining, per Chris Hine of The Star-Tribune (subscription required). Edwards didn’t talk to reporters after the game, and coach Chris Finch said the action was inappropriate. “Obviously frustrated with the performance and rightfully so, but he needs to stay out on the floor and root for his team,” Finch said.
  • Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard said rehab is “going great” as he works his way back from an Achilles tear (YouTube link, hat tip to Real GM). “I think it’s just one of those injuries where you’ve got to take your time — you know, it takes what it takes,” Lillard said. “The first couple of weeks to maybe two or three months is kind of frustrating because you’re so limited. But with patience, giving yourself grace, and doing the things necessary to continue progressing, you get to a point where you start to see the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Lakers’ Adou Thiero To Be Reevaluated In Four Weeks For MCL Sprain

The Lakers announced that Adou Thiero has suffered an MCL sprain in his right knee and will be reevaluated in approximately four weeks, Khobi Price of the Orange County Register writes in a subscriber-only story.

Price notes that it’s not clear when Thiero suffered the injury. He played in the team’s last six games and 15 of the past 18. He was on the court for four minutes in the fourth quarter of Tuesday’s loss to Detroit.

The 21-year-old rookie forward had surgery on his left knee while he was still in college. That caused him to fall to the second round of the draft and forced him to miss the Summer League and preseason.

The recovery process caused Thiero’s NBA debut to be delayed until November 15. He has seen limited action in 15 games, averaging 1.3 points and 1.2 rebounds in 5.8 minutes per night and shooting 38.9% from the field.

The injury comes at an unfortunate time for Thiero, who may have been able to increase his role with the short-handed Lakers. Austin Reaves is sidelined for at least three more weeks with a calf strain, Gabe Vincent has missed the last six games with lower back pain and Rui Hachimura is dealing with right calf soreness.