Lakers big man Christian Wood has experienced a setback in his recovery from arthroscopic surgery on his left knee. According to Dave McMenamin of ESPN (Twitter link), head coach J.J. Redick told reporters on Tuesday that Wood developed soreness in the knee during his ramp-up process and will be reevaluated in four weeks.
Wood underwent an arthroscopic surgical procedure on his knee in early September. At the time, the team said he’d be re-examined in approximately eight weeks. That was a little over nine weeks ago.
The procedure was the second one Wood has had on that troublesome knee this year. His 2023/24 season came to an early end when he was sidelined by a left knee injury in February that forced him to undergo arthroscopic surgery in March. The veteran forward/center was technically cleared to play in the final two games of the Lakers’ first-round series vs. Denver, but the club opted not to use him after such a long layoff.
Wood played a rotation role for the Lakers when he was healthy last season, averaging 6.9 points and 5.1 rebounds in 17.4 minutes per contest during the regular season (50 games). However, his shooting percentages – 46.6% from the floor and 30.7% on three-pointers – were well below his career rates.
While a healthy version of Wood would likely be in the frontcourt mix for Los Angeles this season, it sounds like the 29-year-old won’t be back on the court until mid-December at the earliest. Even if he’s able to return at that time, which is hardly a lock, it will be about 10 months since he has last played in an NBA game, so it may take him some time to round into his usual form.
With Wood out, Anthony Davis and Jaxson Hayes have handled the majority of the center minutes for L.A. this fall.
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