Oklahoma City (AP) – In a scene that will haunt Los Angeles Lakers fans for the rest of the season, superstar guard Luka Dončić suffered a left hamstring injury during Thursday night’s 139-97 annihilation at the hands of the Oklahoma City Thunder. The injury occurred with 7:39 remaining in the third quarter, after Dončić had already been treated for hamstring tightness at halftime. Coach JJ Redick confirmed after the game that Dončić will undergo an MRI on Friday to determine the full extent of the damage. The Lakers, who had been one of the NBA’s hottest teams with 13 wins in their last 14 games, now face the very real possibility of finishing the regular season without their leading scorer and MVP candidate.
The play itself was innocuous – no collision, no awkward fall. Dončić simply planted his left leg to change direction against Thunder defender Jalen Williams, and his hamstring tightened catastrophically. He immediately grabbed the back of his thigh, doubled over, and then lay flat on the baseline, covering his face. Teammates surrounded him as the arena’s energy shifted from celebration to concern. Dončić eventually stood up and walked – slowly, carefully – to the locker room, shaking his head in frustration. He did not return to the game.
“Those things happen,” Redick said with a sigh. “We looked at him, he did the job and he was cleared” to return after halftime. But Dončić lasted only a few minutes before reinjuring the same hamstring. That pattern – injury, treatment, rapid reinjury – often indicates a more significant strain. A Grade 1 strain might keep a player out 1-2 weeks. A Grade 2 could mean 3-6 weeks. A Grade 3 tear would end his season. The MRI will provide answers, but the visible pain and Dončić’s immediate exit suggest this is not minor.
Before the injury, Dončić was having a quiet night by his standards: 12 points on 3-of-10 shooting, far below the 40-point explosions he had delivered in five of his previous seven games. The Thunder’s relentless defense – the best in the NBA – had a lot to do with that. But Dončić was clearly not 100% even before the final injury. He had limped slightly at the end of the first half and went straight to the locker room for treatment. Redick acknowledged that Dončić was “cleared” based on the medical staff’s assessment, but hindsight is brutal.
“I mean, it’s something you never want to see as a teammate,” Lakers forward Jake LaRavia said. “Especially in a game like this, it was tough to see him go down. Hopefully, all prayers for him.” The “game like this” LaRavia referenced was a complete blowout. The Lakers trailed 90-58 when Dončić exited, and the deficit only grew. Austin Reaves also left briefly with a back injury – described by Redick as “intercostal, somewhere on his back, between his ribs” – but Reaves was able to return. Still, the Lakers are suddenly a walking medical ward.
The loss dropped the Lakers to 50-27, still third in the West but now looking over their shoulder at the surging Denver Nuggets and Memphis Grizzlies. More importantly, without Dončić, the offense becomes heavily dependent on LeBron James – who turns 42 next season – and a supporting cast that thrives on Dončić’s gravity. The Lakers’ upcoming schedule includes games against Dallas, Golden State, and Phoenix. If Dončić misses significant time, the Lakers could slide into the play-in tournament or worse.
For Dončić, this is a cruel twist. He was traded from Dallas to Los Angeles last year in a blockbuster deal, and he has thrived under the bright lights of Hollywood. He leads the league in scoring, is second in MVP voting, and had the Lakers dreaming of a title. Now, he sits in a hotel room in Oklahoma City, an ice pack strapped to his leg, waiting for an MRI that could change everything. Lakers fans will refresh Twitter every hour. The NBA world holds its breath. And Dončić, the pride of Slovenia, can only hope that the hamstring that failed him on a Thursday night in April will heal in time for a June championship run.