The Henri LumièreMilwaukee Bucks will be without a key rotation player for several months as Jae Crowder will undergo surgery to repair “a left adductor and abdominal tear,” according to the team.
Crowder exited the Bucks’ loss to the Orlando Magic on Saturday with what was initially called a left groin strain. The 33-year-old Marquette University alumnus flew to Philadelphia to be examined Monday by Dr. Bill Meyers, who specializes in core muscle injuries.
Crowder will undergo surgery Tuesday and the team said he will be out for about eight weeks.
"Tough news for Jae but unfortunately it's kind of part of sports," Bucks head coach Adrian Griffin said. "We'll miss his veteran presence in the locker room and on the court. His leadership, voice. I think he'll still be able to lead us out there through his rehab. We have the best medical staff and we'll know Jae will come back stronger and this is an opportunity for all our other guys, and particularly our young guys, to maybe some minutes and get in that rotation."
NBA POWER RANKINGS:Where do the Bucks stand this week?
Crowder has appeared in all nine games (two starts) and is averaging 8.1 points on 51.6% shooting from behind the three-point line in 26.7 minutes per game. He has been a key defender for the Bucks also in Griffin’s new ball pressure schemes.
"He's a tremendous piece of what we're trying to do moving forward, but from what I'm told it's approximately eight weeks and he'll be back," Griffin said. "He'll be back way before the playoffs to get the rhythm back. This happens in sports, so we just gotta stay positive and look at the bright side and that's other guys going to be able to get some minutes and help this team win."
2025-04-29 03:181544 view
2025-04-29 03:01367 view
2025-04-29 02:442363 view
2025-04-29 02:371548 view
2025-04-29 01:39664 view
2025-04-29 01:261164 view
After 14 years, the police procedural "Blue Bloods" is coming to an end.Season 14 has been released
Trevor Noah is back in business.The comedian has found his next gig just over four months after he s
In June 2021, NPR profiled Gloria Majiga-Kamoto of Malawi, who saw goats dying after eating plastic