Victor Oladipo is back – now the real work begins for Indiana and its star

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VICTOR OLADIPO RARELY gets frustrated.

So when he was standing on the court before tipoff between the Indiana Pacers and New York Knicks on Feb. 1 and kept messing up his intricate dueling circus dribbling routine — between the legs, loop one over the other, switch hands, quick staccato bounces, switch hands again — he just put one ball down and laughed.

Eventually, the guard moved on to his pregame shooting drill. Nothing was falling. He missed six or seven 3s in a row.

It had to be his tucked-in T-shirt, he thought, pulling it out from his waistband.

He missed his next two. Another chuckle.

It was Oladipo’s second game of the season, and this rust-filled warm-up would be a precursor to his struggles finding a rhythm. He tried to play his trademark style — downhill, aggressive, assertive — but scored seven points in 22 minutes on 2-for-14 shooting in a loss.

Ten minutes after the final buzzer, Oladipo sat at his locker putting back on his T-shirt — untucked from the start this time — and pulling up a compression sleeve. He was waiting to knock out his postgame obligations and get back to the court for a workout.

It had been a full calendar year since he sat underneath the basket at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, saw a hole in his right leg and wondered when he was going to play basketball again.

Oladipo might be back in uniform, but that just means he is on to the next step in the Pacers’ three-phase approach to the season.

What happens next in Indiana is contingent on Oladipo enacting phase three of that plan: He can’t just be back. He has to be back. And he’s not there yet.

“I missed a whole year of NBA basketball, not just basketball. It’s the highest level of basketball. It’s different,” Oladipo said. “I’m not frustrated at all. Because I’ve been on the court and made all those shots that I’m shooting. I know I can make ’em.

“It’s just a matter of syncing my body and my mind.”


OLADIPO THOUGHT HIS knee had fallen off.

Before the stretcher came out, before the doctors and trainers rushed to his side, before he had even glanced down to see what happened, he just wanted to know if his knee was still there.

It was Jan. 23, 2019, against the Toronto Raptors, and with about four minutes remaining in the first half, Oladipo was getting back on defense trying to break up an outlet pass to Pascal Siakam.

Oladipo was tracking the ball over his shoulder. He planted with his left leg, then his right, which buckled underneath him. His face turned and he reached out his arms to break his fall, instead inadvertently taking out the legs of Siakam. For about two tense seconds, the Raptors were incensed about an uncharacteristically dirty play by Oladipo. Everyone quickly realized it was something else.

“I just said, ‘It’s over,’ to myself,” Oladipo said.

Head athletic trainer Josh Corbeil arrived first and put both hands on the knee. It took only a second more for Corbeil to raise a fist in the air: Bring the stretcher.

Seeing either Corbeil’s fist or the knee itself, Myles Turner turned away and put both hands over his face. Scott McCullough, the Raptors’ head athletic trainer, ran off their bench to lay a towel over Oladipo’s shoulders. Corbeil grabbed it and immediately covered Oladipo’s knee with it.

Oladipo looked into the baseline stands, trying to make eye contact with his mom, Joan, and his friends. Grimacing, he saw them and shook his head. But he remained calm. He didn’t slap the floor. He didn’t scream in agony.

After the swelling went down the following morning, an MRI confirmed: He had ruptured the tendon that connected his quad muscle to his kneecap, one of the rarest severe injuries in sports. He was only the third NBA player to ever rupture a quad tendon (Tony Parker in 2017, Charles Barkley in 1999).

“I’m not dumb. Obviously, I know I was out a year and had a major injury and it may take some time. But I have no doubt I’ll be back better than I was because of the work I did.”

Victor Oladipo

Surgery to repair the tendon was a success, and Oladipo started light rehab the next day. Three days later, he was in the gym, shooting from a chair.

“I already pushed myself to exhaustion, and in rehab, you’ve got to push yourself to exhaustion and more to get results,” he said. “Fight through stuff; fight through pain. Anybody who knows me knows I’m willing to get back and get better than ever.”

After three or four months, Oladipo was back on the court for another step forward: light drills, no contact, but back on the court. Then one day in May, he put the ball on the floor, took a couple of hard steps, planted and rose for a dunk.

“That was big for me,” he said. “It wasn’t something major, it wasn’t something crazy, but just to be able to jump up there and do it, it was monumental.”

A few months later, he was ramping up the workouts. Games of 3-on-3 became 4-on-4, and 4-on-4 became 5-on-5.

In August or September, he was at the Pacers’ practice facility, going through a workout against a scattered collection of players, when he hit a new milestone in his rehab. It was another dunk, this time with a little more flair.

“I 360’d down there,” Oladipo said, proudly pointing at the basket on the far end. “That’s when I was kind of like, ‘OK, I’m getting closer.'”


THE PACERS ENVISIONED a .500 record when Oladipo returned, but they aced the first third of their test.

The seven offseason additions started fitting. Domantas Sabonis developed into an All-Star. They rediscovered their identity as a defense-first, fundamental, role-based team en route to a 30-17 record.



Source : ESPN