Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Aldridge retires due to irregular heartbeat

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NEW YORK — LaMarcus Aldridge retired from the NBA on Thursday after saying he experience­d an irregular heartbeat during his final game with the Brooklyn Nets.

Aldridge, 35, posted a statement on social media saying the heart concerns he had during and after Brooklyn’s loss to the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday was one of the “scariest things” he’s experience­d.

Aldridge, who was diagnosed with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome — an abnormalit­y that can cause a rapid heartbeat — as a rookie in 2007, said he feels better now after getting it checked out but decided to end his 15-year career.

“For 15 years I’ve put basketball first, and now, it is time to put my health and my family first,” Aldridge wrote.

The seven-time All-Star signed with the Nets on March 28 and he had become their starting center. He missed the last two games with what the team had called a non-covid-19 illness.

Nets General Manager Sean Marks said the team fully supported Aldridge’s decision.

“We know this was not an easy decision for him, but after careful considerat­ion and consultati­on with numerous medical experts, he made the best decision for him, his family and for his life after basketball,” Marks said.

Aldridge joined the Nets after reaching a buyout agreement with the San Antonio Spurs and provided his new team with an inside post presence that was one of the few things it was missing. The 6-11 Aldridge had the best of his five games with the Nets in the one before his heart trouble, scoring 22 points in a victory over New Orleans on April 7.

The No. 2 pick in the 2006 draft was long one of the best at his position, averaging 19.4 points in a career that began with nine seasons in Portland.

He went on to play 51 /2 seasons with the Spurs and was a five-time All-NBA selection.

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