Los Angeles Times

Paul will welcome return of Rivers

- By Ben Bolch ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter: @latbbolch

Chris Paul has been asking Austin Rivers the same question every day.

“He’s like, ‘ Man, when are you coming back?’ ” Rivers said.

Rivers finally has a definitive answer. He’s targeting the Clippers’ game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Wednesday for his return from the broken left hand that has sidelined him since Feb. 3.

Rivers apparently will be back on the early side of the four- to- six- week timetable given by the Clippers at the time of his injury. He completed a workout with coaches Saturday and went through his first full practice Sunday since sustaining a blow to the hand early this month against the Minnesota Timberwolv­es.

“My shot feels great, I feel like I have good wind, but I just want to get back with the team,” said Rivers, who will sit out a 10th consecutiv­e game Monday night when the Clippers face the Brooklyn Nets at Staples Center.

The biggest challenge facing Rivers upon his return will be finding a rhythm, something Clippers Coach Doc Rivers said could take a handful of games.

“You start going too fast, you lose the ball, you miss layups,” said Doc Rivers, who is Austin’s father. “That’s how it goes for most guards when you come back.”

Austin Rivers will wear a protective wrapping with a gel pad for about a week, but he said he’s not experienci­ng any discomfort beyond soreness.

His return will be a major relief to Paul, whose playing time has soared during the backup point guard’s absence.

Paul has averaged almost 36 minutes per game with Rivers out, nearly three minutes more than his season average. Paul’s 40- point outburst against the Sacramento Kings on Friday night was the latest in a string of standout performanc­es since teammate Blake Griffin played his last game on Christmas before being sidelined by a quadriceps injury and a broken hand.

“MVP voting is done already, as far as I’m concerned,” Doc Rivers said, referring to the widely held belief that Golden State’s Stephen Curry is the runaway leader, “but if it was open, Chris Paul would be one of those guys you would have to say, especially since Christmas, there’s no doubt he’s one of the best players in the NBA if not the best other than Curry. Right now, it’s Curry and everybody else.”

What about Blake?

Austin Rivers and Griffin still saw quite a bit of each other while sidelined in recent weeks because they are in the care of the same hand specialist.

“After he’s done, I go,” Rivers said of office visits. “Or after I’m done, he comes.”

Doc Rivers said Griffin has been shooting for at least a week but there remained no timetable for the return of a player who was expected to miss four to six weeks after breaking his right hand while punching team assistant equipment manager Matias Testi on Jan. 23.

Griffin underwent the first of two procedures to repair the hand five weeks ago Monday.

He must also serve a fourgame suspension for his role in the altercatio­n after being cleared to play.

Final roster spot

Doc Rivers would not say whether the Clippers would re- sign forward Alex Stepheson after his f irst 10- day contract expires Monday. The team is also assessing the potential f it of other players who have been waived, including Kris Humphries and Marcus Thornton.

Players must be on a roster by Tuesday to be eligible for the playoffs, with the exception of additions from the Developmen­t League.

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