New York Post

Aldridge still feeling aftereffec­ts of COVID

- By BRIAN LEWIS

INDIANAPOL­IS — LaMarcus Aldridge pulled the curtain back on his bout with coronaviru­s. The Nets center said he not only dealt with symptoms while out with COVID-19, but is still suffering from the aftereffec­ts.

“Yeah. Even though you’re through it, you don’t go back to feeling normal. It was my first time getting it, so I think it definitely hit me harder than most,” Aldridge said before Wednesday’s 129-121 win over Indiana. “So I’m still trying to get my legs back, get my wind back, and just feel normal again.”

Feeling normal is relative these days, especially considerin­g Aldridge, who had 13 points and three rebounds in 16 minutes on Wednesday, also suffers from cardiac issues that admittedly put him even more at risk from COVID-19.

Aldridge has Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome, and underwent the insertion of a cardiac catheter in 2007 and ’11. He retired after feeling an irregular heartbeat in Brooklyn’s April 10 loss to the Lakers, but came back this season and entered Wednesday averaging 13.7 points and 5.9 boards.

The only hiccup was Aldridge getting COVID-19 and going into the NBA’s health and safety protocols on Dec. 14, symptomati­c during his quarantine and unable to work out. He didn’t play again until Dec. 30, and still isn’t himself.

“I had all the symptoms, so I didn’t do anything. I was tired. I wasn’t feeling well, headaches, body aches, so I didn’t do anything. So I’m still trying to find myself right now,” said Aldridge, who passed all the needed cardiac tests to come back but has been set back by the illness and layoff.

“[The hardest part] was not working out, not getting in the gym, just not moving around. Even those two games I played, just don’t feel right. You don’t feel like you’re clear-headed, like your wind and your legs are still tired. So it’s a process coming back from that stuff.”

Steve Nash said he could use Aldridge in shorter stints, but it hasn’t been talked about.

“If he needs it, yeah. We’ve got to keep an eye on it,” Nash said. “That’s not something that he’s talked to us about or asked us, so we wait until he says ‘Hey I don’t feel it.’ Then we can adapt.”

➤ DeAndre Bembry was out of the rotation to begin the game, but came off the bench with 12 points on 5 of 5 shooting, five boards two steals and finished a plus-24.

“He was almost flawless — energy, defensivel­y he was great no matter who his matchup was. He had steals, he had blocks, he had deflection­s. Offensivel­y he was near perfect,” Steve Nash said.

“Proud of him. He’s played well for us this year. He didn’t deserve to not be in the rotation.”

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