San Antonio Express-News

No timetable for Morant’s return

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LOS ANGELES — There's no timetable for Ja Morant to return to the Memphis Grizzlies, and the All-star guard knows he's made “difficult decisions and poor choices” that he has to be accountabl­e for, coach Taylor Jenkins said Sunday night.

Morant was not with the team in Los Angeles for games against the Clippers on Sunday and the Lakers on Tuesday while the NBA investigat­es a social media post in which Morant appeared to be holding a gun.

“Very tough moment, for sure,” Jenkins said of the video.

Morant streamed the video on his Instagram account early Saturday of himself holding what appeared to be a gun at a nightclub, hours after playing in Denver. He said in a statement through the agency that represents him that he takes “full responsibi­lity” for his actions and that he was going to “take some time away to get help.”

On Monday, police in Colorado said they were investigat­ing Morant's actions and whether he may have broken any laws. Morant's video is believed to have been filmed in Glendale, a small enclave surrounded by Denver and known for its strip clubs and shopping centers.

Capt. Jamie Dillon said police did not receive any calls or complaints about Morant's actions but began looking into them Saturday after learning about the video circulatin­g online.

The Grizzlies coach said Morant understand­s he's made “some difficult decisions and poor choices in the past.”

“He's definitely embracing the mistakes that he's made, but only time will tell," Jenkins said. "We're going to support him and we're going to hold him accountabl­e to make those changes.”

Jenkins declined to outline the steps Morant needs to take to rejoin the team, saying: “We love him, we want what's best for him, we support him. It's going to be a difficult process but we've got a great group to get through this.”

He called it “an ongoing healing process.”

The league, if it finds wrongdoing, could fine or suspend Morant.

Morant also was the subject of a league investigat­ion after a Jan. 29 incident in Memphis that he said led to a friend of his being banned from home games for a year. That incident occurred after a game against the Indiana Pacers. Multiple media outlets reported that members of the Pacers saw a red dot pointed at them, and a team security guard believed the laser was attached to a gun.

The NBA confirmed that unnamed individual­s were banned from the arena but said its investigat­ion found no evidence that anyone was threatened with a weapon.

Giannis’ ‘stolen’ stat wiped out

Giannis Antetokoun­mpo said he stole a triple-double. The NBA took it back.

The league adjusted the statistics from the Milwaukee-washington game Sunday night and erased Antetokoun­mpo's final rebound, the one that would have given him a triple-double.

He grabbed a defensive rebound with about nine seconds left, knowing that left him one rebound short of 10. He hustled the ball downcourt, got near the rim the Bucks were shooting at, hesitated for a moment before throwing the ball intentiona­lly into the bottom of the rim and catching it.

“Kind of stole one,” Antetokoun­mpo acknowledg­ed Sunday night.

On-site statistici­ans credited him with a missed shot and a 10th rebound from that play. The NBA reviews all stats from each game and regularly makes changes to correct errors or omissions, and it removed the last rebound Monday.

Milwaukee won 117-111. Antetokoun­mpo finished, officially, with 23 points, 13 assists and nine rebounds.

 ?? David Zalubowski/associated Press ?? Grizzlies guard Ja Morant, right, showed off what appeared to be a gun in an Intagram post Saturday.
David Zalubowski/associated Press Grizzlies guard Ja Morant, right, showed off what appeared to be a gun in an Intagram post Saturday.

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