The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Capela awaits Hawks debut

Injured center will miss six, maybe seven more games.

- By Sarah K. Spencer sarah.spencer@ajc.com

Clint Capela is not content with his current situation.

The 25-year-old center has been battling a nagging right heel injury since late Decem- ber, and it has relegated him to the sideline since the Hawks acquired him in a four-team trade deadline deal Feb. 5.

“I’m not here to sit on the bench and clap my hands,” Capela, officially diagnosed with a right calcaneus contu- sion and plantar fasciitis, said at practice Thursday. “My job is to go out there and play and be dominant, as dominant as I can (be). So when I don’t do that, it’s hard.”

The Hawks (19-44) are obviously hoping for the same thing: a starting-caliber, rim-running center who can rebound the ball and bolster the team’s poor defense. But as Capela rehabs, it’s looking more and more like that will come to fruition next season instead of this one (which might not be the worst thing, since the Hawks, looking to become a competitiv­e, playoff-bound team, sit 14th out of 15 teams in the Eastern Conference standings).

Capela was cleared for impact activity Wednesday along with Skal Labissiere (left knee chondral injury). He said Feb. 9 at his introducto­ry news conference that he hoped to play after the AllStar break but didn’t specify an exact date. In his first time speaking to the media since that day, he mentioned he’s still waking up with a little bit of a limp.

“The past few days, it’s been pretty sore ... I’m really trying to be really cautious about it, because it’s something that comes and goes,” Capela said. “I don’t get too excited when I feel good, because I know I’m having a lot of ups and downs.”

Capela is permitted to do conditioni­ng and some basketball drills, and he was working on his midrange shot at Thursday’s practice. He said his pain level has gone down since he was first injured, but it’s clearly still giving him trouble.

Capela and Labissiere will be reevaluate­d March 18 and are guaranteed to miss at least six, possibly seven more games (the Hawks play Oklahoma City on March 18).

After that date, the Hawks only have 12 games left. Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce pointed out Thursday that even if Capela is able to return and play in some games this year, he will be on a minute restrictio­n, and it will take some time to look like his old self.

“Both of these guys have been out of NBA basketball for a few months now,” Pierce said. “So really, when you get them on the court, everything will be a bonus, but I don’t know about the expectatio­ns.

be a little bit low just considerin­g where they are right now. They’re barely moving in the drills they’re doing right now. I can’t imagine, when they get on the court, we’re going to expect this elite level. It’s just going to be basic level in terms of their conditioni­ng and activity.”

When he was still with Houston, a playoff-bound team that’s No. 4 in the Western Conference standings, Capela was occasional­ly playing through his injury and would experience soreness, particular­ly in the second half of games. Now, as eager as he is to make his debut, both the Hawks and Capela are taking a cautious approach.

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