The Commercial Appeal

Wiseman on returning to Memphis, IARP, knee injury

- Evan Barnes

SAN FRANCISCO — James Wiseman didn’t feel like a stranger at Fedexforum for the NBA playoffs. Yet it didn’t fully feel like home sitting on the Golden State Warriors bench.

Wiseman has only played in 39 games since being drafted in 2020 and none since April 10, 2021 due to a meniscus tear in his right knee. He’s yet to play in Memphis as he was in health and safety protocols last season and he’s missed this season while recovering from knee surgery.

There’s mixed emotions with Wiseman back in familiar territory for the

Western Conference semifinals. The former Memphis high school basketball standout got to enjoy spaghetti cooked by his mother Donzaleigh Artis but he’d also rather be playing in a series combining his two worlds.

“It’s always good to be home and feel that energy and atmosphere while being home,” Wiseman said at shootaroun­d Monday. “It ticked me off a little bit (not playing) because I wanted to play against Memphis since this is my hometown. It is what it is, it’s life. It’s going to happen.”

Being back in Memphis also reminded how Wiseman’s career has been more tease than thrills since leaving East High as one of the nation’s top recruits in 2019. His three-game tenure with the Memphis Tigers ended with him being declared ineligible and the athletic program in the middle of an investigat­ion by Independen­t Accountabi­lity Resolution Process.

Wiseman said he hasn’t been interviewe­d by the IARP, which uncovered at least four Level I and two Level II violations at Memphis between March 2019 and February 2021. Wiseman’s mother received $11,500 in moving expenses — which the NCAA deemed improper benefits — from Tigers coach Penny Hardaway in 2017 when Hardaway was still coach at East yet considered a booster because his name is on the Memphis athletics Hall of Fame building.

Wiseman had confidence that Hardaway

would keep the program afloat despite the investigat­ion.

“It’s going to go well,” Wiseman said. “Penny knows what he’s doing so he’s going to have a lot of great players come to his program. It’s going to go really well.”

He kept that optimism for his Warriors journey. Coach Steve Kerr told Wiseman to absorb the atmosphere of the playoffs, include the details on how to prepare from the veterans. He also studied how Jaren Jackson Jr. recovered from a torn meniscus in 2020, played just 11 games last season and became an All-defensive team candidate this season.

Wiseman also leaned heavily on advice from former Warriors guard Shaun

Livingston, who recovered from a gruesome knee injury in 2007 to win three NBA championsh­ips with Golden State.

As for Wiseman's recovery, he's not sure yet if he'll play in the NBA Summer League since that'll depend on the Warriors' training staff.

“I want to obviously be out there playing with my teammates,” Wiseman said. “But just keeping an even-keeled head, just making sure I reassure myself that I'm young, I'm 21, I've got a long career ahead of myself. It's really just taking it one day at a time and keep working.” You can reach Evan Barnes on Twitter (@Evan_b) or by email at evan.barnes@commercial­appeal.com

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