Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Aldridge explains retirement, and then his return to the Nets

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NEW YORK — LaMarcus Aldridge had played through this before.

The Nets’ All-Star big man was diagnosed with Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome during his 200607 rookie season in Portland. According to the Mayo Clinic, it’s a condition in which an extra electrical pathway between your heart’s upper and lower chambers causes a rapid heartbeat. In Aldridge’s case, it caused a minor heart arrhythmia his rookie season, another in 2011, and an unrelated and equally concerning flare-up with the Spurs in 2017.

So when it happened again in an April 10, 2021 matchup between the Nets and Lakers, Aldridge had a game plan, and not the one Steve Nash was serving. He had seen heart specialist­s in San Antonio, Baltimore and Austin, Texas. The plan was supposed to be bulletproo­f. But it wasn’t. Far from it. Aldridge looked polished on offense — 12 points on 5-of-8 shooting from the field — but he was pummeled by Andre Drummond on a low-post possession. Drummond scored an and-one on that play, then put his hand parallel to the floor, a gesture universall­y known as “too small” that was repeated by everyone on the Laker bench.

All the while, Aldridge’s heart was racing with an irregular beat. It was the last time he touched the floor in a Nets jersey. Retirement came next.

Everything he thought he knew about his condition went out the window in one game. Up to that point, the game plan for his heart arrhythmia was as efficient as his mid-range jumper. An off game on the court pales in comparison to an off day for your body.

“Say you have something wrong with you, and then they say ‘A, B and C is going to happen,’” Aldridge explained as his process on Media Day. “B should take care of A and C should take

care of B, so it’s a way to get out of it.

“So if you have this checklist in your mind of something you’ve dealt with your whole career and how to get out of it, and you do all three of those things and you don’t get out of it, then you start freaking out. ‘OK, like, this is what I’ve kind of learned and what I’ve been taught. This is how I fix what’s going on.’ So that night, A, B and C wasn’t working for me. So I was like, what is this?”

Aldridge got home and his heart continued beating at an irregular rhythm. Then came the chest tightness. Then came the fear.

“It was just a combinatio­n of things I had never experience­d that came after what I had never experience­d,” he said. “There was just kind of an overwhelmi­ng 24 hours of new experience­s with a heart condition that (three heart specialist­s) put together a game plan for me for how I should feel or what should happen in each stage of the game, workout, whatever. So it’s like all that research was flushed down the drain in one game because I had never been in that position before.”

Neither had Nets GM Sean Marks, who spoke to Aldridge on a number of occasions after his abrupt

retirement. Aldridge’s first concern was quality of life: Would he be able to live the same way he was accustomed? When it became clear the answer was yes, the hooper inside began to take control.

First it was the treadmill. Could he get his heart rate up safely without putting himself in jeopardy?

“I think that was the first goal,” Aldridge said. “Everyday life quality, being comfortabl­e with that.”

Then came the tests, which he passed with flying colors. Then came his agent, followed by more conversati­ons with Marks, who tried to talk him out of coming out of retirement.

“I said, ‘Why? You don’t need this. Why would you come back?” Marks said. “I think it’s important to see the conviction. And it’s not conviction made without really doing your due diligence. He had already gone above and beyond in terms of talking to specialist­s and so forth, and being cleared. He wouldn’t have made that comment to me and have had those conversati­ons without already taking those steps. And then we further did our own testing, he’s been up here with our doctors, and that’s where we arrived at the opportunit­y to bring him back.”

 ?? Sarah Stier / TNS ?? The Nets’ LaMarcus Aldridge dribbles during the first half against the Charlotte Hornets last season.
Sarah Stier / TNS The Nets’ LaMarcus Aldridge dribbles during the first half against the Charlotte Hornets last season.

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