The Commercial Appeal

This Grizzlies season needs Clarke’s comeback

- Mark Giannotto Columnist Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK – TENN.

Years from now, perhaps the best way to remember the carnage that came from the 23rd season of Memphis Grizzlies basketball will be through a series of hard-to-believe trivia questions.

Question: How many games did the Grizzlies have their expected starting lineup?

Answer: Zero

Question: How many starting lineups did the Grizzlies use?

Answer: 43 (and counting). Question: How many players did the Grizzlies use?

Answer: 29 (and counting). Question: How many never played for Memphis again?

Answer: Too many.

It’s what makes the latest twist — maybe the last twist — of this particular­ly cruel season a refreshing change of pace. Yes, there’s actually some encouragin­g news to report — news that could serve as a runway to the possibilit­ies that remain for this franchise just as soon as whatever the heck it is we’ve been forced to watch (or turn off ) these past few months is over.

The 30th player the Grizzlies will use in a game this season won’t be a G League player on a 10-day contract. It won’t be an inconseque­ntial journeyman eating up minutes until this season come to its merciful end. It is likely to be forward Brandon Clarke, who could return to action Wednesday night at Fedexforum against the Los Angeles Lakers (7 p.m., Bally Sports Southeast) for the first time in 390 days.

In some ways, Clarke’s torn Achilles represente­d the beginning of this team’s descent into temporary misery. It happened mere hours before Ja Morant infamously filmed himself on Instagram Live holding a gun at a Denver area strip club in March 2023. Though former center Steven Adams had already been lost to injury by that point, the assumption at the time was he would be back for the 2023 NBA playoffs. Clarke’s setback was the first obstacle that felt like it could affect these Grizzlies’ immediate trajectory.

It was a particular­ly worrisome injury because Clarke’s game felt so reliant on his athleticis­m, on the raw jumping ability that depends so much on a healthy Achilles and led to so many entertaini­ng alley-oops during his first four seasons in the NBA.

More than a year later, he returns to a team that hardly resembles the one he left. The Grizzlies are already eliminated from postseason contention and playing for draft positionin­g. But Clarke remains a potentiall­y crucial piece moving forward, whether he can return to the form that made him so valuable during the Grizzlies’ 2022 playoff run or if he can’t.

The answer won’t come this season, not with only a few weeks left. The point of Clarke playing now is to provide him some momentum heading into the offseason, to get over the mental hump of coming back from a devastatin­g injury now when the results don’t really matter. Because we’re 10 games away from the results mattering a lot again.

The manner in which this season played out has made next season and the season after that — the only sea

 ?? STU BOYD II/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Brandon Clarke (15), of the Memphis Grizzlies, soars into the air to dunk the ball during a game against the Milwaukee Bucks in 2022 at the Fedex Forum in Memphis.
STU BOYD II/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Brandon Clarke (15), of the Memphis Grizzlies, soars into the air to dunk the ball during a game against the Milwaukee Bucks in 2022 at the Fedex Forum in Memphis.
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