The Denver Post

Morant ready to rejoin Grizzlies

- By Teresa M. Walker

Ja Morant’s eight-game NBA suspension is over, and the two-time All-star may rejoin the Memphis Grizzlies.

The dynamic guard was expected to be on the bench Monday night when Memphis hosted Dallas, though it’s unclear exactly when he’ll play, with the earliest being Wednesday. The Grizzlies announced Sunday that Morant would not play against the Mavericks because of a “Return to Competitio­n Reconditio­ning.”

“He is going to be part of practice (Tuesday), and obviously we’re hopeful for Wednesday so long as everything medically clears out,” Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins said, adding the delay is part of the “ramp-up process.”

The Grizzlies host Houston on Wednesday in the first of two consecutiv­e games against the Rockets in Memphis.

The Grizzlies know Morant has been working out, trying to be ready for this moment. Memphis was off Sunday after back-to-back wins, and Jenkins said he would like Morant to practice or at least participat­e in a shootaroun­d before seeing game action.

Morant first stepped away from the team March 4, hours after he livestream­ed himself on Instagram displaying a gun at strip club in Colorado following a game against the Denver Nuggets. The Grizzlies said on March 8 that Morant would be sidelined for four more games.

Morant met with NBA Commission­er Adam Silver in New York before the NBA announced his suspension last week, including six games he already had missed.

The league investigat­ion found that Morant was “holding a firearm in an intoxicate­d state” — but did not prove the gun was owned by Morant “or was displayed by him beyond a brief period.” The NBA also did not find that Morant had the gun with him on Memphis’ flight to Denver, or that he possessed the gun in any NBA facility.

Police in Colorado conducted their own investigat­ion and concluded there was no reason to charge Morant with a crime after looking into the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the video.

Morant said in an ESPN interview that the gun was not his and that he takes full responsibi­lity for his actions.

But the strip club incident wasn’t Morant’s first eyebrow-raising move. The Grizzlies had been talking with Morant about his offcourt conduct even before the March 4 incident.

“I can see the image that I painted over myself with my recent mistakes,” Morant told ESPN. “But in the future, I’m going to show everybody who Ja really is, what I’m about and change this narrative that everybody got.”

Morant, whose suspension cost him $669,000 in salary and possibly a chance to max out the fiveyear contract he signed last July by making the ALL-NBA team, also has to keep working on himself away from basketball.

Morant said he underwent counseling during his suspension.

“He’d probably be the first one to tell you: ‘ Nothing is going to change immediatel­y overnight,’” Jenkins said.

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