Lakers Rumors: Brandon Ingram Could Return To Court By 8 Weeks After Surgery; Resume Full Basketball Activities 4-8 Weeks After That Point

Matthew Moreno
2 Min Read
Richard Mackson-USA TODAY Sports

One week after it became evident Brandon Ingram would miss the rest of the regular season, the Los Angeles Lakers announced he underwent successful thoracic outlet decompression surgery on his right arm. The procedure was performed by Dr. Hugh Gelabert at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.

Prior to revealing Ingram was dealing with a Deep Venous Thrombosis (DVT) — or blood clot — in his arm, he missed two consecutive games because of right shoulder soreness. Lakers head coach Luke Walton expressed optimism Ingram would return from the initial issue.

Though, Walton also said the team wasn’t certain how Ingram sustained the injury, and mentioned he wasn’t able to lift his arm above his head without feeling pain and a pull.

In announcing Saturday’s surgery, the Lakers added Ingram is expected to make a full recovery before the start of the 2019-20 season. According to ESPN’s Dave McMenamin, he could be full-go on a basketball court within four months:

Ingram could be back on the court as soon as eight weeks, sources told ESPN, with a return to full basketball activities taking an additional four to eight weeks beyond that.

Regardless of where Ingram lands on the reported timeline, his offseason workouts will impacted to some degree. However, even if Ingram requires upwards of four months to make a full recovery, he still would be available come the start of training camp.

Despite being limited to 52 games because of a suspension, sprained ankle and now shoulder trouble/blood clot, Ingram still finished this season averaging a career-high 18.3 points and 49.7 percent shooting to go along with 5.1 rebounds and 3.0 assists.

Matthew Moreno is a journalist from Whittier, Calif., who is a credentialed reporter and is currently the Managing Editor of DodgerBlue.com and LakersNation.com. In addition to covering Los Angeles Dodgers and Los Angels Lakers games, Matthew has a strong passion for keeping up to date with the sneakerhead culture. It began with Michael Jordan and Air Jordan shoes, and has carried over to Kobe Bryant's signature line with Nike. Matthew previously was the lead editor and digital strategist at Dodgers Nation, and the co-editor and lead writer at Reign of Troy, where he covered USC Trojans Football. Matthew graduated from California State Long Beach University with a major in journalism and minor in communications. Contact: matt@mediumlargela.com