Austin Reaves and the Bizarre Medical Drama Surrounding His Injury
The late stages of the NBA regular season are usually defined by high-stakes basketball, desperate playoff pushes, and scoreboard watching. For the Los Angeles Lakers, the final week of the campaign has instead been hijacked by a bizarre off-court dispute involving imaging protocols, miscommunications, and a very frustrated head coach.
Austin Reaves, the dynamic Lakers guard, is officially sidelined for the remainder of the regular season with a Grade 2 left oblique strain. But how the Lakers arrived at that diagnosis has sparked an unusual war of words between Los Angeles and the Dallas Mavericks.
The Accusation: JJ Redick Points the Finger
The drama began over the weekend when Lakers head coach JJ Redick made a startling claim during a practice session on the SMU campus. According to Redick, the medical staff in Dallas completely mishandled the initial MRI for Reaves, forcing the injured guard to undergo a second scan to get an accurate diagnosis. “I don’t know where the chain of command lies with Dallas imaging, but they scanned the wrong area,” Redick bluntly told reporters.

It was a striking accusation. Redick essentially threw the Mavericks’ medical personnel under the bus, insisting that the Lakers made their imaging requests entirely clear. For a coach watching his team’s postseason hopes hang in the balance, the frustration was palpable. Losing Reaves is a devastating blow for a roster already dealing with significant health issues, and Redick’s anger seemed to boil over into the public sphere.
Dallas Fires Back: Defending the Medical Staff
You do not publicly accuse a rival organization of medical incompetence without expecting some return fire. The Mavericks quickly issued a firm rebuttal, making it crystal clear that they believe the fault lies entirely with the Los Angeles side of the equation. “Our medical team followed standard imaging protocols based on the information provided at the time,” the Mavericks organization said in a released statement.
Read between the lines of that statement, and the implication is obvious: the Dallas medical staff scanned exactly what the Lakers told them to scan. If the wrong area of Reaves was examined, the Mavericks are pointing the finger squarely back at the Los Angeles training staff for providing inaccurate or incomplete information.
The Fallout: Reaves Sidelined for a Crucial Stretch
While the two franchises trade subtle jabs over medical protocols, the harsh reality for Los Angeles remains unchanged. Reaves is expected to miss four to six weeks, a timeline that rips him out of the rotation for the final slate of regular-season games and the early rounds of the playoffs.
Reaves originally suffered the injury during a brutal 139-96 blowout loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Showing incredible grit, Reaves actually returned to the floor after sustaining the oblique injury, logging 27 minutes and dropping a team-high 15 points. But adrenaline can only mask a Grade 2 strain for so long.
Without Reaves, the Lakers lose their premier secondary playmaker, a vital floor spacer, and a guy who has repeatedly proven he possesses the clutch gene when the lights shine brightest. Los Angeles currently sits at 50-29, holding onto the No. 4 seed in the crowded Western Conference. They are chasing the Denver Nuggets for the No. 3 spot—a team they hold the tiebreaker over—but closing out the season against the Golden State Warriors, Phoenix Suns, and Utah Jazz without Reaves is going to be a brutal uphill battle.
Redick Walks the Narrative Back
Perhaps realizing that a cross-conference medical feud does nothing to help his team win basketball games, Redick noticeably softened his stance ahead of Tuesday’s matchup against the Thunder. He stopped short of issuing an apology to the Dallas organization, but he effectively buried the hatchet.
“In the end, we got the image we needed,” Redick noted, shifting his tone toward gratitude. He acknowledged that the Lakers rely heavily on the accommodations of home teams throughout an 82-game grind. “We’re going to move on.”
Moving on is exactly what Los Angeles has to do. The MRI drama is ultimately a distracting footnote to a much larger problem. The Lakers are limping toward the finish line, and they have to figure out how to survive the Western Conference gauntlet without Reaves.
