The’s Heat‘s series-opening victory in New York included a sprained right ankle for star forward Jimmy Butler that might affect his status for Game 2 and beyond, writes Andrew Lopez of ESPN. Butler didn’t address the media after the game to talk about his condition, but he said in a brief ABC interview that it felt “like a rolled ankle.”
Butler was injured on a drive to the basket with 5:05 left to play. He collided with Josh Hart, who inadvertently kicked Butler’s ankle as both players fell to the court. Butler remained in the game, but was used almost entirely as a decoy and was clearly hobbled as he tried to move, Lopez adds.
“You just don’t know with ankle sprains,” Miami coach Erik Spoelstra said. “I don’t even know if we’ll know more by (Monday). We’ll just have to see. It’ll be a waiting game.”
Butler had 25 points, 11 rebounds, four assists and two steals as he played nearly 44 minutes and didn’t come off the court in the second half until the final seconds when the game was decided. He only took one shot after injuring the ankle, but he promised Spoelstra that he could stay in the game without hurting the team.
“I know him,” Spoelstra said. “I know when I can look in his eye. He assured me that he wasn’t going to be a liability and wanted to stay in there and make sure we get this swing. I mean that’s the most important thing. We’ve had a lot of chaos and a lot of things going on, but main thing being the main thing, we got to secure it and get the win and then we’ll figure out what happens in the next 48 hours.”
Butler has one day of rest before the series resumes Tuesday in New York, then a longer break before Game 3, which is Saturday in Miami. The first injury report for Game 2 will be released at 5:30 pm Monday, so we’ll get a better idea then of Butler’s status.
The Heat are already dealing with a depleted roster after first-round injuries to Tyler Herro, who is sidelined until at least early June following hand surgery, and Victor Oladipo, who will miss the rest of the playoffs following surgery on the torn patellar tendon in his left knee.
“This group has been through a lot,” Spoelstra said. “We’ve been through a lot this entire year and we’re not being insensitive to when guys get picked up or get hurt, but our group has learned to compartmentalize and focus on the task at hand and that’s what it was. There wasn’t an overreaction. We’ve had enough tears behind the scenes, some guys getting hurt and stuff like that. We have to get the job done.”