Warriors' Ellis out at least 3 months after ankle surgery

Warhawk

Give blood and save a life!
Staff member
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3556108

The Golden State Warriors won't have Baron Davis or Monta Ellis in their starting lineup on opening night.

In the latest blow during a difficult summer for Golden State, Ellis -- just awarded one of the biggest pay raises in league history -- will be sidelined at least three months, possibly four, after suffering a severe high ankle sprain in his hometown of Jackson, Miss.
Ellis underwent surgery Wednesday to repair a torn deltoid ligament in his left ankle, after he informed the club late last week that he had injured himself working out. More specifics about how Ellis sustained the injury were not immediately available.
The team confirmed the injury Wednesday afternoon.
Ellis' ankle will be immobilized for six weeks, followed by at least six weeks of off-court rehab before the guard can return to basketball workouts.
Ellis will miss training camp and the Warriors' preseason schedule, which includes a trip to China, along with at least the first month of the regular season.
Ellis was unavailable for comment Wednesday, and his agent, Jeff Fried, could not immediately be reached.
It was less than a month ago that Ellis received a six-year, $66 million contract extension from the Warriors, whose tumultuous offseason began with Davis making a verbal commitment to sign with the Los Angeles Clippers on the very first day of free agency.
The contract calls for Ellis to earn a flat $11 million in each of the next six seasons. He made just $770,610 last season, the final year in a modest three-year deal he received as a second-round pick in 2005.
Golden State, which failed to reach the playoffs last season, insisted that it achieved its top two offseason priorities by re-signing Ellis and fellow restricted free agent Andris Biedrins.
The Warriors were nonetheless stunned by the sudden nature of Davis' departure -- as Davis initially was expected not to opt out of the final year of his contract -- and now have likely lost the prolific guard expected to inherit much of Davis' scoring responsibilities until December at the earliest.
The Warriors responded to Davis' exit by signing swingman Corey Maggette away from the Clippers to join co-captain Stephen Jackson, and by signing Los Angeles Lakers restricted free agent Ronny Turiaf to add bulk on their front line.
They also matched the Clippers' offer sheet to retain restricted free agent Kelenna Azubuike and acquired backup point guard Marcus Williams in a trade with New Jersey. The Warriors are likewise extremely high on first-round draft pick Anthony Randolph, and thus did little to prevent forwards Mickael Pietrus (Orlando) and Matt Barnes (Phoenix) from following Davis out the door.

It remains possible that the Warriors could trade forward Al Harrington before the start of the season, with Harrington reportedly open to a move. Yet there's really no replicating what Ellis provides for the Warriors, especially given coach Don Nelson's plans to use Ellis regularly at point guard after playing him primarily as a shooting guard in Ellis' first three pro seasons.

Ellis, 22, seemed to understand his importance to the team's post-Baron future when Ellis shared at a news conference in late July that Davis recently "told me it was time to hand over the torch."

Ellis averaged 20.2 points, 5.0 rebounds and 3.9 assists last season. He won NBA Most Improved Player honors in the 2006-07 season, averaging 16.5 points, 3.2 rebounds and 4.1 assists.

The only solace for the Warriors is that Ellis does have a history of making strong, fast recoveries from major injuries. He slipped to No. 40 in the 2005 draft, in spite of a decorated high school career, because of a knee problem.
But he has since proven more productive in the NBA than any of the 10 players drafted out of high school that year, which was the last time high school players were eligible to be selected. That group includes No. 6 overall pick Martell Webster (Portland); No. 10 Andrew Bynum (Los Angeles Lakers); and No. 18 Gerald Green (drafted by Boston, now with Dallas).

Ellis suffered what initially appeared to be a serious knee injury during a summer-league practice in 2006, and endured an even scarier fall early in training camp last October that resulted in a neck sprain and required Ellis to be immobilized and carted off the court.
In both cases, though, Ellis missed minimal time. He appeared in 77 and 81 games, respectively, after the two injuries.
Ellis is also known for his boundless confidence, as evidenced when he scoffed at reporters' recent suggestions that the switch from shooting guard to the point will be a problem.

"I'm going to improve every part of my game," Ellis said last month. "That's what I do. That's why I play basketball . . . to improve and to become the best player [who] ever touched a basketball."
 
As if their prospects weren't gloomy enough...

Marcus Williams, get out of the drive-thru & into the gym...do some intervals and slap yourself in the face. This is your chance.
 
Well, any chance we had of making the playoffs just improved very little...but hey, thats the kind of thing that needs to happen for us to make it, injuries to key players.
 
Marcus Williams never struck me as much of a gunner to satisfy Nellie ball. I'm curious what mad invention Nelson comes up with to cover for Ellis. Wouldn't surprise me if he tries to use Anthony Randolph at the one,:eek: even if Livingston makes the team.
 
Ummmm Ellis is a little more comparable to Kevin Martin since Ellis won ROY and Kevin Martin was runner up. Douby isn't close to either one of them talent or skill wise.


ellis didnt win rookie of the year and martin sure as hell wasnt runner up... and douby is a pefect comparison to ellis... a sg in a pg body asked to play pg....
 
and douby is a pefect comparison to ellis... a sg in a pg body asked to play pg....

That's a a pretty meaningless way to compare players. Ellis is a borderline allstar. Kind of like saying Shaq and Brian Skinner are comparable because both are centers without a great jumpshot.

If you want to say the best we could possibly expect out of douby is an ellis type of player, OK. But to say they are perfect comparables is innacurate. Never mind the fact that Douby is more of a shooter than the slasher type that is Ellis. Ellis may never be a prototypical PG, but he sure has a better chance of being a Tony Parker type than Douby ever does.
 
Ellis may be in more trouble than just a surgical knee repair. Seems there is not yet clarification as to what he was really doing in his "work out" that caused the knee injury. If for some reason, he violated terms of his contract as to a "work out" that is way out of bounds of a gym or fitness center, then he could be out longer than 3 months. Too bad too, he was a real plus for the warriors.
 
That's a a pretty meaningless way to compare players. Ellis is a borderline allstar. Kind of like saying Shaq and Brian Skinner are comparable because both are centers without a great jumpshot.

If you want to say the best we could possibly expect out of douby is an ellis type of player, OK. But to say they are perfect comparables is innacurate. Never mind the fact that Douby is more of a shooter than the slasher type that is Ellis. Ellis may never be a prototypical PG, but he sure has a better chance of being a Tony Parker type than Douby ever does.

I don't honestly think that anyone was trying to equate Douby to Ellis. Ellis is obviously a superior player. I think the comparison was that they are both tweeners. Neither is the prototypical shooting guard or point guard. Their style of play is similar, so the implication is that perhaps Douby could be a poor man's fill in until Ellis comes back. Actually Douby would fit right into Nellie's style of play.
 
According to the print edition of this morning's Sacramento Bee (Sports section, page 2 - "In Brief"):

According to team sources, the Golden State Warriors have questions about the explanation guard Monte Ellis gave them regardin ghow he sustained an ankle injury. The team has launched an investigation, dispatching athletic trainer Tom Abdenour to Jackson, Miss. to take a look at Ellis.

Ellis informed the Warriors on Aug. 23 that he had injured his left ankle working out in Jackson. He had surgery Wednesday in Alabama to repair a torn deltoid ligament in his left ankle. He also sustained a severe high ankle sprain and disruption of ligaments above the ankle joint. He is expected to miss a minimum of three months.

Team officials, according to one of the sources, are skeptical about Ellis' explanation of how the injury occurred because of its severity. In a conference call with local media Wednesday, Golden State executive vice president Chris Mullin said he didn't know the details, only that "I was told he was working out in Jackson."

Ellis signed a six-year, $66 million contract late last month, making him the team's highest-paid player. NBA contracts include clauses that exclude activities such as motorcycle riding. If the Warriors find Ellis in violation, they could fine him, suspend him or terminate his contract.

And once again, I have to wonder what some of these guys have for brains. If it does turn out he was violating the terms of his SIXTY-SIX MILLION DOLLAR contract, I hope they give him a ginormous fine!!!
 
Reminds me of Vladimir Radmanovic. He injured his shoulder while snowboarding, and lied about it to the Lakers before admitting the truth. The Lakers could've voided his contract, but they didn't.
 
http://cohn.pressdemocrat.com/default.asp?item=2258557

So according to this unnamed doctor the deltoid ligament is a very serious injury and Monta's career is in jeopardy.

Under the best circumstances to repair the deltoid ligament to a perfect orientation and length is difficult. The difficulty is compounded by rehabilitation where you try to return it some some flexibility. Ellis could get a stiff ankle or a tight ankle. When he tries to pivot he might stumble. He might not be able to push off as much or accelerate or explode to dunk. He might not be as explosive as he is now
 
http://cohn.pressdemocrat.com/default.asp?item=2258557

So according to this unnamed doctor the deltoid ligament is a very serious injury and Monta's career is in jeopardy.


Wow...that would be such a shame. While he doesn't have the big personality of a Baron Davis or Stephan Jackson, he was probably the Warriors best player last year. Certainly he was the key to their future. Not to mention the fact that he always seems like a pretty nice, humble kid whenever I hear him interviewed. While ultimately the Warriors do need to determine the source of the injury, regardless of the cause it would be a terrible break for the team if it turns out to be a Grant Hill type situation. I hope he makes it back to where he was athletically because I'm not sure he has the tools to make it as a "crafty" point guard in the league.
 
^^^^^^

Not very (if at all). The W's are back in the lottery this year.. I wouldn't be surprised if the Kings are the best team in Norcal again this year (after a short two year reign for the W's). Too bad, they were a good story two years ago.
 
This kind of news makes me very happy to have K-Mart. I am enamored with the way he has quietly become the best player in Northern California. And, arguably the 2nd best player in California, for his money. Baron is making more and so is Pau, and they are marginally better than Kevin, so, for the money, Kevin is a steal and a half.
 
It's never the scandal (incident) but the cover-up. Ellis lied about it or at least did not come clean right away. I believe the W's would have grounds to void his recently signed huge contract. For his sake and the team, hopefully he can recover fully and won't be like that other "rising star" Jay Williams (Chicago Bulls) who had a similar motorcycle accident which ended his NBA career costing him multi-millions of dollars.
 
MOPED!!!! ahahhahaha wow. He could have at least done it on something cool. The only thing monta has on kevin is speed, well defense too, but i think kevin is a better player all around player and also better to build a team around.
 
its easy to say that now. and i would void his contract in one instant. its a no brainer...i think that the warriors are trying to see if they can trade him before they void it.
 
its easy to say that now. and i would void his contract in one instant. its a no brainer...i think that the warriors are trying to see if they can trade him before they void it.

Uh...not so much of a no brainer when the kid was recently considered your future. Voiding is fairly serious stuff. More serious than you seem to be. Unless its career threatening, its an unlikley move unless they can be sure of being able to resign him to a smaller number.
 
Back
Top