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Cleveland Cavaliers Star James Harden Suffers a Thumb Fracture
Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

James Harden is not the type of guy to sit on the bench and watch. Never has been. So when news broke that the 11-time All-Star fractured his right thumb during Cleveland’s 109-94 win over the New York Knicks on Tuesday night, the basketball world barely flinched. Because if you know Harden, you already knew he was going to play through it.

Per ESPN’s Shams Charania, Harden intends to gut it out. No surgery. No extended absence. Just tape it up, wrap it tight, and let’s go. The Cavaliers confirmed the injury is a fracture of his thumb located on his non-shooting hand. Will he be able to play through it?

How Serious Is Harden’s Injury?

According to injury analyst Jeff Stotts, players with similar injuries who skip surgery typically miss an average of 6.5 games, or roughly 17 days. That’s the baseline. But Harden appears ready to ignore the baseline entirely.

He’s listed as questionable for Wednesday night’s game against the Milwaukee Bucks, which means there’s a real chance he suits up with a wrap on his thumb and goes out there and drops 22 and 9. That would be very on-brand.

The bigger concern? The Cavaliers are already short-handed. Donovan Mitchell is out with a groin strain, and Evan Mobley is sidelined with calf injury management. Cleveland needs Harden. Not just as a scorer, but as a playmaker, a pressure-release valve, and the kind of veteran presence that keeps a playoff-contending locker room grounded when stars start dropping like flies.

Harden’s Impact Since Joining Cleveland

Harden was acquired from the Los Angeles Clippers on Feb. 3 in one of the more eyebrow-raising deadline moves of the season. And in just seven games since the trade, the guy has been exactly what Cleveland needed.

He’s averaging 18.9 points, 8 assists, and 4.6 rebounds per game with the Cavs. Those numbers are a slight dip from his 25.1 points, 8.1 assists, and 4.8 rebounds with the Clippers, but context matters. Harden isn’t the lead dog in Cleveland. He doesn’t need to be. He’s the smart, experienced player that championship contenders covet.

And the results? The Cavaliers have gone 6-1 since the trade. Cleveland is tied for third in the Eastern Conference at 37-22, right there in the thick of things with the playoffs approaching. They’ve won eight of their last nine games. Whatever Harden is doing, it is clearly working.

Can Harden Play Through a Broken Thumb?

The short answer is yes, probably. The longer answer is: it depends on how that thumb feels when the adrenaline wears off, and the swelling kicks in. He scored 20 points and played 32 minutes on Tuesday, the same night he apparently suffered the fracture. He didn’t come out of the game. Didn’t make a scene. Just played basketball with a broken thumb.

At 36, Harden has been in this league long enough to know his body. He knows when to push and when to pull back. Right now, with the Cavs rolling and the playoffs on the horizon, he’s pushing.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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