
Cavaliers guard James Harden has been diagnosed with a non-displaced fracture of the distal phalanx in his right thumb, the team announced today ( Twitter link). Harden sustained the injury in Tuesday’s win over New York and underwent X-rays on Wednesday to confirm the diagnosis.
Harden, who will undergo treatment and will continue to be evaluated, will be listed as questionable to play in Milwaukee on Wednesday in the second game of Cleveland’s back-to-back set, per the club.
The fact that Harden hasn’t already been ruled out for tonight’s contest suggests the injury shouldn’t require an extended absence — or possibly any absence at all. However, that’s still to be determined and will depend on the treatment plan. According to the Cavs, updates on the star guard’s status will be provided as appropriate.
Harden is left-handed, so the injury affects his non-shooting hand. The distal phalanx is the bone at the tip of the finger.
While it sounds like the news could’ve been worse for the Cavs and Harden, it remains to be seen how the injury will impact his play going forward. The 36-year-old has been highly effective since being traded from the Clippers to the Cavs at the deadline earlier this month, averaging 18.9 points and 8.0 assists in 32.0 minutes per game in his first seven outings with Cleveland. He has posted an excellent shooting line of .494/.488/.867 during that time.
As we relayed earlier today, head coach Kenny Atkinson said following the Cavaliers’ victory over the Knicks on Tuesday that adding Harden has given the club “renewed confidence.” Cleveland has won 13 of its past 15 games, including six of seven with Harden active.
“We understand we’re a better team,” Atkinson said, per Jamal Collier of ESPN. “That spirit, that confidence for some strange reason, it makes you play harder, compete harder, compete harder defensively. I felt like we were kind of missing that edge, that belief. I feel like we’re regaining that. A lot of it has to do with who we added in the trade.”
Harden told reporters on Tuesday that the team is playing well but still has “a few more notches to get to,” according to Collier.
“We got what, 25 games? I think we can get there,” he said. “Matter of fact, I know we can get there. I think it’s going to start defensively because offensively we can have six guys in double figures … defensive is going to be key. If we can find a way to really hone in defensively and really get stops and limit teams to one shot, we’re going to be very, very tough.”
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