Put the Hibachi in storage. Gilbert Arenas is
essentially done for the season.
The Washington Wizards point guard had surgery Thursday for a left knee
injury that will sideline him for two to three months. Even the most optimistic
scenario has him coming back only if his team manages to make the NBA finals
without him.
Washington Wizards' Gilbert Arenas
walks off the court after suffering a tear in his left knee against the
Charlotte Bobcats in the first quarter of a basketball game in Washington,
Wednesday, April 4, 2007. [AP]
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"It's pretty much down," said guard DeShawn Stevenson, assessing the mood of
the locker room following Thursday's practice. "But at the same time, we are a
playoff team. We have to worry about the playoffs and winning games."
Arenas was diagnosed with a lateral meniscus tear and had arthroscopic
surgery at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington. He was injured in the first
quarter of Wednesday night's 108-100 loss to the Charlotte Bobcats.
Arenas, who averaged 28.4 points and six assists this season, was always
coming up with a new catch phrase. The best ones were his nickname -- Agent Zero
-- and "Hibachi!" which he would yell when shooting his jumper.
"It's an unfortunate incident," coach Eddie Jordan said. "As coaches in the
NBA, you have to be prepared for what one of my old coaches use to call
'thunderbolts.' And I think we are prepared."
Thunderbolts, indeed. The Wizards have lost both of their All-Stars to
injuries in less than a week. Caron Butler broke a bone in his hand in Sunday's
loss to the Milwaukee Bucks and is out for six weeks.
As a result, the Wizards are stumbling to the finish of what was a very
promising season only two months ago. They lost back-to-back games Tuesday and
Wednesday to the lottery-bound Bobcats and have fallen behind the Miami Heat in
the race for the Southeast Division title.
"That team had a chance to contend, and to lose their most crucial guy at the
most pivotal time ... it really destroys the whole season, everything they did,"
Heat coach Pat Riley said before his team's game at Cleveland.
The Wizards began the season confidently, declaring the Eastern Conference
finals as their goal. When Butler went down, they still hoped to rally around
Arenas -- even though they are 2-9 this season when Butler doesn't play.
"It's very difficult, to lead a conference and be the best team, and then all
of a sudden injuries kind of plague the team," captain Antawn Jamison said. "But
it's basketball. It's not the first time this has ever happened. It's just
difficult for us because we were on the brink of doing something special as far
as contending for the best record and really making some noise. Not to say that
is too far-fetched now, but the identity of the team is totally different."
With Arenas gone, Antonio Daniels will run the team like a true point guard,
and Jamison, Stevenson, Etan Thomas, Jarvis Hayes, Darius Songaila and others
will have to find ways to compensate for the 47.5 points combined averaged by
Arenas and Butler -- both of whom also played nearly 40 minutes per game.
"The bottom line is you can't reinvent the wheel in April," Jordan said. "You
stay with your system, but you shift the gears. You shift the focus to what your
strength is now. Not Gil, not Caron, but now to Antawn and to Etan."
Arenas had dubbed this season "The Takeover," and for a while he was as good
as his word. He dropped 60 on the Los Angeles Lakers, 54 on Phoenix and was
named Eastern Conference player of the month for December. He leads the NBA with
35 30-point games.
The combined success of Arenas and the Wizards, along with his flamboyant
self-marketing savvy, propelled him into another level of stardom. He made the
All-Star game for the third consecutive year, but this was the first time he was
voted by the fans as a starter.
Arenas started every game for the Wizards until Wednesday night, when he was
benched at the opening tip-off for being late for a shootaround earlier in the
day.
Arenas entered late in the first quarter and was injured less than two
minutes later, when Charlotte's Gerald Wallace inadvertently crashed into Arenas
after an off-balance reverse layup. Arenas' knee bent the wrong way, much like
that of a quarterback who has been hit low by a rushing lineman.
"Once he found out the severity of the injury, it kind of shellshocked him a
little bit," Jamison said. "It's hard because of the type of year he was having,
and the playoffs were coming upon us and we all know Gilbert -- he loves the
playoffs and the limelight and things like that."
It's the first significant injury for Arenas since an abdominal strain
sidelined him for 27 games during the 2003-04 season. He missed only two games
each of the last two seasons.
Arenas finishes the regular season with 2,105 points, becoming the
franchise's first player since Walt Bellamy to score more than 2,000 points in
three consecutive seasons.
"For our players right now, this could be a shining moment," Jordan said.
"It's a shining moment for the coaches also. When your two best players are
down, you're coaching a team now that has to move forward."