The Brooklyn Nets may be without their most important offensive weapon for the remainder of the season, with Michael Porter Jr. facing another injury setback.
The team announced Thursday that Porter has suffered a strained left hamstring and will be reevaluated in two to three weeks, according to ESPN. With just over three weeks remaining in the regular season, there is a growing possibility that his campaign could already be over.
The injury comes at a difficult time for Brooklyn, not just because of Porter’s production, but also due to the timing within the season. The forward had already missed the past three games with a sprained right ankle before this latest issue surfaced.
An MRI conducted Wednesday confirmed the hamstring strain, adding to what has been a frustrating stretch for both Porter and the Nets.
Brooklyn currently sits at 17–52 and has dropped five consecutive games, leaving them with the third-worst record in the league. While the losses have piled up, the organization appears to have little urgency to rush Porter back given its positioning toward the NBA draft lottery.
Porter’s absence would be a significant loss regardless of context.
In his first season with the Nets after arriving from Denver, the former NBA champion has put together the best year of his career. He is averaging 24.2 points, 7.1 rebounds and 3.0 assists, emerging as the clear focal point of Brooklyn’s offense.
His scoring leap has been one of the few bright spots in an otherwise difficult season for the franchise.
The uncertainty now centers on whether Porter will have the opportunity to build on that momentum before the offseason begins. With the reevaluation window stretching into the final days of the regular season, the timeline leaves little room for a return unless his recovery progresses quickly.
For a Nets team already looking ahead, the focus may shift toward preserving their leading scorer’s health rather than risking further injury in a season that has already slipped out of contention.
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