
The Los Angeles Lakers may be holding out hope for a playoff return from Luka Doncic, but former NBA champion Danny Green offered a far more sobering outlook on the superstar guard’s recovery timeline.
Speaking on Doncic’s reported Grade 2 hamstring strain, Green made it clear he doesn’t expect a quick return — or even a return at all during the postseason.
“When I heard grade two, I said he’s out. He’s not coming back,” Green told Heavy Sports in a conference call with NBA reporters on Friday. “That’s usually four to six weeks. But if you’ve already injured it before, you can add another two weeks on top of that.”
Doncic missed four games right before the All-Star break with another left hamstring strain.
Green, who won his third championship with the Lakers in 2020, leaned on personal experience with similar injuries to explain why hamstring strains — particularly at that severity — are among the most difficult to manage in the NBA.
Danny Green Explains Why Grade 2 Hamstring Injuries Are So Risky
According to Green, the distinction between Grade 1 and Grade 2 hamstring injuries is significant — and often misunderstood.
“Grades are based on how big the tear is,” Green said. “A Grade 1 is small. A Grade 2 is a bigger tear than you’d like.”
That difference directly impacts recovery time. While a mild strain can heal in a few weeks, a more severe tear introduces risk of re-injury, which can derail not just a series — but an entire postseason run.
“Hamstrings are very sensitive,” Green said. “If you pop that thing, you’re out for a very long time.”
Green, who is now working as an ESPN NBA analyst, estimated a typical Grade 2 recovery at four to six weeks but added that a re-aggravation — like the one Doncic reportedly suffered — could extend that timeline to six to eight weeks.
“At the very least, five or six weeks,” he said.
Lakers Playoff Schedule Adds Pressure to Luka Doncic Timeline
The timing of Doncic’s injury only adds to the urgency for the Lakers.
Doncic suffered his second hamstring injury of the season on April 2 in Oklahoma City, leaving a narrow window for a potential return during the first-round series against the Houston Rockets.
If the series goes the distance, it would conclude on May 3 — exactly one month after the injury.
The full Lakers-Rockets schedule underscores the challenge:
| Date | Game | Time (ET) | Watch |
|---|---|---|---|
| April 18 | Game 1: Rockets at Lakers | 8:30 p.m. | ABC, ESPN app, DIRECTV |
| April 21 | Game 2: Rockets at Lakers | 7:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock, DIRECTV |
| April 24 | Game 3: Lakers at Rockets | 5 p.m. | Prime Video |
| April 26 | Game 4: Lakers at Rockets | 6:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock, DIRECTV |
| April 29 | Game 5: Rockets at Lakers* | TBD | TBD |
| May 1 | Game 6: Lakers at Rockets* | TBD | TBD |
| May 3 | Game 7: Rockets at Lakers* | TBD | TBD |
(*if necessary)
That timeline means the Lakers may need to survive most — if not all — of the first round without their superstar.
Lakers Playoff Hopes Tied to Luka Doncic Recovery Timeline

GettyCan Lebron James (center) lead the Los Angeles Lakers past the first round without Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves?
With Austin Reaves also sidelined by an oblique injury, Los Angeles is already entering the postseason short-handed. Green noted that both injuries are difficult in their own ways, but emphasized the long-term risk associated with rushing a hamstring.
“If he doesn’t play in the playoffs, I thought they were going home,” Green said.
The Lakers have leaned on LeBron James and their supporting cast to close the regular season, but Doncic’s absence removes a primary playmaker and scoring engine from the lineup.
Green acknowledged that modern recovery methods — including regenerative treatments — could help accelerate healing, but remains skeptical of a first-round return.
“It does help speed the process,” he said. “But I still don’t see him getting back sooner than five or six weeks.”
For now, the Lakers face a difficult reality: their championship hopes may depend on how long they can extend the series — and whether Doncic can return before time runs out.
3-Time NBA Champion Drops Brutal Luka Doncic Timeline for Lakers