Lakers’ Avery Bradley chooses not to restart Orlando, cites family concerns


Los Angeles Lakers shooting guard Avery Bradley has chosen not to play in the Orlando season restart of the NBA, he told ESPN Tuesday night.

Bradley, who started 44 games for the Lakers this season, informed the Lakers’ management of his decision to stay behind.

At the forefront of Bradley’s decision to stay with his family is the well-being of his oldest son, Liam, his 6-year-old son. Bradley and his wife, Ashley, have three children.

Liam Bradley has a history of difficulty recovering from respiratory illnesses, and it is unlikely that he has received medical clearance to enter the Orlando bubble with his family.

“As committed to my Lakers teammates and organization as I am, I finally play basketball for my family,” said Avery Bradley. “And so, at a time like this, I can’t imagine making a decision that can put my family’s health and well-being at the slightest risk.

“As promised too, I will use this time to focus on building projects to help strengthen my communities.”

Bradley has co-led with Kyrie Irving of Brooklyn of a coalition of players who have tried to have several issues focused on social justice and racial equality and empowerment addressed with the NBPA and the NBA in the league restart.

Bradley has been a key two-way player for the Lakers, who are the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference in the 22-team restart in Orlando.

Kentavious Caldwell-Pope would be the likely candidate to replace Bradley in the starting lineup. The Lakers will be able to sign a replacement player for Bradley, with free agent guard JR Smith emerging as a leading candidate, sources told ESPN.

Bradley will lose a projected salary of $ 650,000 by ignoring the resumption of the season. He has averaged 8.6 points and 2.3 rebounds for Los Angeles this season.

In a decade in the league, Bradley has averaged 11.8 points in his stays with the Boston Celtics, Detroit Pistons, LA Clippers and Memphis Grizzlies.

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