Clippers Big Man Injury Update Just Raised A Bigger Concern

Yanic Konan Niederhauser's recovery hits a crucial juncture as he undergoes a follow-up foot procedure, raising questions about his availability for the Clippers' upcoming season.

Yanic Konan Niederhauser’s offseason has included another step in the recovery process after the Clippers big man had season-ending surgery in March to repair a Lisfranc injury in his right foot.

According to Law Murray of The Athletic, Niederhauser has since undergone a follow-up procedure that removed “hardware” from the original surgery. Murray said that’s a normal part of the recovery process, and he added that Niederhauser is still in a walking boot.

The Clippers never gave a recovery timetable when Niederhauser had the March surgery, and they still haven’t offered any firm update on when he might be back. Murray suggested he doesn’t expect the 23-year-old to be ready for opening night this fall and wouldn’t be surprised if he doesn’t return until after Christmas, though he noted that was only informed speculation.

Niederhauser, the No. 30 pick in the 2025 draft out of Penn State, saw limited action as a rookie. Across 41 games off the bench, he averaged 4.3 points, 2.9 rebounds, and 0.7 blocks in 10.3 minutes per game, with most of that quiet stretch coming in the first half of the season.

His role picked up before the injury hit. After the deadline deal that sent Ivica Zubac to Indiana opened more minutes, the 6-foot-11 center was part of the rotation right away. He played double-digit minutes in each of his final nine healthy games in February and March, posting 7.0 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 1.6 blocks in 16.6 minutes per game over that span.

When he’s cleared, Niederhauser is expected to be in the mix at center for the Clippers alongside Brook Lopez and Isaiah Jackson.

In Other News...

Warriors Just Lost Out On A Wing They Clearly Needed

The Clippers added another proven wing option by signing Rui Hachimura, a move announced by Lawrence Frank, the teams president of basketball operations. Hachimura arrives with a reputation for efficient scoring and dependable three-point shooting, traits that have made him a useful fit in recent postseason play and a player other teams around the league clearly wanted in the mix.

Golden State was among the clubs pursuing him, along with San Antonio, Minnesota and Brooklyn, but the Clippers came away with the veteran forward instead. For a roster that has spent plenty of time looking for size, shooting and versatility on the wing, Hachimura checks a lot of boxes, and his arrival gives Los Angeles another piece to lean on as it continues shaping the rotation. [Read more 🡒]

NBA Just Gave Pacers Fans Another Reason To Question The League

The NBAs latest round of discipline has stirred up more than a little skepticism around how the league polices its own rules. Utah was hit with a hefty fine for the way it managed late-game rest, while Indiana also got punished under the Player Participation Policy, a reminder that the league is still trying to draw a line between strategy and conduct it considers harmful to competition.

For Clippers fans, the broader issue may feel familiar because league enforcement often looks clearer in the abstract than it does in practice. The Pacers and Jazz cases have reopened the same old debate about consistency, especially when other teams have been part of similar tanking-related conversations without drawing the same kind of immediate attention, and that uneven history is what keeps making these rulings feel bigger than the fines themselves. [Read more 🡒]