Magic guard Jalen Suggs out indefinitely after right MCL sprain
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An up-and-down season in Central Florida got even choppier over the weekend, as the Orlando Magic announced that bellwether starting guard Jalen Suggs will be out indefinitely after suffering a Grade 1 sprain of the medial collateral ligament in his right knee.

Suggs sustained the injury during Orlando’s loss to the Bulls on Friday, landing hard following a foul by Chicago center Jalen Smith on a drive to the basket late in the third quarter:

Despite being in evident pain as soon as he hit the deck, Suggs got to his feet and shot and made a pair of free throws to give Orlando a three-point lead before asking to come out of the game on the next possession; he wouldn’t return. With Suggs sidelined for the rest of the contest, the Bulls blitzed the Magic 30-19 in the fourth quarter, coming away with a 121-114 win that dropped Orlando to 8-10 on the road this season.

It’s a frustrating setback for Suggs, who had just returned to the lineup following a seven-game absence due to a left hip contusion, and for the Magic, who have been at their best this season with the hard-charging 24-year-old guard on the floor.

“It’s tough,” Magic coach Jamahl Mosley said before the team’s Sunday home win over the Pacers, according to Jason Beede of the Orlando Sentinel. “Your heart goes out to him just because he was just coming back, then something happens again.”

Jalen Suggs will miss some time after suffering a right knee injury against the Chicago Bulls. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images)
Geoff Stellfox via Getty Images

Suggs has dealt with an array of injuries since the Magic drafted him out of Gonzaga with the fifth overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft, missing significant time in three of his first four pro campaigns. He made just 35 appearances last season, with a pair of injuries — first a lower back strain, then a left knee issue — keeping him on the shelf from early January through the end of Orlando’s playoff run. Recovery from arthroscopic knee surgery had Suggs on a minutes restriction to start the 2025-26 season; he’s topped 30 minutes just five times in 23 outings.

“He’s such a resilient young man,” Mosley said Sunday. “You know he’s been through this process before, and he’s going to continue to bounce back regardless of the scenario.”

When Suggs has been on the floor, the former All-Defensive selection has made a significant impact, averaging 15 points, 4.7 assists and 3.7 rebounds per game, shooting a career-best 62.1% on 2-pointers and 85.7% from the free-throw line. Among players who’ve made at least 20 appearances, Suggs sits tied for third in steals per game, seventh in deflections per game and tied for 13th in loose balls recovered per game — all despite only logging 25.4 minutes a night.

Those two-way contributions make Suggs something of an advanced stats darling: a top-40 performer this season according to estimated plus-minus, box plus-minus, DARKO, LEBRON, xRAPM and Net Points Per 100, among other metrics.

The Magic have outscored opponents by 11 points per 100 non-garbage-time possessions with Suggs on the floor, according to Cleaning the Glass, and have been outscored by 4.9 points-per-100 when Suggs is out of the game. That 15.9 points-per-100 swing is not only the biggest on-court/off-court differential on the Magic, but one of the biggest in the entire NBA. Among players who’ve logged at least 500 minutes this season, only Giannis Antetokounmpo, Nikola Jokić and Lauri Markkanen have had a more dramatic impact on their teams’ fortunes than Suggs.

"Just his energy out there, he's just a huge part of the team,” Magic star Paolo Banchero recently told reporters. “So when he's out there, I just think we're better."

Banchero’s assessment shows up in the data — three of Orlando’s four most potent lineups this season have featured Suggs — and in the overall results. The Magic have gone 14-9 with Suggs in the lineup, serving as an elite point-of-attack defender and a complementary source of playmaking and shot creation, compared to just 6-7 in the 13 games he’s missed.

That’s why — even with Banchero now back from a groin strain that cost him nearly a month, with primary offseason addition Desmond Bane producing well in his first season in Orlando, and with third-year wing Anthony Black in the midst of an eye-popping breakout — losing Suggs for another extended stretch would be troubling for a team that enters Monday’s action tied with the Miami Heat for sixth in the East.

Reaching the heights for which many ticketed the Magic before the season — not just a third straight postseason appearance, but actually winning a playoff series, advancing and having a chance to push for a slot in the Eastern Conference finals and perhaps beyond — will likely require the Magic actually getting all of their best players on the floor. That hasn’t happened all that much: Thanks to Banchero’s groin strain, Franz Wagner’s high ankle sprain and Suggs’ injuries, the Magic have had all four of Banchero, Wagner, Suggs and Bane available for just 11 of their 36 games, with the quartet sharing the floor for just 125 minutes, according to PBP Stats.

Suggs might not miss an extended stretch; he “avoided structural damage in his right knee,” according to Beede of the Sentinel, which could mean that he’s back on the court in a week or two. The longer it takes for Suggs (and Wagner) to get back into the fold, and for them to resume getting reps alongside Banchero, Bane, Black and the rest of Orlando’s rotation mainstays, the tougher it’s going to be to develop the sort of cohesion that can fuel the deep postseason run the Magic have had their sights set on making.



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