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Inside the Memphis Grizzlies' injury crisis that derailed their season

Injury report card and key takeaways following a disappointing season for the Grizzlies.
Nov 22, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant (center) looks on from the team bench during the first quarter against the Dallas Mavericks at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images
Nov 22, 2025; Dallas, Texas, USA; Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant (center) looks on from the team bench during the first quarter against the Dallas Mavericks at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Memphis Grizzlies finished the 2025-26 regular season with 25 wins and 57 losses, a record that fell far short of expectations after being in the playoffs just one season ago. A number of factors contributed to this outcome, with injuries playing a significant role. Here is an end-of-year report card for Memphis’ injury situation and how the team can best move forward.

Injury Report Card: 2025-26 Season

Overall Grade: D-

What started out as one or two injuries turned into a season filled with them. This team couldn’t catch a break. They played almost the entire year with nightly uncertainty about who would be available to suit up.

It all began before the season even started. During the off-season and pre-season, a number of Grizzlies players landed on the injured list, including Ja Morant, Jaren Jackson Jr., Brandon Clarke, Zach Edey, Scotty Pippen Jr., and Ty Jerome. Most underwent surgical procedures, delaying their timelines for return. Even when some of them worked their way back into the rotation, it wasn’t long until they found themselves on the injury report again.

At the beginning of the regular season, Memphis leaned on Jaylen Wells, Cam Spencer, Jock Landale, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Santi Aldama, Cedric Coward, Javon Small, John Konchar, Vince Williams Jr., and Jahmai Mashack to carry the load during this stretch. While some of these players were later involved in the mid-season trade with Utah, at the time they were key members of the group who helped keep the team afloat.

Fast forward to the end of the regular season, and Memphis had just six healthy players available to face the Jazz on April 10. Six players. That’s it. Even though those players deserve credit for competing through adversity, it also highlights the reality that a team simply cannot compete at the highest level when only six people are healthy enough to play.

Injuries are just part of the game, right? Doesn’t every team deal with injuries? Yes, of course, injuries are part of the game, and every team will experience them at some point during the season. However, having more than half the team out with injuries at the same time is not normal, nor is it normal for the rotation to always be in question because so many players are sidelined.

What’s next?

As the Grizzlies move forward into the off-season and upcoming year ahead, the number one priority should be getting healthy. Injuries will happen, but if they can have a relatively constant starting five and bench rotation, the confidence and chemistry as a group will strengthen. This becomes especially important as Memphis begins the rebuilding process and adds more talented pieces after the NBA Draft this summer. With improved health, this team has tremendous potential, and next season they’ll have a real chance to show it.

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