I'm not sure how much a shorter season would help. Let's look at the major injuries:
Giannis -- hurt himself trying to jump over Kevin Love and landed badly. Yes, he's had some back issues that might have exacerbated things, but that injury was due to a pretty specific play.
Morant -- tried to jump over Anthony Davis and his wrist bent the wrong way when he fell.
Kawhi -- was load managed all season, and lasted all of two games in the playoffs.
George -- missed a third of the games during the regular season, and is hurt again.
Herro -- broke his hand diving for a loose ball.
Fox -- broke his finger when he was hit while someone was trying to block his shot.
Embiid -- he's never played more than 68 games in a season, and the only year he didn't miss at least one game in the playoffs was the 2020 bubble year when there was four months off in the middle of the season, and the Sixers only lasted four games before we swept them.
Oladipo -- Played 42 games, which was the most he'd played since 2017-2018.
Would a shorter season have prevented any of these injuries? A lot of them were contact injuries, so not due to overuse. The ones that weren't contact injuries came to players that have missed years of their career to injury issues.
Agree with this.
I don't mean to be callous, but what I've witnessed in this postseason has been a couple of fluke contact injuries, some injury-prone players sustaining yet more injuries, and some players with high-risk playstyles finding out why their playstyle is considered high-risk. This is all unfortunate, but not particularly surprising.
It's a shame that it has scuttled what had the makings of a great first round of basketball. But I don't think less basketball is necessarily the fix here. Nobody can fault the Clippers for putting too many miles on George and Leonard, but they're stuck in the breakdown lane anyway.
Specifically, I've been irritated by the discourse around Giannis's injury to begin with. Guy goes down with a back injury for a couple of games and we blame the schedule, the rules, everything except the
guy whose entire game is running people over. He gets away with more contact than anybody I can remember. Even Shaq, physical as he was, didn't typically have a running start before he pasted some unlucky schmuck.