Griffin suffered the injury during the fourth quarter of Stepinac’s 62-54 win over Iona Prep last Friday night at the Westchester County Center. The son of Toronto Raptors assistant coach Adrian Griffin, Griffin committed to Duke in November. He is the No. 3-ranked small forward in 2021 and a projected NBA Draft pick in 2022. Griffin missed some time last season with a foot injury, but came back to help the USA Basketball U16 win a gold medal at the FIBA Americas Men’s U16 Championship in Brazil in June. He suffered a strained back when he dove for a ball in the gold-medal game against Canada, and then missed Peach Jam with the PSA Cardinals. Follow Adam Zagoria on Twitter And Like ZAGS on FacebookCan a Duke recruit and a North Carolina commit join forces to win a State Championship?
— Adam Zagoria (@AdamZagoria) January 3, 2020
At @step_basketball they’re trying to find out.
Our latest documentary from @freshfocusports : https://t.co/PvGnPKE1Pz
By ADAM ZAGORIA
An MRI on A.J. Griffin, the 6-foot-7 Class of 2021 Duke commit, revealed he did not suffer any ligament damage after injuring his knee on Jan. 3, Archbishop Stepinac coach Pat Massaroni told ZAGSBLOG.
Griffin is expected to miss 2-3 more weeks and to return in late January.
Given that timeframe, he would miss Stepinac’s game with East Catholic High School (CT) on Jan. 18 at the Hoophall Classic. Stepinac is ranked No. 15 nationally by USA Today.