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        <title><![CDATA[Nets get Jeff Green back for pivotal Game 4 against Bucks]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Nets get Jeff Green back for pivotal Game 4 against Bucks</media:title>
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<p>MILWAUKEE — Nets big man Jeff Green was cleared to return for Sunday’s Eastern Conference semifinal Game 4 <strong>after missing six straight playoff tilts </strong>with a foot injury.</p>



<p>The 35-year-old Green had been forced out of Brooklyn’s first-round Game 2 win over Boston after just 12:07 with a left plantar fascia strain. He’d initially been listed as questionable for Sunday’s tilt in Milwaukee, and had to go through pregame warmups before the Nets’ medical staff cleared him.</p>



<p>“Well, I don&#8217;t think we expect him to play a ton of minutes,” Steve Nash said of Green beforehand. “I think we’ve got to see how he looks and feels if he&#8217;s available, and see how it goes. He hasn’t played for a couple of weeks.</p>



<p>“He was on the court the last couple of days, but still in a kind of controlled environment. So I think a lot of unknowns there still. I mean, it’s nice to have him back, for sure. But we&#8217;re not sure what he can do and manage, and how sharp he’ll be. But we hope that we have the option of using him.”</p>



<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img  data-src="/uploads/2021/06/13/nets-get-jeff-green-back-for-pivotal-game-4-against-bucks-0.jpg" /><figcaption>Jeff Green has been cleared to return for the Nets&#8217; Game 4 against the Bucks.</figcaption><figcaption><span class="credit">NBAE via Getty Images</span></figcaption></figure>



<p>Brooklyn got to use Green for the first time since May 25. And it couldn’t come at a better time, after suffering a galling Game 3 loss in Milwaukee.</p>



<p>The 6-foot-8, 235 pounder provided another switchable big in Game 4 to help slow Giannis Antetokounmpo. Or at least try.</p>



<p>Green, who averaged 11 points on .492 percent shooting and a career-high .412 from 3-point range, was second in games played this season for the Nets with 68.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator" />



<p>Brooklyn got Green back, but <strong>hamstrung James Harden is still out</strong> despite the team’s claims the past few days that he’s making progress, and Nash struggled to define exactly what that progress consists of.</p>


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<p>“I&#8217;m not sure I can answer it,” Nash admitted. “I&#8217;m just going off of (asking) how&#8217;s James doing? &#8216;Good. It&#8217;s getting better.’ So, I asked him and he says he&#8217;s feeling better, doing better. I ask the staff, they say ‘yeah, it&#8217;s getting better.’ So I don&#8217;t know if I can detail what that is fairly.</p>



<p>“But he is on the court. He&#8217;s doing some shooting, some movement, his rehab, and he&#8217;s progressing in the right direction. But I don&#8217;t know exactly what he&#8217;s capable of right now. I think he&#8217;s still in that area where he&#8217;s got a little gap to make up. But he&#8217;s getting closer. So it&#8217;s been positive.”</p>



<p>Brooklyn lost Harden just 43 seconds into the series with right hamstring tightness, and he hasn’t played since June 5.</p>







<p>When pressed on exactly what benchmarks Harden has to clear before the performance team and trainers will clear him to play, Nash said it amounts to stringing together consecutive high-intensity practices.</p>



<p>“Just going off the last couple of occurrences with his hamstring, there’s a certain amount of continual high-intensity loads,” Nash said. “When he’s able to get up to full speed and do it for two or three days without recurrence or setback, then I think that’s kind of the markers.”</p>
			 
					
									<p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>NyPost</strong> - Author:<strong>Brian Lewis</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Brian Lewis]]></dc:creator>
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