heavy.com

Is Damian Lillard Coming Back This Season? Injury Timeline, Latest Updates

Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard during an NBA game.

Damian Lillard is about to be on national TV in the NBA All-Star 3-point contest, and that’s exactly why fans want to know: Is Damian Lillard coming back this season?

The most direct answer is: No. Lillard is not on track to return for the 2025-26 season.Multiple reports and league/team framing have treated his torn Achilles recovery as a season-long absence, even though Portland has cleared him to take part inAll-Star Weekend shooting events.

Why he’s in the 3-point contest if he’s still out

The key detail: the 3-point contest is a controlled, non-contact event, no cutting, no defense, no repeated sprint/stop/pivot work that an NBA game demands.

Lillard is competing despite being sidelined this year due to a torn Achilles tendon suffered in the 2025 playoffs. Reuters noted the unusual nature of the appearance and framed it as a “despite being sidelined this season” storyline, which is exactly what’s driving the return-date searches tonight.

Damian Lillard injury timeline: the dates that matter

If you’re trying to piece together a realistic return window, these are the most useful mile markers:

2025 playoffs: Lillard suffers the Achilles injury while with the Milwaukee Bucks.

May 2, 2025: He undergoes surgery to repair the torn left Achilles,per CBS Sports.

July 2025:The Buckswaive-and-stretch Lillard’s contract to create flexibility for a major roster move (including signingMyles Turner).

July 2025: Lillard returns to Portland on athree-year, $42 million deal that includes aplayer option (2027-28) and ano-trade clause,per ESPN.

2025-26 season: NBA.com explicitly noted he wasexpected to miss the 2025-26 season, which has remained the consistent public expectation.

That’s why the most honest “return timeline” answer right now is: not this season, with the practical target being training camp / early 2026-27, assuming rehab stays on schedule.

The latest team tone

Portland hasn’t pinned a specific game-return date publicly — and for an Achilles, that’s normal — but the coaching staff has tried to balance optimism with patience.

At Lillard’s introductory availability after re-joining the Blazers, then head coach Chauncey Billups said he expects him back “as good as ever,” and joked Lillard would be the “highest-paid assistant coach in league history” while he rehabs.

That quote matters because it reflects the team’s posture: long-term health first, no rushing for a midseason cameo.

Contract context: why Portland did it (and why Milwaukee moved on)

Milwaukee’s decision to waive-and-stretch Lillard was driven by roster construction and cap mechanics, ESPN reported the move was made to acquire Turner.

Portland, meanwhile, brought Lillard home on a new deal at a very different price point than his previous superstar max-level money, signaling a reunion built around rehab + legacy + a longer runway rather than immediate 2025-26 wins.

Where Lillard already ranks in Blazers history

Even with this season lost, Lillard’s Portland résumé is already all-time. NBA.com noted he holds franchise records for points (19,376) and 3-pointers (2,387).

And tonight’s contest is a reminder of what he still does at an elite level: Reuters notes Lillard is a two-time 3-point contest champion (2023, 2024) and is trying to join Larry Bird and Craig Hodges as the only three-time winners.

Bottom line: If viewers see Lillard drilling shots and wonder if a late-season return is coming, the clean answer is still no return expected in 2025-26, but his presence tonight is a real sign that rehab has progressed enough for Portland to green-light a high-profile, basketball-specific workload.

Read full news in source page