Chicago Bulls guard Alex Caruso will undergo surgery for a right wrist fracture, which occurred after a flagrant foul from Grayson Allen during Friday's game against the Milwaukee Bucks, the team announced. Caruso will be re-evaluated in 6-8 weeks.
Injury Update: Alex Caruso will undergo surgery early next week and be re-evaluated in 6-8 weeks after sustaining a fracture of his right wrist in last night’s game versus the Milwaukee Bucks.
— Chicago Bulls (@chicagobulls) January 22, 2022
The play Caruso was injured on happened with just under six minutes remaining in the third quarter. While on a fast break, Caruso jumped to attempt a layup. Allen ran in from the wing to contest the shot. As both players were in the air, Allen hooked Caruso's right arm, turning the Bulls guard horizontal mid-air. Caruso then fell hard under the basket.
"Dude just grabbed me out of the air," Caruso said after the game. "It's kind of bulls---. I don't know what else you can do about it. I'm just glad that I didn't have any major scary injuries right away."
Initial X-rays on Caruso's wrist came back negative. Officials reviewed the incident and gave Allen a Flagrant 2 foul, which results in an immediate ejection.
It is not known at this time if he will face further discipline from the league. After the game, Bulls head coach Billy Donovan voiced his displeasure.
"It was really, really bad," he said. "For Alex to be in the air and for him to take him down like that, he could’ve ended his career. [Allen] has a history of this. That to me was really, it was really dangerous. I hope the league takes a hard look at something like that because they could have really, really seriously hurt him."
In college, while playing for Duke, Allen developed a reputation as a player who committed questionable -- and at times, dangerous -- plays. On at least three separate occasions, he blatantly tripped opponents mid-game.
After being drafted 21st overall in 2018, he was ejected from a Summer League game for striking an opponent in the head, too.
"I personally thought it was – it wasn’t good," Donovan said. "It was not good. For it to be even be extended to a Flagrant 2 and be thrown out of the game, clearly the officials must have felt there was some intent there, the way he yanked him and snapped him to the floor, his head bounced off the floor. Really, really, really dangerous play."
Caruso played 24 minutes for the Bulls on Friday prior to the injury, scoring seven points while adding eight rebounds and four assists. In his first season with Chicago, Caruso averaged 8.4 points and 3.9 rebounds per game.