Memphis G.M. ‘Couldn’t Care Less’ About Ja Morant’s Apology For Gun Incidents: ‘Ja Has to Prove It’

Morant was suspended twice in recent months for flashing a gun on social media

<p>Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty</p> Ja Morant

Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty

Ja Morant

Ja Morant is getting tough love from his Memphis Grizzlies team after getting suspended twice by the NBA in recent months for flashing a gun on social media.

Morant, 23, will serve a 25-game suspension at the start of the 2023-24 NBA season as a result of the second incident in May, after he was first suspended for eight games in March.

The two-time NBA All Star apologized both times, saying in May that "I know I've disappointed a lot of people who have supported me” and that he’s “committed to continuing to work on myself.”

But at the NBA Draft on Thursday, Grizzlies general manager Zach Kleiman told The Associated Press his player’s apology is pointless unless he shows change moving forward.

“At this point, it doesn’t matter until he follows through,” Kleiman said. “I couldn’t care less about words. Ja has to prove it.”

Kleiman told the AP he believes the NBA’s 25-game suspension “was appropriate” for Morant, who had spoken with league commissioner Adam Silver about the seriousness of the matter after his first suspension in March.

Related: Ja Morant Makes First Statement Since Flashing Gun on Social Media: &#39;I&#39;ve Disappointed a Lot of People&#39;

Jamie Sabau/Getty Ja Morant
Jamie Sabau/Getty Ja Morant
Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Ja Morant
Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Ja Morant

Silver said last month that he was “shocked” when he saw the video of Morant flashing a gun a second time, despite their conversation.

"An eight-game suspension was pretty serious and something that he, at least to me, seemed to take incredibly seriously in that time," Silver told ESPN. "And we spoke for a long time about not just the consequences that could have on his career, but the safety issues around it. [Morant] could've injured, maimed, killed himself, someone else with an act like that."

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Silver said he and Morant had also discussed "the acknowledgment that he's a star" and the impact his actions have because of his popularity. "He has an incredibly huge following, and [we discussed] my concern — and I thought he shared with me — that millions, if not tens of millions, of kids globally would have seen him do something that was celebrating in a way that act of using a firearm in that fashion," Silver said.

Related: Ja Morant Suspended from Memphis Grizzlies After Allegedly Showing Gun on Instagram

Justin Ford/Getty Ja Morant
Justin Ford/Getty Ja Morant

The commissioner then announced Morant’s latest suspension last week following the NBA Finals, calling Morant’s behavior “alarming.”

The back-to-back gun incidents were the latest in a string of off-the-court issues for the NBA star. Morant was previously involved in two other off-the-court incidents that The Washington Post reported on in March. In those instances, Morant was accused of threatening a security officer at a Memphis mall and also of punching a teenage boy during a pickup basketball game at his house.

Kleiman told the AP that Morant’s gun incidents were a part of a pattern of “problematic behavior” for the young player and that his future is in his own hands.

“There’s no room for steps back,” Kleiman said. “Ja has the opportunity to come back from this. And everyone wants him to be successful.”

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