Victor Oladipo is not ready to shut things down.
According to ESPN’s Jeremy Woo, Oladipo played in a “well-attended” private workout in Las Vegas on Monday morning, with what Woo described as a large contingent of NBA and European teams attending.
Woo said Oladipo played full-court five-on-five in a group workout of international pros.
“Multiple team sources in attendance came away impressed, with Oladipo described as being in excellent shape as he pursues another comeback,” Woo wrote.
Inducted into the IU Athletics Hall of Fame last year, Oladipo reached the pinnacle of his NBA career with the Indiana Pacers, when he was named an NBA All-Star twice in 2018 and 2019. He has played in 504 games in the league over 10 seasons and has a career average of 16.9 points per game.
But for the third time in just over four years Oladipo suffered a major knee injury in April of 2023. He has not played in the NBA since.
The latest injury involved Oladipo’s left knee, while his prior history of major issues related to his right. His prolonged absence has led to widespread speculation his playing days are over.
But Oladipo is determined to get another chance.
“I feel so great right now!! Better than I felt in the last 7 years mind, body and soul,” he wrote on his X account earlier this week.
First Play…. pic.twitter.com/GWCQjDDxIy
— Victor Oladipo (@VicOladipo) July 15, 2025
Oladipo’s Indiana coach posted on X yesterday about his former star player.
“For the NBA teams looking to get to another level of winning or trying to build a winner, Victor Oladipo is the right guy. Healthy and EXTREMELY hungry. WINNER!,” Tom Crean wrote.
Now 33, Oladipo had a harsh run of bad luck after becoming one of the game’s best. He missed 255 of a possible 374 games from when he initially was hurt while playing for Indiana in 2019 until his 2023 injury.
Oladipo became IU Basketball’s first National Player of the Year in 20 years when he earned the honor from the Sporting News following a remarkable junior season in 2012-13. He averaged 13.6 points, 6.3 rebounds, 2.1 assists, and 2.2 steals during that season while leading IU to its first Big Ten championship in 11 seasons and its first No. 1 NCAA Tournament seed in two decades.
In addition to his National Player of the Year honor, Oladipo was also named co-National Defensive Player of the Year and was a consensus First-Team All-American. Following his junior season Oladipo departed for the NBA, where he was the second overall pick by the Orlando Magic in the 2013 NBA Draft.
He’s played 11 years in the NBA with five different franchises. His best season to date was in 2017-18, when he averaged 23.1 points/game for the Indiana Pacers and was named Third-Team All-NBA, First-Team All-Defense, and won the league’s Most Improved Player award.
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