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Brooklyn Nets coach Steve Nash says 'good chance' Kevin Durant exits COVID-19 protocol this week

LOS ANGELES -- While Kevin Durant could be rejoining the Brooklyn Nets later this week when they are back in New York, Steve Nash says Kyrie Irving will need between a week and two weeks to ramp up before making his season debut.

Durant and Irving remain in health and safety protocols and are not with the team in Los Angeles, where the Nets beat the Clippers 124-108 on Monday night. But the team returns to New York after the game, and the Nets could have Durant and center LaMarcus Aldridge out of protocols and back with the team when they play Philadelphia on Thursday.

"I think there's a good chance Kevin will be," Nash said after the team's shootaround about whether Durant will be back with the team when it gets back home. "With Kyrie, I'm not so sure, but it's coming. He's already been [in protocols since Dec. 18]. ... He's got to be getting close."

Aldridge entered health and safety protocols on Dec. 14 along with five other Nets. The other five -- James Harden, James Johnson, Bruce Brown, DeAndre' Bembry and Jevon Carter -- were all cleared and played in the Nets' win over the Los Angeles Lakers on Christmas.

Durant and Irving went into protocols on Dec. 18. The day before, the Nets announced Irving would be returning to the team to play on a part-time basis. Because of New York City's vaccine mandate, Irving is not allowed to play in home games at Barclays Center or at Madison Square Garden, home of the New York Knicks.

Since the point guard has not practiced on a regular basis with the team since early October in training camp, Nash says it will take Irving time to ramp up. The Nets have yet to see Irving on a court since deciding to bring him back into the fold because he went into health and safety protocols.

"It's hard to say, but I would say probably somewhere between a week and two weeks," Nash said of the ramp-up. "He's obviously been isolating so that kind of puts another layer to the ramp-up. It's not like he's been working out so probably I'd imagine it's going to be closer to two weeks once he comes out of protocols. We'll just have to see how it goes, though, because we have to evaluate him from a physical and performance standpoint and a basketball standpoint as well."

After concluding this two-game trip in Los Angeles, the Nets only have two road games in their following nine games after Monday's game at the Clippers. They play at Indiana on Jan. 5 and then at Chicago on Jan. 12.

If Irving doesn't play in those games, the Nets could have him at Cleveland Cavaliers on Jan. 17 for the start of a four-game road swing.

Harden said on Saturday that having Irving back, even on a part-time basis, "will be huge for us."

"Hopefully we can get him back full-time," center Nic Claxton said. "But it's definitely gonna be scary hours [with Irving back]. I think he's gonna break the game for us, and make things easier for everybody on the court. And I'm just, I'm ready to get my brother back."