Updated: April 24, 2012, 2:20 PM ET
Associated PressOKLAHOMA CITY -- The Oklahoma City Thunder are still waiting for top reserve James Harden to be cleared after took an elbow to the head from the Lakers' Metta World Peace and sustained a concussion.
Coach Scott Brooks said Tuesday morning that Harden had not yet been cleared. He wouldn't say whether he would play Harden if doctors allow it, or if he'd hold him out as a precaution.
"That's hypothetical. I don't know," Brooks said. "Until I find out if that is the case, I would have to think about that."
The Thunder are locked into the No. 2 seed in the Western Conference playoffs with two regular-season games remaining, against Sacramento on Tuesday night and Denver on Wednesday night.
Harden was hurt when World Peace, formerly known as Ron Artest, swung his left elbow and hit him on the back of the head behind his left ear during a game Sunday. Harden was able to fly back to Oklahoma City and is going through the league's new process of getting cleared to play after a concussion.
"There's steps that we have to take. We just have to continue that, the process of doing all the steps," Brooks said, adding that there was "really no update."
He said Harden "did a few things but just not everything" in the team's shootaround on Tuesday morning.
"He seems fine to me," NBA scoring leader Kevin Durant said. "I'm happy that everything is OK with him, nothing too serious, I guess. We're just taking it a day at a time. We care more about James' health than him being on the court playing basketball for us."
Even with nothing to gain in the West standings, Brooks said he will "definitely" play his normal starters this week but he may reduce their playing time slightly.
"We still want to keep working on playing good basketball, working on our good habits," Brooks said. "We've done a good job all year. We're not going to stop now. No matter who plays, we still have a standard that we have to make sure it's in check.
"I really don't know right now the minutes. Still, they have to play a good amount of minutes to get a good rhythm and a good flow of the game. I can't imagine 40 minutes. It's probably mid-30s to low 30s on the guys that average that."
Durant ranks third in the league with 38.7 minutes per game and just moved past Kobe Bryant for the scoring lead after the Thunder's loss in Los Angeles on Sunday. Fellow All-Star Russell Westbrook is averaging 35.5 minutes.
"If I play, I don't want to play 15, 20 minutes," Durant said. "Scotty, whatever he wants me to do, I'll do it. But I really don't want to play a half or something like that. I want to go out there and, if I do play, kick it in full drive and use that as an opportunity to get better."
"Once I'm in the mode and the energy is going, I just don't like to get pulled out and sit for a while," he added. "I just want to hopefully play as long as I can. But we'll see what Scotty does."
Durant, who has won the scoring title the last two seasons, is averaging 27.906 points to Bryant's 27.862.
"I know if I was in that situation, it would be on my mind and I would want it," Brooks said. "I'm selfish and I would want to be able to say I'm the scoring champion. Kevin hasn't brought it up."
Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press
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