Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.Photo:Shahar Azran/WireImage

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Impact award recipient, (R) and Spike Lee on stage during 2023 Apollo Spring Benefit at The Apollo Theater on June 12, 2023 in New York City.

Shahar Azran/WireImage

Kareem Abdul-Jabbaris sharing an update on his broken hip — and his overall wellbeing — as he heals from surgery.

The former basketball player, 76, had an accidental fall in Los Angeles on Friday evening, PEOPLE confirmed his fall the following day with his longtime rep, Deborah Morales,who said he was having surgery on Saturday.

“You may have heard that Humpty Kareem had a great fall. It’s true,” Abdul-Jabbar shared Monday on hisSubstackpage. “I was at The Manhattan Transfer’s final public concert at Disney Hall, ready to read a letter from Kamala Harris and provide some praise of my own for a group I love and admire. But I fell and was carted off to UCLA Hospital with a broken hip.”

The six-time MVP player, who played for the Los Angeles Lakers in 1975-1989 for 14 years and the Milwaukee Bucks for six years prior, said he’d “like to say I fell while trying to save a child from plunging over a balcony, but I just tripped.”

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar attends a Lakers game in February.Allen Berezovsky/Getty

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar attends a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Milwaukee Bucks at Crypto.com Arena on February 9, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.

Allen Berezovsky/Getty

“Hard for me to accept that a once world-class athlete just stumbled,” he added. “But age is the great equalizer and humbles us all.”

Joking that he’s now a “world-class patient” recovering from surgery, the avid writer said he will be taking a break to “recuperate.”

“I will be taking a week or so off over the holidays to fully recuperate and spend time with my family. When I return, it will be with a shiny new hip and a lot of shiny thoughts to share.”

Since his night was cut short, he took some time to share what The Manhattan Transfer means to him, explaining that the first iteration of the a cappella group “first took the stage in 1969, the same year I first took the NBA court.”

He apologized for not being able to read the letter from the vice president to the “trailblazing artists” honoring their “long-lasting legacy” that he was proudly tasked with reading that night and shared it in full on hisSubstack, “complete with a cool seal and indecipherable signature.”

“On the plus side, my fall hit all the newspapers so I made your final show even more memorable,” Abdul-Jabbar teased. “Merry Christmas!”

source: people.com