BuffaloBull wrote:
There's a difference between playing through pain and playing injured, and as a professional, elite athlete, I'm sure Derrick knows his own limits better than anyone on this board. And he doesn't need Thibs to be his babysitter.
Rose has EXPLICITLY admitted that he came back too soon from his toe injury and that it cost him more games. This idea that players know best and are infallible is beyond belief to me. Haven't you guys heard the hundreds of stories of players admitting that they came back too early from an injury and that it ended up costing them?
DASMACKDOWN wrote:This is in reference to Doug,
KCJHoop K.C Johnson
RT @TeddyGreenstein: Rose: "The back’s feeling better. I should be ready to go tonight. "
This is coming from the horses mouth.
If you were coach and your star says what Rose said, do you then proceed to say, screw you, you are sitting down?
Again, Rose has admitted that he's come back too soon from injury before.
Also, it doesn't take a "screw you" to tell Rose that he's going to sit a game. Let's not build strawmen arguments here. If Thibs told Rose that he wasn't playing, the odds of Rose suddenly becoming anti-Thibs and fueling a coup against Thibs, ala Ben Wallace, is about 0.
DuckIII wrote: I'm not defending it. I'm operating on the presumption that the Bulls medical staff is not committing malpractice with regard to the franchise player to win a regular season game against the Hornets.
You're just building a strawman argument. A doctor's job is to tell a player whether or not he can play, what steps he can take to remedy an injury, etc. The Bulls doctor is not thinking about HCA or the probability of beating NO without Rose.
This is what some of us are arguing. That we could have and would have easily beaten NO w/o Rose. And that resting Rose would have been better for his ailing back than playing. This last sentence you can't disagree with. You don't need a doctor to tell you that not playing basketball is better for an ailing back than playing basketball.
DuckIII wrote:And one other thing: I've seen countless players play with back spasms in the NBA over the years, even getting treatment on the sidelines during the games in an attempt to stay loose. And Rose's issue hasn't even been calling for that type of in-game management.
Wrong. Rose was getting back massages on the sidelines during the Bucks game. And when he came back in, he was clearly being hampered by his back.
Cliff Levingston wrote:You make it sound like Thibodeau was in Rip's face telling "i don't care if you're hurt, you're playing!" Rip himself has said that he really wants to be on the floor and guys can play through injury. Is it a coincidence that Rip was out for a few games, came back for Detroit then sat out for 5 more games. You think Thibodeau got in his face saying "I DON'T CARE IF YOU'RE HURT, YOU'RE PLAYING DAMNIT, ICE!!!!" Not a chance; Rip wanted to stick it to his old team and re aggravated the injury because of it.
It's about as simple as this: if you say you can play, you'll play. Thibodeau will lean on his best players to win games when they're available. The only gripe you'll find from Cliff Levingston about Thibodeau is that he waits too long into blowouts to empty the bench. That's it.
And this is exactly the philosophy that a number of us are railing against.
I don't understand how you someone can see what happened to Hamilton after we used that philosophy, and then strongly continue to advocate for that philosophy.
Rip wanted to play. Rip was medically cleared to play. Rip has now missed more games after playing.
How does anyone not see a problem with that?
Ron Harper wrote:Rangers coach on 24/7 had a great view of injuries.
Something like "Being hurt is a mindset, there is a difference, if you can't play then you don't. But if you're in the training room, asking for games off, and getting massages I think that's a slippery slope. Playing hurt is a mindset that everyone has to deal with"
That's not exact, but it's the overall message. I agree 100%. Playing hurt is just something that happens. I'm sure a lot of you have done it. Things do heal. You can play through a lot of things, and you should because at some point you are going to have to.
It's not like one day you can say "okay, now I'm going to push myself through this" ...No, it's a mentality that you work for. You see how deep you can go mentally. You find where you can get that inner strength. It's completely and 100% necessary to be a champion and I think a lot of times (or even all of the time) this gets over looked on this board.
Play through pain, it's a mentality, and it's so so important.
First of all, I definitely appreciate the mental approach of pushing through injuries. And let it be known that John Tortorella has had no influence on me understanding this.
But do you really think that Rose sitting out against the Hornets (or Bobcats) would really all of a sudden turn him into a giant p*ssy? You think that he would all of a sudden forget how to play through pain?
That's preposterous. Rose is one of the toughest players in the entire league. He's one of the most competitive players I've ever seen. A coach deciding to rest him (against Rose's will) for a game or two won't change that.
Also, you talk about this mentality. So what does that say about Rose that he was only able to play 11 minutes against the Bucks? That he played the least minutes out of all the starters against NO? Does this mean that he doesn't have the mentality to fight through injuries?
Obviously not.
Cliff Levingston wrote:Cliff Levingston has got to agree with coldfish here and expand on it.
The moment you get complacent and think you don't need to play guys or play hard against sub-par competition, you get beat (or almost lose). Look at the Heat this year and their losses to some bad teams: can it be explained any other way really? That team has no excuse for losing to the Bucks twice.
Really? Are you seriously arguing that the Heat lost to the Bucks because the Heat have been overresting their players? There is absolutely no correlation between the two.
Cliff Levingston wrote:If Derrick says he can play, he'll play, and did. Thibodeau had a pretty quick hook for him when A. it was apparent that Rose wasn't 100% and B. we had a huge lead.
If it was apparent that Rose wasn't 100% and had to have his minutes reduced more than any other starter, what was the point of having him in the game to begin with? Were we going to lose without his 6 points and 6 assits? Did we gain some much needed chemistry in those 22 minutes that we will need in the playoffs?
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The main point is that this idea that "if player X wants to play and is medically cleared to play, he should play and no one should argue with this" has been entirely discredited.
1) Rip was cleared to play and wanted to play, but he continued to reaggravate it and now he's out indefinitely. Could it have possibly been more beneficial if Thibs had told Rip that he won't play until he's 100%? I'd argue that this is very possible. You guys seem to think this is crazy talk.
2) Rose has admitted to coming back too soon from injury. Again, your philosophy failed. And again, Thibs could have made the right move by telling Rose to sit more. Instead, he adopted your philosophy and it hurt the team.
So right there, we have two instances in which this philosophy failed. What I'm arguing is that other factors need to be looked at and that it's not such a simple minded process.
Rose started having back problems against the Bucks. Then before the Nets game, he said his back was still bothering him. Then he ended up playing only 11 minutes and could barely walk w/o pain.
Then we played the Hornets, the 2nd worst team in the league. A simple cost/benefit analsyis would tell you that benefits of resting Rose clearly outweighed the costs. The only real cost was the chance of losing (losing being a HUGE cost, b/c I consider HCA vastly important). But the chance of losing was very small. If the other players took the game seriously, the odds were incredibly in our favor. The fact that we won while Rose played only 22 mins and had a whopping 6 and 6 is evidence of this.
The benefit of resting Rose was that it would help heal his back. It was clear during the game that his back was bothering him. Can anyone tell me that he would not have benefited from not playing in the game, not going through shoot around, and not warming up? Anyone who has ever had a back problem (including myself) knows that rest is the best medicine. And I don't need to talk about the benefits of having a healthy Rose, do I?
And just as a last quick question, can someone tell me what we gained by having Rose play 22 minutes last night while being clearly and visibly hampered by his back?