The Sebastian Express wrote:You two can cool it or you'll make me get a stick.
get an MRI on the stick before you use it...just to be sure
Moderators: DeBlazerRiddem, Moonbeam
The Sebastian Express wrote:You two can cool it or you'll make me get a stick.
Your return to your desired activity level will depend on the extent of damage and the procedure performed on your knee. In general, you will be allowed to return to sports in 4-8 weeks after surgery. You must have good motion, strength, and control of your knee. How quickly you return depends on several factors, including: 1) your own rate of healing; 2) the damage found at surgery; 3) if you have any complications; 4) how well you follow the post-operative instructions; 5) how hard you work in rehabilitation.
Ripcity4life wrote:Found this about Meniscus Injuries and it's very good and if i am reading it right then Camby should miss 6 to 8 weeks.
Link to a piece called : Patient's Guide To Meniscus Injuries
http://www.toc-stl.com/info/meniscus.htm
If your car keeps breaking down do you keep taking it to the same mechanic? If you have multiple cars that are in constant need of repairs do you not consider the possibility that the mechanic you pay to maintain them may have some fault in the matter? At the very least don't you bring in an outside mechanic to check up on the work/evaluate what has been done? It's entirely possible that everything has been done right but it is also possible that the training staff has some culpability
TBpup wrote:If your car keeps breaking down do you keep taking it to the same mechanic? If you have multiple cars that are in constant need of repairs do you not consider the possibility that the mechanic you pay to maintain them may have some fault in the matter? At the very least don't you bring in an outside mechanic to check up on the work/evaluate what has been done? It's entirely possible that everything has been done right but it is also possible that the training staff has some culpability
Agreed...that certainly seems reasonable. An 'outside' audit, not one done my the people who hired or pay the staff.
As for pointing out Camby's games missed in his career, that might be helpful if Camby's knee injury as a player under the care of this medical staff were an isolated incident instead of the most injured group of knees in the league. Also, how many times has Camby required surgery versus just missing games due to sprains etc. That is quite a difference.
Wizenheimer wrote:TBpup wrote:If your car keeps breaking down do you keep taking it to the same mechanic? If you have multiple cars that are in constant need of repairs do you not consider the possibility that the mechanic you pay to maintain them may have some fault in the matter? At the very least don't you bring in an outside mechanic to check up on the work/evaluate what has been done? It's entirely possible that everything has been done right but it is also possible that the training staff has some culpability
Agreed...that certainly seems reasonable. An 'outside' audit, not one done my the people who hired or pay the staff.
As for pointing out Camby's games missed in his career, that might be helpful if Camby's knee injury as a player under the care of this medical staff were an isolated incident instead of the most injured group of knees in the league. Also, how many times has Camby required surgery versus just missing games due to sprains etc. That is quite a difference.
again: does anybody know that an outside "audit" hasn't been done?
I see all kinds of calls for the 'training staff' to get fired (and what exactly is the difference vetween training staff and medical staff?). I see that a lot of people seem convinced that the Blazers are doing something wrong with players once they get to portland. That may be the case, but I have yet to see anybody identify what it is
and yet I see all kinds of rather strange analogies like cars and mechanics. I don't get that. The circumstances do strain belief, but there's as much evidence for coincidence as there is for fault. which is to say...none. At least no evidence has been advanced in this forum. Whether the Blazers have any I don't know
as a matter of fact, there's as much circumstantial evidence for the 'Andre Miller is a vampire' theory as there is for the 'training staff is incompetent' theory.
As to Camby missing games due to surgery versus missing games due to non-surgical injuries, I'm not sure that means anything. Camby missed a ton of games due to hip surgery earlier in his career. he once missed 12 games due to a sprained ankle. Another time he missed 18 games due to knee tendinitis.
I'm not sure it matters whether he misses 18 games because of tendinitis, 16 games because of meniscus surgery, or 12 games due to a sprained ankle
The Lakers have had 4 players undergo knee surgery in the last 6 months: Kobe, Bynum, Barnes, and Ratliff. Maybe the Laker's training staff is doing the same things the Blazer staff is doing. Or maybe they aren't
Wizenheimer wrote:
again: does anybody know that an outside "audit" hasn't been done?
I see all kinds of calls for the 'training staff' to get fired (and what exactly is the difference vetween training staff and medical staff?). I see that a lot of people seem convinced that the Blazers are doing something wrong with players once they get to portland. That may be the case, but I have yet to see anybody identify what it is
and yet I see all kinds of rather strange analogies like cars and mechanics. I don't get that. The circumstances do strain belief, but there's as much evidence for coincidence as there is for fault. which is to say...none. At least no evidence has been advanced in this forum. Whether the Blazers have any I don't know
as a matter of fact, there's as much circumstantial evidence for the 'Andre Miller is a vampire' theory as there is for the 'training staff is incompetent' theory.
As to Camby missing games due to surgery versus missing games due to non-surgical injuries, I'm not sure that means anything. Camby missed a ton of games due to hip surgery earlier in his career. he once missed 12 games due to a sprained ankle. Another time he missed 18 games due to knee tendinitis.
I'm not sure it matters whether he misses 18 games because of tendinitis, 16 games because of meniscus surgery, or 12 games due to a sprained ankle
The Lakers have had 4 players undergo knee surgery in the last 6 months: Kobe, Bynum, Barnes, and Ratliff. Maybe the Laker's training staff is doing the same things the Blazer staff is doing. Or maybe they aren't
Klinky wrote:I am with Wiz on this one. It's highly doubtful these injuries are the fault of the training staff. When you take on injury prone players it's kind of crazy to act shocked when they get injured.
Roy's knees were crap from the get go. Camby has been injury prone from the moment he entered the league. Oden, you cannot blame on the training staff because his knee self-combusted before the training staff really got their hands on him, basically setting the stage for him to become injury prone. Przy injured himself in a freak accident on the court, everyone saw it. I don't think the training staff has our guys doing the splits with one leg tucked under their body, nor do they have the authority to barge into players homes to insert anti-slip mats in their bathrooms. Then you have Pendergraph who had a congenital hip problem which needed surgery before he could play...
Com'on guys, seriously... Those examples blow gaping holes in the entire idea that our training staff is some how doing mad voodoo on our players.
Brandon-Clyde wrote:In fact I can not recall the last time Portland was below the league average for injuries.Hell I'd even bring in experts to look at the Rose Garden arena floor to see if it might be contributing to the injuries in some way.
OlFlashy wrote:Lebron would hurt derozan's development
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