Zerocious wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
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you need 2-3 more emoticons
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico
hands11 wrote:So what's going on again? He gets looked at Monday or he is going to test it Monday in practice? From what I can tell he is feeling better. He just wants to make sure it is healed enough to make it through the playoffs.
Now I'm hoping for a Friday return.
hands11 wrote:NY can still get a lot better, but I feel like we are on the hairy edge with DS, AD and AJ. 2 days rest is a very needed right now. I'd actually be fine if we played MIL without all 3 of them, so they can get 4 days rest. I would risk the one loss if it helped get them healthy so they have something left when CB returns.
miller31time wrote:Thought this was interesting. Not that it has any basis in reality, or that Antawn has any information more than just a hunch, but...
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fishercob wrote:The data suggest that max minutes do not lead to injuries:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/statistic ... eason=2007
and
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/statistic ... eason=2007
The players that are high on these lists that have gotten hurt either sustained freak/unlucky injuries (Brand's Achilles popping) or are injury prone (Gerald Wallace, Lamar Odom). But for the most part, the people on this list haven't spent much if any time out hurt.
So in the absence of more data directly to the contrary, I would say that the assertion that "max minutes lead to injuries" is false.
BigA wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
These exclude the people who don't get up to 60 games/2000 minutes or aren't on pace? The people missing alot of games, whether or not they play alot of minutes when they do play, aren't on this by definition.
fishercob wrote:-= original quote snipped =-
Understood, but the relationship between injury proneness and minutes played is hardly a linear one. Factors like conditioning/healthy lifestyle, genetics, and luck likely play as big, if not bigger, roles.
Players play big minutes because they're very good and their replacements are not.

t through 95 percent of practice and we just cooled him down at the end."In his blog, Ivan Carter wrote: Caron Butler practiced for the first time since Feb. 18 and felt fine afterward. The next test, according to the all-star forward who has missed 19 games with a left hip injury, will be how he feels tonight and tomorrow. As Butler said a few minutes ago, he also felt good while practicing back on the 18th but woke up the next morning feeling "terrible."
A firm timetbale for Butler's possible return has not been set but what happened today was clearly a positive sign. Butler said he is meeting with a person who specializes in hip issues tonight.
"I felt good, real good," Butler said. "We'll see how the body responds tomorrow but, I was able to move around with no pain. At the end, we just decided to pull me out just because I was feeling a little soreness in the groin."
More Caron: "I just went out there and they threw me into the fire. Coach just said: "go and be you out there.' And I felt good. I had a nice rhythm and my teammates were looking for me. I just felt good."
Coach Eddie Jordan was very encouraged by what he saw: "He looked great today. A lot of burst, speed and explosion...great passing and just running up and down the floor. He just looked good today, a lot better than I thought. He wen
fishercob wrote:The data suggest that max minutes do not lead to injuries:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/statistic ... eason=2007
and
http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/statistic ... eason=2007
The players that are high on these lists that have gotten hurt either sustained freak/unlucky injuries (Brand's Achilles popping) or are injury prone (Gerald Wallace, Lamar Odom). But for the most part, the people on this list haven't spent much if any time out hurt.
So in the absence of more data directly to the contrary, I would say that the assertion that "max minutes lead to injuries" is false.