Fierce1 wrote:Celts17Pride wrote:Fierce1 wrote:Kobe Bryant tore his achilles in April 2013 and 8 months later, Kobe returned to action in December 2013.
and was never the same player.
Reason for that is Kobe was old when he tore his achilles.
JT is just 27 years old and had surgery 12 hrs after suffering the injury.
And JT is not the type who relies on superior athletic ability.
You don't need to be super athletic to jack up 3s.

If all Tatum is going to be when he comes back from the torn achilles is a guy who jacks up 3's and nothing else, we don't have a shot in hell at winning anymore titles with him
That's why you take it slow. Nice and easy. Don't rush it. So that he can come back as close to the player he was pre-injury as possible. The longer the recovery takes, the better he will be on the court - the better chance we have at winning another ring with him.
Also, Tatum is only 27 but:
a) The younger the player is (and the more $ you are paying him, the bigger the role is he has on your team), the more risk there is if you rush him back and he gets hurt again
b) Haliburton is younger than Tatum (25) and it's been announced Haliburton will miss the entire 25-26 season.
Chet Holmgren (age 20) had a foot injury and missed his entire rookie year. It was reported that he was healthy enough to play in like March/April but wasn't worth the risk to bring him back that late in the season.
Jamal Murray was 24 yrs old..sat out the entire season with torn ACL. They didn't rush him back..same thing, he probably could've tried to come abck in March/April but was not worth the risk..there's a greater risk with a player that young, especially when they are such a key piece of your team and getting paid so much $.
Embiid was basically out for the entire season in his first 3 years of his career. He was young and was seen as their franchise player. So they took it slow, didn't rush him back and he turned into an MVP.