ciueli wrote:Ari_Emanuel wrote:Just want to remind people that Steph Curry had bad injury luck for the first part of his career before he got stronger and luck turned in his favour later in his career.
Not saying Brandon Ingram is the same level of talent - he’s probably not going to be a top 20 player of all time. However, he’s definitely more talented than he’s shown and the bet is a change of scenery + physical and mental maturity will coalesce into a leap in performance for him, as well as a huge payoff for the raps. The odds are very good for a positive ROI.
Steph Curry missed a significant number of games in just one season in the first 8 seasons of his career, he was actually the picture of health outside of that regularly playing 70+ games per season, he even has two seasons where he played 80 games. There is no comparison between him and Brandon Ingram who has never been healthy in a season outside his rookie season where he played limited minutes in a bench role, he has literally never had a healthy season as a full time starter in his entire career, he's actually never even played enough games to qualify for postseason awards outside his rookie season.
Now I'm not saying Ingram staying healthy and playing a 70+ game season is something that can't happen, but I am saying that it seems very unlikely at this point in his career. I'll even go one step further and say we should probably be limiting his minutes and even load managing him the way we did in 2018-19 with Kawhai (no back-to-backs), that's the only chance I see for him to be healthy and ready to go come playoff time.
It's worth looking at the specifics of why Ingram missed games.
2017-18: Left groin strain (12 games), concussion (7 games, ended his season)
2018-19: Ankle sprain (7 games), blood clot in his arm caused by a vein being pinched (19 games, structural problem not blood condition)
2019-20: Right knee soreness (4 games), right ankle sprain (3 games).
2020-21: Toe (5 games), left ankle sprain (6 games at end of year so might have been shut down)
2021-22: Right hip contusion (7 games), right ankle sprain (5 games), right hamstring (10 + 3 games)
2022-23: Concussion (3 games), left toe injury (29 games)
2023-24: Right knee soreness (3 games), right achilles soreness (1 game), left knee contusion (12 games)
2024-25: Calf soreness (5 games), significant high-grade left ankle sprain (27+ games, shut down)
I think we can accept that joint sprains and muscle strains happen in basketball. I don't see any pattern to suggest that Ingram is particularly susceptible to sprains or strains to a specific part of his body.
What is unfortunate is that he has had two atypical injuries for basketball that caused him to miss a significant number of games (concussions and blood clot), as well as a few seemingly minor injuries that actually take a long time to heal (bone contusions, toe injuries).
IMO the only injury that should be of concern is his most recent ankle sprain. From what I have gathered it was likely a 3rd degree sprain but one that could be managed without surgery; I also suspect that it included a high-ankle sprain component which adds to the recovery time. Fortunately, you can fully recover from this injury and with proper rehabilitation there shouldn't be any significant risk of re-injury. We have to trust in the Raptors medical staff to get Ingram back fully healthy, which I am comfortable with after what they did with Kawhi.
Two additional things to note about his time in New Orleans that may very well be related. First, the Pelicans did not have a physiotherapist on staff until 2 seasons ago. Read that again—a professional basketball team without a physiotherapist on staff. Second, it was reported that some teammates were frustrated with Ingram because they thought he was unwilling to play through some injuries. Can you blame him if NOP has a considerably lacking medical staff of questionable competence?
I don't think Ingram is a particularly injury prone player. He's had some bad luck and a lack of support to properly take care of his body both to prevent injury and recovery from injury. Does this mean he won't get hurt this year? Of course not, but it's not like he has glass ankles (like Curry did before surgery) or a degenerative quad.