Iggyemu wrote:You are usually a smart guy. But that was completely idiotic. I am sorry. If someone continues to get foot injuries..be it toe infections or broken ankles or stress fractures...then he has a problem. If he wasn't 7'5 those falls he takes wouldn't result in breaks..they would result in sprains. Yao is injury prone. To assume that only Rocket fans know this team is completely idiotic on your part. Get off this board more....the Rockets are not some secret team that plays in a secret league. They play in the NBA...they are consistently one of your better teams. People know of them. People know of our injury problems...people know of Yao and McGrady's first round failures etc.
I implore you...don't do that. Don't be that guy that considers himself special b/c he watches one particular team on a nightly basis. You are beyond that.
Well let's examine this then.
- Yao endured an extended period on the inactive list in his fourth season after developing osteomyelitis in the big toe on his left foot, and surgery was performed on the toe on December 18, 2005
- With only four games left in the season, Yao suffered another injury in a game against the Utah Jazz on April 10, 2006, which left him with a broken bone in his left foot. The injury required six months of rest.
- Early into his fifth season, Yao was injured again, this time breaking his right knee on December 23, 2006 while attempting to block a shot.
- On February 26, 2008, however, it was reported that Yao would miss the rest of the season with a stress fracture in his left foot.
To be fair, I'd forgotten about the one with 4 games left in the season.
- The knee shouldn't be recurring.
- The toe thing is pretty minor. It was the same as what Shaq had, no biggie.
- We now have a broken bone and stress fracture, both in the left foot, and spaced by nearly two years. I personally don't know the location, but that's going to be involved in saying "it's likely to be a recurring injury", which not a single doctor I've heard of has yet said.
Obviously there was no broken ankle, but the thing is, for an injury to be recurring, it needs to be in the same area. "Foot" is not the same area, it's too vague. Moreover, one of those two injuries was from an impact, which happens.
For the bolded parts, my statements in that were based not on people not getting information about the Rockets, but from that information more commonly coming largely from national sources. I know ESPN and TNT both have a good history of misrepresenting our team, I've seen it being talked about on their broadcasts plenty. Hell our own local sources misrepresent a lot of crap, and even our own local fans don't tend to realize the ridiculousness of say, the whole "first round" thing, for instance. You'll note that I didn't say WE'RE THE ONLY ONES THAT KNOW WHAT'S GOING ON WITH THE ROCKETS, I said MAYBE we're the only ones that paid attention to what his injuries REALLY are, as opposed to some inspecific nebular cloud ("foot"). And no, I don't think IT'S ONLY US that knows, but I do think that a lot of national sources tend to dramatize our situation more than our local ones (well, Feigen anyway, can't say that for Blinebury and Justice), which is going to increase our rate of knowing what the heck is really going on. Heh and yes I used the word "only". Given how often I use the words "maybe", "probably", "likelihood", etc, do you really think I *meant* "ONLY"? Just used the wrong word, big le oops.
Iggyemu wrote:And about Alexander....from what I have seen he wants to win more than make money. Of course he strives for the balance...but right now he is paying the lux tax b/c of Artest. One of the few owners doing that. Owners don't do that unless they want to win. If Artest works out I am sure he'll be willing to go deeper into the lux tax to hang on to him.
Like I said, selective balancing. He's absolutely not the Yankees, Blazers, Knicks, Red Sox, Mavericks, or whatever have you by any means though. I can agree with your re-statement, it was the "finances take a back seat to winning." Little more open way of saying it and I read it a different way.
Iggyemu wrote:Look bro...China and all the revenue Yao generates for this team through China is not enough to sustain this team. Fans have to come out. Houston fans...NBA TV contracts....US advertising through the Rockets..those things sustain a team. Combine that with China and you can see why we are one of the better revenue generating teams. But consider this though...the Lakers have no Chinese players and they are the highest grossing team in the NBA. Here is what I am saying though...how many more injuries will it take for Houston fans to completely not care about this team. For ESPN and TNT to take us off their schedule?
The Lakers case is a bit special given L.A.'s see-and-be-seen culture, higher population, consistently winning nature, and vaguely-competent-like (can't complement Kupchak too much even with The Heist) management. Why would we just toss away an additional revenue stream? I don't follow. It's not whether or not we have injuries that keep people from watching, it's whether or not we're winning and/or watchable that does it. If we can still win, how do injuries impact us like that?
Iggyemu wrote:Well thats something Alexander has to think about. I don't think he'll hold onto a guy just because he generates revenue from China. He wants a balance. And Yao keeps getting huge devastating injuries that balance will be gone. We hint about rebuilding if we fail to make the playoffs or get ousted in the first round this season. Well answer this....who rebuilds around an injury prone player? Why would the Rockets do such a thing?
Right, but given the medical indetermination above, the lost revenue stream, that as configured we're still capable of winning games now that we finally have some depth, that Yao still has 3 years on his contract, that whoever we trade him to is still going to have to have the sizable Chinese market, AND not care about the "injury prone" reason we're wanting to trade him, that the Chinese government is going to demand to agree to anything we do with him, and probably quite a few other reasons, it's going to be, uh, tricky, to trade Yao. Bear in mind, I've thought for 2 years that we might just be better without him, much as I like the guy.
sleeeeeeping...
Morey 2020.
Q:How are they experts when they're always wrong?
A:Ask a stock market analyst or your financial advisor