Sham wrote:6.) The Memphis Grizzlies and the Boston Celtics signed a player approved by the NBA whom according to the NBA had a career ending injury - FACT!
The adjudication by the NBA's doctors that Miles' injury was career ending was only speculative, and a prediction. It could never be anything else, such is the nature of the beast when you're trying to predict the future. The NBA put the 10 game ruling thing into place as a safeguard in case such a prediction ever turned out to be wrong, and, in this case, it was.11.) You are making an assumption that appearing in 10 NBA games constitutes a player being healthy enough to have an NBA career. There is no medical explanation for this being true. Anyone at any age with any level of health can stand on a court for 10 games.
Conversely, why was it any less healthy for Darius to return on his surgically repaired knee than it was for, say, Dikembe Mutombo to play these last three years? Of course, Darius risked popping his knee again every time he jumped, and causing perhaps lifelong damage to his knee. But for all we know, Mutombo could have been taking 3 years of walking pain-free from the back end of his life for each year that he backed up Yao Ming on the Rockets. He, too, risked a career ending injury every time he took the court and left the ground, because he too had decidedly haggard knees from several centuries of playing in the NBA. Medical teams may well have been able to say without fear of contradiction that, while Dikembe could play, he shouldn't. And remember that, of the two, it was Dikembe who suffered a career ender, not Darius.
More to the point - Darius didn't stand on the court for fleeting moments in 10 games. He was in a rotation for 34 games. The proof of his ability to not only take an NBA court, but to perform acceptably well on it, came from the fact that he did it. Sure, a yardstick as arbitrary as the 10 games one COULD, in theory, be manipulated by suiting up a pensioner and stapling them to the half court line for 5 seconds at the end of the first half for three weeks. But this didn't happen. Whatever Memphis' motives, Darius' health was acceptable.
No. You are wrong. The CBA clearly states that the NBA will assign an independent doctor to evaluate the injury of the player, then make a professional medical opinion on whether or not this injury is career ending. The doctor said "YES, DARIUS MILES HAS A CAREER ENDING INJURY". There is no gray area in this!!! If they go to the lengths to hire a doctor to determine if an injury is career ending then the only reasonable way to determine whether or not a player no longer has a career ending injury is for a doctor assigned by the NBA to make a professional medical determination that the previous career ending injury has healed to the point where he is healthy enough to resume an NBA career.
There is no standard set in the CBA for what defines a "career" in the NBA.
There is no standard of performance set in the CBA for defining a "career" in the NBA.
The only standard set in the CBA is the appearance in 10 games. In fact they do not even establish the amount of time on the court during those 10 games.
In fact NOTHING in the CBA states that appearing in 10 games shows ANY SIGN OF PROOF THAT A PLAYER DOES NOT HAVE A CAREER ENDING INJURY!!!
The salary cap relief is specifically provided for A CAREER ENDING INJURY which CAN ONLY BE DETERMINED BY THE INDEPENDENT DOCTOR!
