Please don't!

Moderators: Kilroy, Danny Darko, TyCobb
Jase wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about it. The Lakers' brass will handle it.
Jase wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about it. The Lakers' brass will handle it.
ctorres wrote:Jase wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about it. The Lakers' brass will handle it.
How? How will they handle chicken pox?!? If Blake was around the whole team while he had early symptoms, he may have already infected Bynum, Artest, and Bryant.
vmor wrote:Jase wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about it. The Lakers' brass will handle it.
Yeah, I can see the Lakers brass starting linup:![]()
Fisher
Brian Shaw
Phil Jackson
Pau Gasol
Mitch Kupchak
Threepeat! Threepeat! Threepeat!
(forgive me, Jase - not making fun of your post, just trying to lighten the mood! Yes, there are shots...)
Jase wrote:ctorres wrote:Jase wrote:I wouldn't worry too much about it. The Lakers' brass will handle it.
How? How will they handle chicken pox?!? If Blake was around the whole team while he had early symptoms, he may have already infected Bynum, Artest, and Bryant.
Multi-million dollar organization, trained medical staff, shots.....
Steve Blake isn't the first NBA player to get the pox.
That, or I'm just not getting all worked up over it because it isn't going to make the negative possibility any brighter.
chefy wrote:correct me if wrong. I think if you had the vaccine when you're a child, the chances of you getting a chicken pox is very low.
70 to 90 percent of adults who don't remember having chickenpox actually have protection in their blood
Without the chickenpox vaccine, around 2 percent of adults older than thirty years of age in the United States are susceptible to chickenpox.
Dalakerbox wrote:honestly, knowing they never had the pox before and that it is very dangerous to contract it as an adult....they should have had the vaccine by now, you don't have to be a kid to get the shot.
Also I hate to be Debbie Downer here but chances are at least one other person on our team is already infected, which would also mean players from the Spurs and now Kings are also at risk.
The head scratcher is that Blake's wife says their kids already had the vaccine and did not infect him...so where did he get it
Kobe Bryant said his father told the Lakers he believes Bryant was vaccinated against chickenpox as a youth, which helped allay some fears that the Lakers’ star might have contracted the virus from teammate Steve Blake, who is out indefinitely with it.
Bryant also joked about putting on makeup to hide it if he did have chickenpox so he could continue to play.
“If I had it, I wouldn’t tell y’all (expletive),” Bryant said to reporters.
Bryant, Andrew Bynum and Ron Artest told the Lakers they had not previously had chickenpox. Bryant said having been vaccinated should help his situation. Blake is questionable for the first round of the playoffs against New Orleans, with that series starting at 12:30 p.m. Pacific on Sunday.