
Bad circumstances but good to see them together right now. good to have support from someone who understands what your going through.
Moderators: BigSlam, yosemiteben, fatlever, JDR720, Diop
James Gatz wrote:Kinda funny that two undersized scoring PGs with a similar game are friends in real life.
Balllin wrote:Zion Williamson is 6-5, with a 6-10 wingspan. I see him as a slightly better Kenneth Faried.
Liver_Pooty wrote:1 week down. 5ish to go.
He was harming his team.
When Charlotte Hornets point guard Kemba Walker came to that conclusion, following a 39-point road loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, he started rethinking the cost-benefit of playing on a painful left knee.
Walker, well known for his durability, asked out of that game in Cleveland after shooting 3-of-14. The next morning he asked out of a home game against the New York Knicks.
Ultimately he opted for surgery Jan. 28 to repair a torn meniscus. This wasn’t about pain, so much as how that pain affected his performance.
“I played through it against Miami and against Cleveland. Against Cleveland I just wasn’t myself,” Walker said in his first extended interview since surgery in New York City.
“There were certain things I couldn’t do. I felt like I was hurting my teammates. I wasn’t really doing anything to help. So it was a choice I had to make and it was a good one for me.”
Nine days removed from surgery, Walker was walking around Time Warner Cable Arena on Friday without any noticeable limp or discomfort. He has begun working out daily on a stationary bicycle.
He’ll be out at least another five weeks, which means he’ll miss at least 15 games. This is the first time Walker has ever needed surgery to correct an injury. In his first two NBA seasons he never missed a game. Last season he was out nine games with an ankle sprain and a groin strain.
One thing Walker asserts: He won’t rush back and risk re-injury.
“Right now I’m taking things slow. I want to be 100 percent when I come back,” Walker said. “I started riding the bike two days ago. As the weeks go by, I’ll do more and more.”
Walker watched Thursday’s home victory over the Washington Wizards from the bench in street clothes. It feels a bit strange to be at the game, but not in the game, but the team’s 6-1 record in his absence makes it easier to watch.
“At times it’s fun. Other times it’s, ‘Oh my God, I wish I was playing.’ You’re thinking, ‘I could have made that play right there,’ ” Walker said. “As long as we’re winning, I can’t complain. So it’s up to these guys to keep me really positive and excited on that bench.”
Some players prefer not to be around their teams during extended injuries. Walker is just the opposite.
“I don’t want to disappear on my teammates. Regardless of me playing or not, I’ve got to support them,” Walker said. “Guys like Brian (Roberts) and MKG (Michael Kidd-Gilchrist) and the younger guys, I’ve got to be around for them. I can still help even if I’m not on the court.”
The Hornets have done a solid job this season of riding out injuries to Al Jefferson, Lance Stephenson and Walker. Walker says that shows a resiliency all good teams need.
“We have confidence in each other. When I wasn’t playing, I told Brian he’d have to hold it down. And he was ready. He’s fully capable of this,” Walker said. “MKG is at his best right now and Gerald (Henderson) last night played great. Al, being the leader that he is, does what has to be done. One guy goes down and someone else steps up.”
Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2015/0 ... NVjYebF-aw#storylink=cpy
Walker, well known for his durability, asked out of that game in Cleveland after shooting 3-of-14. The next morning he asked out of a home game against the New York Knicks.
catch20two wrote:Makes you wonder how much this lingering knee injury might've limited his ability to be consistent when he's having random flare ups by the day.
BigSlam wrote:catch20two wrote:Makes you wonder how much this lingering knee injury might've limited his ability to be consistent when he's having random flare ups by the day.
You think he might have been suffering from this for 7 years?
TheKingofSting wrote:I wonder if all of the teams knew about it pre draft?
Balllin wrote:Zion Williamson is 6-5, with a 6-10 wingspan. I see him as a slightly better Kenneth Faried.
TheKingofSting wrote:Hopefully he will be a new man upon his return.
Balllin wrote:Zion Williamson is 6-5, with a 6-10 wingspan. I see him as a slightly better Kenneth Faried.
Braggins wrote:I wish we knew more specifics about the injury and the surgery. We still don't know if it was a partial or full tear or if the surgery involved a full repair or simply removing unhealthy tissue. My guess based on the recovery time and what we do know is that it was a partial tear that was fully repaired. The press release said it was "repaired" but the recovery time seems short for a full repair so I get the feeling it was probably just a partial tear and thus won't take as long to recover. That would also explain how he was able to play through it.
Balllin wrote:Zion Williamson is 6-5, with a 6-10 wingspan. I see him as a slightly better Kenneth Faried.