wichmae wrote:humanrefutation wrote:wichmae wrote:No but I did go to school to be a physician assistant. Its quite easy to diagnose. In fact for any athlete (weekend warrior in my experience) loss of articular surface is a pretty significant hurdle to over come. There is no way to rehab the loss of the surface. Once its gone it doesnt come back. Micro fx is somewhat of a shot in the dark procedure too. The outcomes vary significantly with very few truly successful returns. If Jack does have degeneration of the articular surface of the knee there is no rehabbing that. He will have to absolutely at some point have the chondroplasty to try and regen the surface.
Fair enough. But isn't it reasonable to assume that Andrews has seen his scans and has concluded that Jack does not have degeneration of the articular surface of the knee? Or at least it's insignificant enough that it won't warrant microfracture surgery?
That seems much more in line with his quote than assuming that Andrews made a significant error of omission.
Truthfully to me it sounds like lip service from Andrews or a quote open to interpretation. Over 31 NFL teams felt differently with their physicians or teams of physicians than Andrews quote. If there was only the meniscus injury and no degeneration he woulda been a top guy. This never would be brought up or debated here. There has to be a reason why he slid and that reason has been stated as the need for the chondroplasty. Meaning there is articular surface degeneration.
Those are a hell of a lot more assumptions than I'm making by simply reading the quote from Schefter.
Andrews has nothing to gain by lying. Jack had already been drafted. He's not going to get paid more by telling Jack he doesn't need surgery. His reputation is intact. Making things up is quite the risk to take for a guy who has little to gain by being right.
Teams are obviously extraordinarily risk averse in the first round. Even the hint of the chance Jack's injuries are career-defining could cause many teams to pass. That doesn't mean he needs microfracture.
The only thing we know definitively is that the preeminent sports orthopedist has reviewed Jack's scans and progress and determined that he doesn't need the surgery.
Could he be wrong? Of course. But I'm not going to authoritatively speculate otherwise without having a legitimate reason to.