Cookies4Life wrote:nedleeds wrote:HighRyzer83 wrote:Dude what's the downside here?
It's not the downside. It's the posters shooting their loads like we got a desirable talent. There is downside in that it's another example of prioritizing the back page and the tickets on sale posters instead of prioritizing young (guard) player development. Kemba isn't a bad guy or a unskilled player. He has an incurable knee condition. I really wish him well. But if any team thought he could play 20 minutes at his prior level he wouldn't be free.
I'm curious, what's his incurable knee condition? Does he have a degenerative condition in his knee such as chronic arthritis? I tried to research his injury history and I couldn't find anything outside of a medial meniscus tear a few years ago which required a subsequent arthroscopic procedure to clean up debris a year afterward. Also late last season he had a bone bruise but in the other leg.
Maybe I missed something on the injury history but if it's just a meniscal tear he didn't recover from properly (i.e. came back too early when he should be rehabbing,) than this seems like something he can work through. There's plenty of players that have had meniscal tear like Russell Westbrook and there are also plenty of atheltes that tore their meniscus that just had it removed so they could come back earlier.
I'm just curious about his knee condition(s) because I didn't see anything from a bunch of websites when I tried to research his injury history outside of a meniscal tear in his left knee.
He has torn and missing cartilege in his left knee.
"Kemba Walker's injured knee and the stem cell program he's on to recover from cartilage damage next week after New Year's Day. "
He started getting on Stem Cell Therapy Winter 2020. Managed to get back for the bubble but it flared up again.
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x7ydzur"Boston Sports Journal’s Dr. Jessica Flynn hinted that Walker is developing arthritis in his left knee following three surgeries and various career steroidal injections. Walker received an injection to address cartilage loss in February. She expected Walker to continue to manage his knee for the rest of his career. Listening to Stevens talk it certainly sounds like the knee is an issue that is going to require maintenance.
“He’s (Walker) working exceptionally hard. The key to this whole thing with him is just strengthening the knee,” Stevens told Ryan and Goodman. “Just continuing to take this opportunity when we’re not playing, when we’re not practicing to really focus on that."
https://www.clnsmedia.com/kemba-walkers-status-uncertain-for-celtics-opening-night/He was cooked after last Summer and as your recall couldn't get ready for the start of the year.
Again, I don't hate Kemba Walker and it's a low risk move. I'm saying, we aren't one of the 5 best teams in the East, let's play and develop some of these young guards and actually get a Knick draft pick to a second contract.