VDT wrote:Huh? Fultz barely played for the Sixers precisely because they tried to be extra careful with him. I am not sure what the Sixers did wrong here. For what it's worth, Fultz and his shooting form hasnt really recoverd from that "injury" to this day so Orlando's medical team hasnt faired any better. I get why Fultz did what he did (he was trying to save his career), but i dont see how Fultz trying to find a doctor to give him a diagnosis (TOS) that was virtually impossible to verify reflects badly on the Sixers medical team. His shooting form is still terrible and its been some years since he moved away from the Sixers medical team. In any case, i dont see how Fultz is in any way relevant here.
Fultz is very relevant, in my opinion, because his situation gives us insight into how the Sixers operate as a franchise and how they use their medical team to get the spin they want with the media. The Sixers tried to portray Fultz as a nutcase. They tried to say that he was "just scared to shoot". The media ate that **** up and then sold this spin to NBA fans who kept calling Fultz a nutcase, a mental midget and all that good stuff. I was here when it happened so I remember what was told quite vividly. It's not all that different from the slurs that people direct now at Simmons. Some people are very happy and very ready to attack players at the behest of big corporations.
Orlando's medical team verified that Fultz's injury was indeed serious when they traded for him. So, his missed that season and then returned the next where he produced fairly well. Not All-Star level production, of course, but good starter level production. Pretty good for a "mental midget nutcase who's afraid to shoot", huh?
His shooting numbers, by the way, were markedly better in Orlando. He shot 73% from the FT line (up from 47.6% in his rookie season and 56.8% in his sophomore season) and 41.6% from the mid-range (up from 25% in his rookie season and 24.4% in his sophomore season). Sure, the 3-point range isn't there yet but you can't say that these numbers aren't an improvement. So, Orlando's medical team definitely did the right thing here, unlike Philly's medical team. It just sucks that Fultz tore his ACL this January.
VDT wrote:Simmons has been treated by the same medical team (which, bear in mind, has changed over the years) multiple times over these years and he never had an issue with them. It's reasonable to say that the team's medical team might not be completely impartial but Simmons shouldnt have any reason to mistrust them. Also, i dont see how the Sixers are discrediting the NBPA medical proffessional (who shouldnt be considered impartial either). The only issue at the moment is that the team has the right to know what Simmons is doing, whether he has been diagnosed with any mental illness and what are the steps and the timeline for his return and Simmons' side is not cooperating. The same thing that any team would do with any injured player somehow has become a matter of controversy and debate here.
Read my post again, please. I never said that the Sixers are discrediting the NBPA medical professional. I specifically said that it was the people in this thread and not the Sixers who are discrediting the NBPA medical professional. I tried to be very clear on that.
VDT wrote:The excerpt was pretty clear. If the player is seeing a physician (psychiatrist or not) to get a diagnosis about an illness/injury then the team has the right to know what it's going on. i might add that it is pretty reeasonable for a player that is not able to provide his services for a medical reason to provide some proof for that and to be in contact with the team in the meantime. Again, this is a pretty standard and reasonable practice, i am not sure why the Sixers request is viewed as something extraordinary by some people here.
Unless we're not talking about a mental health related medical service which is exactly what is happening in this case. That's why I said that the excerpt was pretty murky. Because that exception under B seems to apply in this case.
VDT wrote:NBA level athletes should never ever be compared with normal workers/employees since their bargaining power is orders of magnitude bigger, which is why they are getting these ridiculous salaries. No one is defending the owners here, but trying to compare NBA athletes, and stars at that, to normal people working 9-5 and claim that whatever agreement they negotiate with the owners will be relevant to and impact the working rights of normal people is indeed disingenuous.
I fully disagree with everything in that part of your post. There is a pretty clear employer-employee relationship between NBA teams and NBA players. The power dynamics aren't all that different from any other employer-employee relationship either. Owners typically make much, much more than players do. Owners profit off of the players' labor. Making millions does not erase all these dynamics. All it does is make them very handsomenly-paid employees. Still employees, though.