yoyojw17 wrote:OrlChamps2030 wrote:fendilim wrote:This is actually good.
Making sure he is healthy when he gets back. There is no need to have him on the court anyway.
Not being able to fully participate in practice 18 months after an injury is a good thing?
Riiiiiight…

totally didn't derail Embiid's career. lol
buuuuuut.... it all depends on what is being done during the time. I'm sure he's not just sitting on the couch eating twinkies... like some other players. He might come back with a new lease on life, more developed skills, developed jumper, ... and set of strong ass knees. If that's the case.... it was worth it. lol
But we will see where this all goes! Would have personally loved to see him on the court... but if that's not the case... I pray it was all worth it and we'll see when he finally hit the court.
everything is all suspicion until it becomes reality.

Joel Embiid did not have repetative knee injury. It was foot injury.
Also during whole Embiid rehab process we knew what's wrong.
"The 76ers recently announced that Joel Embiid, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft, will miss the entire 2015-16 season due to another injury to his right foot. It turns out Embiid broke the same right navicular bone that caused him to sit out his rookie year, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer's Bob Cooney."
See the difference? Clear medical report, no bul***ts, we knew what happened and why he is out yet another year.
With Isaac, we have sporadic 12 seconds videos of him throwing medical ball at a wall as only update in last year and some " not doing contact training yet" after he is missing second season year in a row.
In actual real time, Jonathan Isaac played
31 min of basketball in last 25 months/ 750 days. By the time, if he is even ready for training camp next year, he will be officially out of serious basketball for close to
three years. It's such a large period of time that women can give birth to 3 different babies in that period.
He might come back with a new lease on life, more developed skills, developed jumper, ... and set of strong ass knees. If that's the case.... it was worth it. lol
Sports don't work like that. You are not going to become great player by sitting in empty arena against coach that guards you with broomsticks and shooting endless jumpers over him. If that is a case than Greg Oden, Kenyon Martin, Blake Griffin, Derrick Rose would return better after injuries than they were before. It simply did not happen. In reality after every massive time out their athletcsm chipped away a little bit, their movment was noticablly slower, their body did not become stronger by "overrehabbing".
I don't even understand why Embiid is "positive" example.
At average, Joel missed 30 games a year.
You use him because he is elite player to feel better about Isaac. Truth is, Embiid would have been easly top 5 player in nba if he never was hurt. isaac without injuries would still be role player and nothing more.
Injuries didn't help Embiid to become good, Embiid is elite player despite massive health issues he has. We talk about guy who after 2 years of not playing basketball, as a rookie averaged 20 points, 8 rebounds, 2,5 blocks, 2 assists in 25 min a game. And ofc got hurt in process.. He was hands down best prospect in the world in that draft, and despite having massive injuries, he still didn't fall below 3rd pick. (
not to mention he didn't play basketball until he was 15)Jonathan Isaac blew up knee twice in one year and has been out for 2 years, minus those bubble minutes where he menaged to blew his ACL.
Just because Magic sit him for whatever reason ( injuries, tanking, doesn't matter ) won't make him better player in future
nor will oversitting him prevent future injuries. Players who did sustain massive injuries in past ( ones above mentiond and guys like Gordon Hayward, Paul George and many, many others) tend to be injury prone to not only injuries they had, but to other injuries as well such is tendinitis. Because during massive injury body starts to overcompensate by overworking other side of a body. In almost all cases, after broken leg, blown achillie, knee or whatever, player tends to hurt his healthy side next. That's reality. Literally execlly what happend to Klay Thompson. After torning ACL in his left knee, he blew up achille in his right leg. Coincidence? Not really.
Joel Embiid right foot surgeries were followed by left leg mensicus tear.
Rose torn ACL in left knee and next injury was menicus in right leg.
I don't know how old are you but if you were nba fan in mid 00s than you remember energy bomb Kenyon Martin was and how bad he looked after blowing both knees in year and half.
So yea, i really struggle where guys like you draw your "optimsm" from. Isaac is out for almost 20 months in a row, he is yet to be part of contact practice and he has history of being injuried and all injuries are on same leg. We won't see him on the floor until he turns 25,with basically 3 years without basketball. He won't just magically stay healthy for rest of his basketball days and even notion that he will "get better at basketball by not playing" is ridicilous.
People here in general don't like reality, they like to purple hills and sunshine and rainbows , and that's fine, you call it "being positive" , i call it being delusional about situation by just ignoring facts.
Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans. -John Lennon