OT: Kobe fracture his leg

Discussion in 'Portland Trail Blazers' started by magnifier661, Dec 19, 2013.

  1. BlazerWookee

    BlazerWookee UNTILT THE DAMN PINWHEEL!

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    This. Repped.
     
  2. SlyPokerDog

    SlyPokerDog Woof! Staff Member Administrator

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    Breaking Down the Latest Kobe Bryant Injury

    Just 11 days after making a celebrated return to the court, Kobe Bryant will again miss time after suffering a fracture to the lateral plateau of his tibia. The injury occurred in a Lakers’ win over the Grizzlies. Bryant was attempting to back down Tony Allen when he took an awkward step, hyperextending his left leg. He fell to the ground and immediately grabbed his knee. However he would finish the game, leading the Lakers with 21 points. However, further testing later revealed the break.
    [​IMG]The tibia is the bigger of the lower leg bones and bears the majority of the body’s weight. At the end closest to the kneecap, the tibia widens forming the tibial plateau. The menisci of the knee sit between the ends of the femur and the tibial plateau, allowing for proper knee articulation. Fractures of the area are particularly uncommon and generally occur in car accidents or falls from a great height. In both cases excessive force is driven through the femur and into the softer bone tissue of the tibial plateau. Unable to withstand the extreme force, the tibia succumbs to the stress and breaks. Indirect trauma can also lead to a tibial plateau fracture especially with excessive torsion.

    On the plus side, Kobe’s fracture is non-displaced and will not require surgery. It also appears he avoided any significant soft tissue or meniscus damage. The basic treatment program is rest. Time will be needed for the bone to repair and the Lakers will take various steps to insure the bone properly aligns. The use of a bone stimulator could also help accelerate the process. However time remains the best option and don’t be surprised if this takes longer than initial estimate of six weeks. For comparison sake consider Tyson Chandler’s recent injury. Chandler suffered a non-displaced fracture of his fibular head and missed five and a half weeks recovering. Chandler’s injury occurred in a location of close proximity to Bryant’s but there is one glaring difference. The tibia bears a much heavier weight load that the tibia, suggesting it will need additional time to recover.

    Furthermore previous NBA players to sustain this type of injury missed more than six weeks. Yao Ming and Lorenzen Wright both suffered tibial plateau fractures during their careers. Coincidently, like Kobe both players suffered their injuries in December. Wright was injured on December 9th, 2001 and returned on February 14, 2002 nearly 10 weeks and 33 games later. Ming went down on December 23, 2006 and did not play for 10 weeks returning on March 5, 2007 after a 32 game absence. The size of Ming and Wright likely contributed to their extended recovery window but six weeks is clearly a best-case scenario.

    Other factors to consider are the numerous setbacks and complications that can arise. Compartment syndrome and nerve entrapment can occur and arthritis is often a resulting complication. These kinds of things can be problematic for a player who has logged as many minutes as Bryant.

    With the latest injury occurring on the same leg as his Achilles injury, people are bound to wonder if the two are linked. The answer is maybe. As previously mentioned tibial plateau fractures are rare and Kobe’s break could easily be seen as a freak injury. However pictures of Kobe since his return do seem to show noticeable atrophy in his left calf muscle complex. If his calf was not a full strength, it may have played a role in the fracture.

    During motion, eccentric contractions of the gastrocnemius slow the tibia down, moving the knee into extension. As a result the risk of hyperextension at the knee increases, as the calf muscle complex is unable to adequately and smoothly decelerate the knee. If the break occurred when Bryant’s knee hyperextended, then his weakened calf may have been unable to stop the motion and prevent the fracture from happening. It’s hard to pin the injury on that sole reason but it’s reasonable to believe it played a role.

    Bryant is a polarizing figure in the NBA and his absence leaves a void difficult to fill. He will attack rehab just as aggressively as he did his previous injury with his mental toughness providing an edge most others do not have.


    http://instreetclothes.com/2013/12/19/breaking-latest-kobe-bryant-injury/
     
  3. Draco

    Draco Well-Known Member

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    My only concern is if the Lakers end up sucking enough to get the top pick in the draft.

    But with Kobe sucking up so much of their cap space even if they get a top pick they’ll be no threat to win the west in the next three years.
     
  4. oldmangrouch

    oldmangrouch persona non grata

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    And with the first pick in the 2014 NBA lottery...
     
  5. PapaG

    PapaG Banned User BANNED

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    First thing I thought of, too, when I heard this news while driving.

    Repped
     
  6. PtldPlatypus

    PtldPlatypus Let's go Baby Blazers! Staff Member Global Moderator Moderator

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    Ah, Further, you sneaky son of a gun! Now, that's a true Blazer fan right there!
     
    Further likes this.
  7. Further

    Further Guy

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    hahaha, repped.


    If I had been able to test him he would have had chlamydia of the knee as the official diagnosis.
     
  8. Charcoal Filtered

    Charcoal Filtered Writing Team

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    The Lakers have become a train wreck. Trading for Howard, then hiring a coach that wants to play a style that is completely different than the personnel they have, signing an over the hill superstar to big money, and then letting him rush back from injury only to get hurt again. It makes my respect for what Dr. Buss did with that franchise grow and am glad to see them struggle.
     
  9. PapaG

    PapaG Banned User BANNED

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    I guess Bryant's newfangled German steroids, er, 'breakthrough medical procedures' don't help make bones stronger as the tissue rebuilds.
     
  10. Charcoal Filtered

    Charcoal Filtered Writing Team

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    Hey, it is baseball and football that has a steroid problem. Basketball is 100% immune.

    Come to think of it, when is the last time anyone got caught doing anything in basketball?
     
  11. Blazer Fanatic

    Blazer Fanatic Suspended

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    I am unaware. I will attach the proper AP citation if you find that to be accurate.
     
  12. BlazerDuckSeahawkFan94

    BlazerDuckSeahawkFan94 AWOL

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    Rashard Lewis?
     
  13. Charcoal Filtered

    Charcoal Filtered Writing Team

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    Yes, and they caught that scrub we had to take in the Lopez deal. NBA is not looking very hard.
     
  14. MARIS61

    MARIS61 Real American

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    Somewhere in Colorado a young woman is smiling.
     
  15. RR7

    RR7 Well-Known Member

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    And Hedo. Hmmm. 2 guys that were on Orlando together with Dwight......no. no chance.
     
  16. jlprk

    jlprk The ESPN mod is insane.

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    This is like Roy, except the Lakers already used their amnesty.
     
  17. Sinobas

    Sinobas Banned User BANNED

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    Tough shit.
     
  18. KingSpeed

    KingSpeed Veteran

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    That'd be cool if Lillard got to start because of this!
     
  19. Charcoal Filtered

    Charcoal Filtered Writing Team

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    Is Westbrook and Paul going to get hurt too? Kobe getting hurt opens up a starting spot for Harden or Curry.

    On second thought, watch Kobe still get voted in and rush his rehab to play. He makes it a couple of games and gets hurt again.
     
    Last edited: Dec 20, 2013
  20. jlprk

    jlprk The ESPN mod is insane.

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    What do Laker fans pay for Kobe's salary? Using last year's Laker home attendance...

    $24 million / 778,877 = $30.81 per average ticket

    Some of that attendance is free tickets, so the Kobe tax on paying customers is more like $35.
     

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