Legit the most Blazer thing. I know it’s cliche but cmon. We can’t even get fucking MRI results like a normal team. Almost every 1st round player having good games, putting up impressive numbers, showing signs, but nope. Ours is 5 mins and out and crickets
@Fairly-Hard is on the ground in Vegas and says that Shaedon will play tomorrow. I would ask him for a link but our reporters are constantly asleep on the job. I guess we'll see tomorrow. As far as the team goes, the last word was from Hetzel who said that Shaedon was feeling good and that they would feel comfortable playing him tomorrow if the MRI was good. I know the sentiment on here has been no news is bad news but when the last concrete news was that Shaedon was feeling good and the MRI would have to contradict that in order for him to be held out, I think a clean MRI might be seen as a nonstory to the coaching staff and they'll just trot him out tomorrow. This isn't the playoffs with huge stakes and it's not even the regular season where the team has to give the league an injury report. So let's just see what happens tomorrow.
Let me hijack this thread: WHO is more famous? Me or Shaedon Sharpe?? The man only has 19K Twitter followers. I have almost 90k!!
Only 770K though. Pretty small considering how long he's been around. Just think how many followers I could drum up in 2000 years.
What I got from this post is that we still have no definitive proof Sharpe survived his 6 minutes of playing time and subsequent MRI. I'm not saying @Fairly-Hard is wrong; I'm just saying they could be wheeling Sharpe out there like Bernie Lomax.
Hello, Maybe this will help? https://scitechdaily.com/fixing-sho...d-to-restore-damaged-tendons-and-muscles/amp/
This seems to be a real lack of communication skills by the organization. Can't think of any reason not to release MRI results.
Yes, they're getting a second opinion on it, or worse, it's something like cancer. Not kidding around. Young people suffer cancer too. Not trying to start some crappy rumor, and hopefully it's nothing like that, but athletes have had this disease show up early in life, and get treatment and survive and succeed going forward. Blessings that it's just a strain.