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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 6:25 pm 
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Is there a way for you to check starter minutes vs. games missed for the top 8 teams and report to us on it? My bet is that the Bulls will be virtually no different than the other potential playoff rosters. A cursory check with radio and their well-meaning, yet contextually lacking, overwrought panic tells me they're blaming Thibs. Currently, the Clippers have 2 injured starters (Paul, Griffin) who were playing career low fourth quarter minutes, and the Spurs - lauded for resting key starters, have Duncan and Ginobili and Jackson out. Two of the last three playoff runs, the Spurs and Celtics had injured starters as well.

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Sam: You mean players can get injured not playing big minutes? You might make that three with the Clippers with Crawford also hurt. Look, talk radio can be very entertaining and a nice source of debate. But it’s not where you generally go for expertise. I don’t believe they advertise that. They sell discussion and possibilities, and they really don’t much watch any other teams. So it’s difficult to get much perspective. Not getting injured is vital. Look, the Bulls don’t win six titles if Jordan and Pippen were getting hurt. The Thunder basically hasn’t had a major injury in three years. Similarly with Miami. But the Bulls also succeeded because Jordan and Pippen averaged almost 40 minutes per game in their primes. The same with Tim Duncan and Kobe. You win because your top players are able to play big minutes. The big minutes don’t necessarily cause injuries. I’ve never seen any evidence that 37 minutes keeps you healthy and 39 minutes doesn’t. But how long can you discuss the Bears’ offensive line?

http://www.nba.com/bulls/news/ask-sam-s ... 82013.html

:lol: :lol: Hope they bring him on and debate the issue. Boers tried to make a cogent point about Smith's tweets on Friday, but didn't quite get there. It would be entertaining if they can.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 6:53 pm 
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The thing is, Sam didn't really answer the guy's question. Is there a correlation between starter's minutes and injury? I suspect there isn't. But bernstein only likes the numbers when they confirm the point he is trying to make.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 6:54 pm 
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Fuckin' BernSTINE


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 9:55 pm 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The thing is, Sam didn't really answer the guy's question. Is there a correlation between starter's minutes and injury? I suspect there isn't. But bernstein only likes the numbers when they confirm the point he is trying to make.

Of course there's some type of correlation. The question is if it is a big enough risk to make the extra minutes worth it. And it probably is worth it in almost every scenario.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 10:01 pm 
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Run a 2nd team, defense first, hustle/press/rebond/defend team out for the 1st quarter. Wear the other team out some, then
bring in the starting 5 to start the 2nd quarter.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 10:03 pm 
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If it's team Bernie he is taking shots at where are the shots at Schmutzie or Quad City Patty? These guys live and die on what Danny says

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 11:06 pm 
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FavreFan wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The thing is, Sam didn't really answer the guy's question. Is there a correlation between starter's minutes and injury? I suspect there isn't. But bernstein only likes the numbers when they confirm the point he is trying to make.

Of course there's some type of correlation. The question is if it is a big enough risk to make the extra minutes worth it. And it probably is worth it in almost every scenario.


I'm not sure there's any correlation at all. Some guys get hurt tripping over their gym bags. I hardly think playing a few extra minutes per game is going to cause the biggest blackest studliest best athletes in the world to break down. If you mean a guy is more likely to get hurt in the game than on the bench, I agree. But as you seem to be pointing out with your statement regarding worth, the likelihood that they will get hurt within those "extra" minutes is remote and outweighed by the value of playing them. bernstein seems to take the position that the minutes are cumulative and that a player has a limit to how much he can play before becoming injured- or at least less effective. Basketball players play basketball. Radio hosts flap their gums.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 11:18 pm 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The thing is, Sam didn't really answer the guy's question. Is there a correlation between starter's minutes and injury? I suspect there isn't. But bernstein only likes the numbers when they confirm the point he is trying to make.

Of course there's some type of correlation. The question is if it is a big enough risk to make the extra minutes worth it. And it probably is worth it in almost every scenario.


I'm not sure there's any correlation at all. Some guys get hurt tripping over their gym bags. I hardly think playing a few extra minutes per game is going to cause the biggest blackest studliest best athletes in the world to break down. If you mean a guy is more likely to get hurt in the game than on the bench, I agree. But as you seem to be pointing out with your statement regarding worth, the likelihood that they will get hurt within those "extra" minutes is remote and outweighed by the value of playing them. bernstein seems to take the position that the minutes are cumulative and that a player has a limit to how much he can play before becoming injured- or at least less effective. Basketball players play basketball. Radio hosts flap their gums.

All im saying is the bolded statements contradict eachother. There's obviously a mor inherent risk of injury to playing a guy more minutes. So that part is obviously true on its own merits. Then as you said its a idea of risk/reward and I think that is dependent on the player. I don't think it's a good idea to play Noah over 38 mpg when he's never played even 33 in a season before and is a seven foot guy with a history of foot problems and no true backup on the team. I don't have as much of an issue with Deng playing 38 minutes if he is completely healthy. I don't think it's nearly as physically demanding on him.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 11:30 pm 
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NBA players who Jay Williams ratted on deal with pain better

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 10, 2013 11:31 pm 
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FavreFan wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
FavreFan wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
The thing is, Sam didn't really answer the guy's question. Is there a correlation between starter's minutes and injury? I suspect there isn't. But bernstein only likes the numbers when they confirm the point he is trying to make.

Of course there's some type of correlation. The question is if it is a big enough risk to make the extra minutes worth it. And it probably is worth it in almost every scenario.


I'm not sure there's any correlation at all. Some guys get hurt tripping over their gym bags. I hardly think playing a few extra minutes per game is going to cause the biggest blackest studliest best athletes in the world to break down. If you mean a guy is more likely to get hurt in the game than on the bench, I agree. But as you seem to be pointing out with your statement regarding worth, the likelihood that they will get hurt within those "extra" minutes is remote and outweighed by the value of playing them. bernstein seems to take the position that the minutes are cumulative and that a player has a limit to how much he can play before becoming injured- or at least less effective. Basketball players play basketball. Radio hosts flap their gums.

All im saying is the bolded statements contradict eachother. There's obviously a mor inherent risk of injury to playing a guy more minutes. So that part is obviously true on its own merits. Then as you said its a idea of risk/reward and I think that is dependent on the player. I don't think it's a good idea to play Noah over 38 mpg when he's never played even 33 in a season before and is a seven foot guy with a history of foot problems and no true backup on the team. I don't have as much of an issue with Deng playing 38 minutes if he is completely healthy. I don't think it's nearly as physically demanding on him.


They don't really contradict each other although they might seem to. Of course, it's a lot harder to get injured on the bench, although I'm sure we can find instances of guys who have. But it isn't the extra minutes themselves causing the breakdown or injury.

What I'm saying is that in baseball, for example, you can look at a giant sample of pitchers and pitches per game and you see evidence of decline across the board at certain benchmarks. That's real evidence. Real numbers. It doesn't mean there isn't some guy who can't throw 130 pitchers per game with no ill effects. It's just that he isn't the norm.

I'd be interested to see if players averaging more minutes per game spend more time on injured lists. I really doubt that to be the case. Anyway, I think that's what the guy was asking Sam Smith and it went unanswered.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 6:29 am 
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:roll: :roll:

It's hard to believe that someone who is paid to write stories about the Bulls, who is also paid by the Bulls, would not have a problem with how the team is operated. Sam Smith is basically Jerry's PR guy.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 6:45 am 
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Douchebag wrote:
:roll: :roll:

It's hard to believe that someone who is paid to write stories about the Bulls, who is also paid by the Bulls, would not have a problem with how the team is operated. Sam Smith is basically Jerry's PR guy.



True, and I think Sam made his lack of integrity very clear when he was a Bulls/NBA columnist/beat guy for the Trib and he held back all kinds of stuff for later publication in his book.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 6:49 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

They don't really contradict each other although they might seem to. Of course, it's a lot harder to get injured on the bench, although I'm sure we can find instances of guys who have. But it isn't the extra minutes themselves causing the breakdown or injury.

What I'm saying is that in baseball, for example, you can look at a giant sample of pitchers and pitches per game and you see evidence of decline across the board at certain benchmarks. That's real evidence. Real numbers. It doesn't mean there isn't some guy who can't throw 130 pitchers per game with no ill effects. It's just that he isn't the norm.

I'd be interested to see if players averaging more minutes per game spend more time on injured lists. I really doubt that to be the case. Anyway, I think that's what the guy was asking Sam Smith and it went unanswered.


Plantar fasciitis is an injury caused by overuse/excessive minutes. Gibson has suffered from it in the past and it's been a problem for Noah in multiple seasons. There is also a body of scientific literature that links traumatic injuries--such as ACL tears--to fatigue.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 6:57 am 
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Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

They don't really contradict each other although they might seem to. Of course, it's a lot harder to get injured on the bench, although I'm sure we can find instances of guys who have. But it isn't the extra minutes themselves causing the breakdown or injury.

What I'm saying is that in baseball, for example, you can look at a giant sample of pitchers and pitches per game and you see evidence of decline across the board at certain benchmarks. That's real evidence. Real numbers. It doesn't mean there isn't some guy who can't throw 130 pitchers per game with no ill effects. It's just that he isn't the norm.

I'd be interested to see if players averaging more minutes per game spend more time on injured lists. I really doubt that to be the case. Anyway, I think that's what the guy was asking Sam Smith and it went unanswered.


Plantar fasciitis is an injury caused by overuse/excessive minutes. Gibson has suffered from it in the past and it's been a problem for Noah in multiple seasons. There is also a body of scientific literature that links traumatic injuries--such as ACL tears--to fatigue.


Maybe so, it just would be nice to have the answer to the question. For example, do those averaging 39 minutes in each game they play miss more time than those averaging 33 minutes.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 7:05 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

They don't really contradict each other although they might seem to. Of course, it's a lot harder to get injured on the bench, although I'm sure we can find instances of guys who have. But it isn't the extra minutes themselves causing the breakdown or injury.

What I'm saying is that in baseball, for example, you can look at a giant sample of pitchers and pitches per game and you see evidence of decline across the board at certain benchmarks. That's real evidence. Real numbers. It doesn't mean there isn't some guy who can't throw 130 pitchers per game with no ill effects. It's just that he isn't the norm.

I'd be interested to see if players averaging more minutes per game spend more time on injured lists. I really doubt that to be the case. Anyway, I think that's what the guy was asking Sam Smith and it went unanswered.


Plantar fasciitis is an injury caused by overuse/excessive minutes. Gibson has suffered from it in the past and it's been a problem for Noah in multiple seasons. There is also a body of scientific literature that links traumatic injuries--such as ACL tears--to fatigue.


Maybe so, it just would be nice to have the answer to the question. For example, do those averaging 39 minutes in each game they play miss more time than those averaging 33 minutes.


Since different coaches demand different effort levels from their players, I don't think minutes alone have great predictive power with regards to injury. A high-effort/high-minutes guy like Thibodeau strikes me as the kind of coach who is likely to have difficulty keeping his best players healthy over the long term. Of course, Thibodeau seems to understand the toll his philosophy takes on players and thus developed a great second team in past seasons.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 7:20 am 
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Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

They don't really contradict each other although they might seem to. Of course, it's a lot harder to get injured on the bench, although I'm sure we can find instances of guys who have. But it isn't the extra minutes themselves causing the breakdown or injury.

What I'm saying is that in baseball, for example, you can look at a giant sample of pitchers and pitches per game and you see evidence of decline across the board at certain benchmarks. That's real evidence. Real numbers. It doesn't mean there isn't some guy who can't throw 130 pitchers per game with no ill effects. It's just that he isn't the norm.

I'd be interested to see if players averaging more minutes per game spend more time on injured lists. I really doubt that to be the case. Anyway, I think that's what the guy was asking Sam Smith and it went unanswered.


Plantar fasciitis is an injury caused by overuse/excessive minutes. Gibson has suffered from it in the past and it's been a problem for Noah in multiple seasons. There is also a body of scientific literature that links traumatic injuries--such as ACL tears--to fatigue.


Maybe so, it just would be nice to have the answer to the question. For example, do those averaging 39 minutes in each game they play miss more time than those averaging 33 minutes.


Since different coaches demand different effort levels from their players, I don't think minutes alone have great predictive power with regards to injury. A high-effort/high-minutes guy like Thibodeau strikes me as the kind of coach who is likely to have difficulty keeping his best players healthy over the long term. Of course, Thibodeau seems to understand the toll his philosophy takes on players and thus developed a great second team in past seasons.


Well, that seems to be bernstein's take on the matter as well. You both may be right. And I'm not going to argue with your belief. We all have our beliefs; sometimes they are right and sometimes we are wrong and we are surprised by the reality.

However, I cannot accept such a position based on nothing more than a feeling from dan bernstein. This is a guy who constantly derides the intangible, who takes unfettered joy in ridiculing those who express similar unsupported belief in concepts like "momentum" and "getting up for games".

It's one thing to point out a larger occurrence of injury or an increase in ERA after x amount of pitches. That is a fact and it is difficult to argue with facts. Were I to call today's show with the belief that today's pitchers are pussies and need to pitch more rather than less to avoid injury, I would be assaulted with the irrefutable evidence and then quite likely mocked in a faux Chicago accent: "Deez guize today are a buncha wusses. Dat Bob Gibson yousta tro tree hunnert innins an' he never got hurt."

I would only ask of bernstein the same rigors he demands of his callers. Fair enough?

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 7:29 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

Well, that seems to be bernstein's take on the matter as well. You both may be right. And I'm not going to argue with your belief. We all have our beliefs; sometimes they are right and sometimes we are wrong and we are surprised by the reality.

However, I cannot accept such a position based on nothing more than a feeling from dan bernstein. This is a guy who constantly derides the intangible, who takes unfettered joy in ridiculing those who express similar unsupported belief in concepts like "momentum" and "getting up for games".

It's one thing to point out a larger occurrence of injury or an increase in ERA after x amount of pitches. That is a fact and it is difficult to argue with facts. Were I to call today's show with the belief that today's pitchers are pussies and need to pitch more rather than less to avoid injury, I would be assaulted with the irrefutable evidence and then quite likely mocked in a faux Chicago accent: "Deez guize today are a buncha wusses. Dat Bob Gibson yousta tro tree hunnert innins an' he never got hurt."

I would only ask of bernstein the same rigors he demands of his callers. Fair enough?


I haven't been listening to B&B lately and wasn't aware that this is his current view. At the beginning of last season, he was arguing that there is no correlation between minutes and the propensity for injury. There is a thread about that somewhere in this section. At the time I pointed out the absurdity of this view given the number of fatigue-related injuries the Bulls had suffered under Thibodeau. Since then, I've learned that there is a strong connection between fatigue and traumatic injury.

In any event, it seems like you're adopting a position just because you revel in identifying yourself as a Bernstein contrarian. I know that's become all the rage on the board, but I'm not sure there's an intrinsic value in it.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 7:38 am 
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Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

Well, that seems to be bernstein's take on the matter as well. You both may be right. And I'm not going to argue with your belief. We all have our beliefs; sometimes they are right and sometimes we are wrong and we are surprised by the reality.

However, I cannot accept such a position based on nothing more than a feeling from dan bernstein. This is a guy who constantly derides the intangible, who takes unfettered joy in ridiculing those who express similar unsupported belief in concepts like "momentum" and "getting up for games".

It's one thing to point out a larger occurrence of injury or an increase in ERA after x amount of pitches. That is a fact and it is difficult to argue with facts. Were I to call today's show with the belief that today's pitchers are pussies and need to pitch more rather than less to avoid injury, I would be assaulted with the irrefutable evidence and then quite likely mocked in a faux Chicago accent: "Deez guize today are a buncha wusses. Dat Bob Gibson yousta tro tree hunnert innins an' he never got hurt."

I would only ask of bernstein the same rigors he demands of his callers. Fair enough?


I haven't been listening to B&B lately and wasn't aware that this is his current view. At the beginning of last season, he was arguing that there is no correlation between minutes and the propensity for injury. There is a thread about that somewhere in this section. At the time I pointed out the absurdity of this view given the number of fatigue-related injuries the Bulls had suffered under Thibodeau. Since then, I've learned that there is a strong connection between fatigue and traumatic injury.

In any event, it seems like you're adopting a position just because you revel in identifying yourself as a Bernstein contrarian. I know that's become all the rage on the board, but I'm not sure there's an intrinsic value in it.


That isn't the case. I just don't believe a 23 year old elite athlete in top physical condition is affected in any significant way by playing an extra four minutes per game. Whether it's under Thibodeau or Vinny Del Negro. If there is evidence to show I am incorrect I'd be interested to see it.

It's easy to blame the coach for Rose's injury. Why was he in a game that was all but over anyway? But the truth is that could just as easily have occurred in the first minute of a game. That doesn't mean Rose shouldn't start.

And it can't really be that Thibodeau is this great coach who gets every ounce from his players on the one hand, yet he is an ignorant boob who drives them too hard on the other. I think the hard-driving and the maximizing of talent are linked. Again, no evidence to support that, but it's my feeling. And I would suggest that it's a reasonable conclusion.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 7:52 am 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Tall Midget wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:

Well, that seems to be bernstein's take on the matter as well. You both may be right. And I'm not going to argue with your belief. We all have our beliefs; sometimes they are right and sometimes we are wrong and we are surprised by the reality.

However, I cannot accept such a position based on nothing more than a feeling from dan bernstein. This is a guy who constantly derides the intangible, who takes unfettered joy in ridiculing those who express similar unsupported belief in concepts like "momentum" and "getting up for games".

It's one thing to point out a larger occurrence of injury or an increase in ERA after x amount of pitches. That is a fact and it is difficult to argue with facts. Were I to call today's show with the belief that today's pitchers are pussies and need to pitch more rather than less to avoid injury, I would be assaulted with the irrefutable evidence and then quite likely mocked in a faux Chicago accent: "Deez guize today are a buncha wusses. Dat Bob Gibson yousta tro tree hunnert innins an' he never got hurt."

I would only ask of bernstein the same rigors he demands of his callers. Fair enough?


I haven't been listening to B&B lately and wasn't aware that this is his current view. At the beginning of last season, he was arguing that there is no correlation between minutes and the propensity for injury. There is a thread about that somewhere in this section. At the time I pointed out the absurdity of this view given the number of fatigue-related injuries the Bulls had suffered under Thibodeau. Since then, I've learned that there is a strong connection between fatigue and traumatic injury.

In any event, it seems like you're adopting a position just because you revel in identifying yourself as a Bernstein contrarian. I know that's become all the rage on the board, but I'm not sure there's an intrinsic value in it.


That isn't the case. I just don't believe a 23 year old elite athlete in top physical condition is affected in any significant way by playing an extra four minutes per game. Whether it's under Thibodeau or Vinny Del Negro. If there is evidence to show I am incorrect I'd be interested to see it.

It's easy to blame the coach for Rose's injury. Why was he in a game that was all but over anyway? But the truth is that could just as easily have occurred in the first minute of a game. That doesn't mean Rose shouldn't start.

And it can't really be that Thibodeau is this great coach who gets every ounce from his players on the one hand, yet he is an ignorant boob who drives them too hard on the other. I think the hard-driving and the maximizing of talent are linked. Again, no evidence to support that, but it's my feeling. And I would suggest that it's a reasonable conclusion.


To this point in his career, Thibodeau is a great regular season coach. Two years ago many argued that he was badly outcoached by Frank Vogel and, occasionally, by Larry Drew in the playoffs. Thibodeau wins in the regular season partly because his guys play harder than most other teams. In the playoffs, effort levels even out, and coaches are forced to outthink their adversaries. I would argue that Thibodeau didn't fare too well in that area in his first go-round.

Being in top physical condition hardly makes one impervious to fatigue-related injuries. Prior to blowing out his ACL, Rose was giving himself ulcers because he was taking so much pain medication for knee tendonitis.

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 11, 2013 12:16 pm 
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