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.