Jump to content

ptatc

Members
  • Posts

    18,396
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    7

ptatc last won the day on May 8 2022

ptatc had the most liked content!

About ptatc

  • Birthday 07/24/1967

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    sec 162 row 1

Previous Fields

  • Favorite Sox Minor League Affiliate
    Birmingham Barons (AA)

Recent Profile Visitors

8,300 profile views

ptatc's Achievements

Grand Master

Grand Master (14/14)

  • Dedicated
  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Posting Machine
  • Conversation Starter

Recent Badges

3.3k

Reputation

  1. They didn't say he was 80% healed. They said he was running at 80%. That doesn't mean he is 80% healed. That means he is running at 80% effort. He could be 90% healed but the rehab protocol they set is protecting the muscle on a set time line. He is currently training at an 80% effort with no lasting soreness. The next step is to train at 90% effort and see if soreness lasts more than a day. If he can do that, he will return to games. If he is too sore after 90% effort they will back him down to 80% and try again. This is how rehab works. It's not linear.
  2. You are talking about 2 very different things healing cancer can be quantified by imaging such as MRI or VY scans. Trying to quantify how hard someone is running can only be determined by the athlete. Your 70% effort is different than someone else's 70%. The full quote would probably be, he can run 80% without pain. That is slightly more objective but pain is also subjective from one person to another.
  3. Athletes are asked to do it all the time for training. You don't train everyday at 100%. You need to adjust your effort each time to train properly. Even recreational runners learn their pace and effort to adjust daily workouts.
  4. Not a doctor but have worked with athletes for 30 some years. They can do it by watching the time and checking his time to first base when healthy. This is usually the final step though. Right now it's probably more the athletes reported level of exertion. There is only so much that the medical staff can do. As much as we try with research there is a reason they say practice of medicine. Everyone's anatomy and physiology can vary. We can talk about averages and likelihood of injury and healing but the athletes anatomy, genetics and their own effort/work all play a significant part.
  5. Not stretching, off season training is the issue, I think.
  6. This is accurate especially with the warm-ups. Research shows that one of the most sure ways to injure a muscle is to do passive stretching. Hence the dynamic warm-ups you described. I don't think any of these issues is related to the in season activities. It's all about what type of training they are doing in the off season. Similar to what you described. What are you training for, strength is great but there needs to be functionality. A basic principle od training is SAID, Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demands. If you don't train for explosive running out of the box, your body won't be able to handle it.
  7. There is something to be said for this in a contract year. They will push it more than a player with a guaranteed contract.
  8. Holy crap. He must have a grade 3 tear. The particular muscle here is a big issue. If it's the adductor magnus or one of the bigger ones, he should heal fine but could be a long term issue. Similar to Robert and the hip flexor. However if it's the adductor longus, a muscle that is long a relatively thin, that may not heal well at all. He will still have good function but could decrease the strength and change lateral movement. Could be really significant for a 3B.
  9. It's possible. The amount of scar tissue will impact both the flexibility and the ability of the muscle to generate force. It's impossible to tell unless you feel the muscle or look at imaging but it's a good possibility.
  10. Probably accurate. 6 weeks of healing then ramping up. They will be cautious due to the previous one and this being a lost season anyways. Sounds like it's a high end grade 2 then. Probably an early June return.
  11. Not surprised as the previous spot is probably locked with scar tissue. The overall flexibility of it is decreased due to the previous one.
  12. In 2021, he tore the muscle in the midsubstance not from the bone. That's why there was no surgery. It would have been easier if he would have avulsed it. This is probably a 6 week injury. They may be more cautious due to the history of injuring the same muscle.
  13. No, it's just an elbow superficial bursitis. He hit it on something. It's all external to the joint. They will drain it and it will be fine. I've seen them the size of a baseball.
  14. Thank you, I appreciate the sentiment. That's pretty aggressive language when answering someone's opinion. And obviously you have no respect for me so that Wil be the end of it. I'm am willing to give the new FO a chance, you are under no obligation to.
  15. Yes, it's great if they are only looking for one year and he's good. If he sucks they are stuck for 2 more years with him and if they sign Alonso I'm not sure where bellinger will play. The OF is set and with Alonso at first there aren't many options.
×
×
  • Create New...