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S/I Article
Assessing the impact of Greg Oden's injury
The stunning news that Greg Oden will probably miss his rookie season after being diagnosed Thursday with a microfracture knee injury raises a number of questions for him and the Blazers.
1. How did this happen?
Oden's agent Bill Duffy told me this week that Oden couldn't pinpoint exactly when or how his knee had been injured, that it started hurting suddenly and for no apparent reason.
You may recall that 10 days before the draft last June we broke the news that some teams were concerned about Oden's physical status. One team in particular was worried about a number of problems.
"Our doctors saw some early signs of arthritis in his knees,'' an executive with that franchise recalled Thursday after news of Oden's microfracture had come out. "They were also really concerned with his hip and his back as well. The way they explained it, all of those problems are linked: The knee hurts because the back is doing this, and the back hurts because the hip is doing that. The doctors thought there was some inter-connectivity between each issue, so that basically his body was working against itself.''
What makes all of this complicated -- as anyone with a serious medical issue will attest -- is that different doctors will have different opinions. Provide the 30 NBA franchises with the same MRIs and medical results, and their team doctors will arrive at a variety of diagnoses and predictions.
Based on what Duffy had been told, Oden entered the draft with no pre-existing knee concerns. "Portland did more due diligence than anybody and their doctors saw nothing wrong with his knee,'' Duffy said.
The point of this is not to accuse one doctor of being superior or inferior to another. This is a cautionary moral: As the medical tests become more intricate and sophisticated, the harder it becomes to read them -- and to apply those results with perspective.
2. What is next for Oden?
A long comeback is ahead. The best-case scenario was established by Phoenix center Amare Stoudemire, who missed all but three games in 2005-06 after undergoing microfracture knee surgery in the preseason. He returned last season to play in every game while showing steady improvement, becoming a far more dynamic player in April than he had been in November.
So if everything goes well, Oden is probably looking at a two-year window to recover his athleticism and confidence.
But Kenyon Martin, Chris Webber and Oden's fellow Blazer Darius Miles can tell Oden how difficult an injury this can be, as none of them has regained full health since undergoing microfracture knee surgery.
Oden's recovery will require a lot of work, as Stoudemire was relentless in his rehabilitation. The cutting-edge approach of the medical and athletic training staff in Phoenix was for Stoudemire to strengthen the areas of his body whose weaknesses contributed to the injury in his knee. Their approach helped Stoudemire return in record time -- only Jason Kidd has done as well in his recovery from microfracture knee surgery -- while also, in a roundabout way, confirming the suspicions of Oden's longterm prognosis that we first reported in June.
3. How will the Blazers do without him?
Entire article: SI.com - Writers - Thomsen: Assessing the impact of Oden's season-ending surgery - Thursday September 13, 2007 4:59PM
Assessing the impact of Greg Oden's injury
The stunning news that Greg Oden will probably miss his rookie season after being diagnosed Thursday with a microfracture knee injury raises a number of questions for him and the Blazers.
1. How did this happen?
Oden's agent Bill Duffy told me this week that Oden couldn't pinpoint exactly when or how his knee had been injured, that it started hurting suddenly and for no apparent reason.
You may recall that 10 days before the draft last June we broke the news that some teams were concerned about Oden's physical status. One team in particular was worried about a number of problems.
"Our doctors saw some early signs of arthritis in his knees,'' an executive with that franchise recalled Thursday after news of Oden's microfracture had come out. "They were also really concerned with his hip and his back as well. The way they explained it, all of those problems are linked: The knee hurts because the back is doing this, and the back hurts because the hip is doing that. The doctors thought there was some inter-connectivity between each issue, so that basically his body was working against itself.''
What makes all of this complicated -- as anyone with a serious medical issue will attest -- is that different doctors will have different opinions. Provide the 30 NBA franchises with the same MRIs and medical results, and their team doctors will arrive at a variety of diagnoses and predictions.
Based on what Duffy had been told, Oden entered the draft with no pre-existing knee concerns. "Portland did more due diligence than anybody and their doctors saw nothing wrong with his knee,'' Duffy said.
The point of this is not to accuse one doctor of being superior or inferior to another. This is a cautionary moral: As the medical tests become more intricate and sophisticated, the harder it becomes to read them -- and to apply those results with perspective.
2. What is next for Oden?
A long comeback is ahead. The best-case scenario was established by Phoenix center Amare Stoudemire, who missed all but three games in 2005-06 after undergoing microfracture knee surgery in the preseason. He returned last season to play in every game while showing steady improvement, becoming a far more dynamic player in April than he had been in November.
So if everything goes well, Oden is probably looking at a two-year window to recover his athleticism and confidence.
But Kenyon Martin, Chris Webber and Oden's fellow Blazer Darius Miles can tell Oden how difficult an injury this can be, as none of them has regained full health since undergoing microfracture knee surgery.
Oden's recovery will require a lot of work, as Stoudemire was relentless in his rehabilitation. The cutting-edge approach of the medical and athletic training staff in Phoenix was for Stoudemire to strengthen the areas of his body whose weaknesses contributed to the injury in his knee. Their approach helped Stoudemire return in record time -- only Jason Kidd has done as well in his recovery from microfracture knee surgery -- while also, in a roundabout way, confirming the suspicions of Oden's longterm prognosis that we first reported in June.
3. How will the Blazers do without him?
Entire article: SI.com - Writers - Thomsen: Assessing the impact of Oden's season-ending surgery - Thursday September 13, 2007 4:59PM
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