Yao’s Injury Not Decisively Catastrophic; Media Salivates
Posted by Steve Fales | Posted in NBA | Posted on 30-06-2009
Tags: Houston Rockets, Tom Clanton, Yao Ming
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As you are sure to have read over the past 12 hours, the hairline fracture in Yao Ming’s troubled left foot, has still not healed despite more than 6 weeks of immobilization. In fact, the fracture has actually extended across the bone. This is by no means good news for the Rockets, who were hoping that their 7-6 big man would start rehab this week. This case, however, is not as black and white as it seems. Yao, as it stands, is completely asymptomatic. His foot feels fine. He was certain that after his X-Ray, he would be cleared to start his workouts. This is where the situation becomes dicey for Houston. As team doctor, Tom Clanton, stated in his press conference, “We don’t treat the CT Scan, we treat the patient.” The problem the Rockets find themselves in though, is while Yao is feeling no pain, swelling or tenderness, if he so much as missteps on the basketball court, his foot could shatter, and he would never play again. Yao and the Rockets will spend the next several days getting second opinions on whether to give it more time to heal on its own, put a pin in his foot (which Yao has done before on this same foot), or get more extensive surgery to eradicate the problem. The first option is high risk, high reward. If the foot mends on its own, Yao could be ready opening night, however if it still doesn’t heal, a later surgery date would mean more basketball missed. If they choose to install a pin, seen as a temporary solution that could hold for several years, it would be guaranteed that Yao would start the season on injured reserve, something Yao himself, does NOT want to do. Lastly, completely grafting the foot, would be a permanent solution, albeit with an estimated recovery time of 12-18 months, or perhaps even longer. This is seen as a worst case scenario. These are the facts. The question isn’t whether the injury is season threatening or, God forbid, even career threatening. It certainly is. The question is, what are the odds…
