The
Detroit Lions are struggling with injuries again for the second year in a row, and you can totally understand why Lions fans either feel some concern or are just mad about the whole situation.
The overwhelming feeling, even beyond those two things, is bewilderment. People want to know why this keeps happening.
It’s just human nature to, at times, create the answers to your own questions. It has to be the training staff, right? Well, it’s not that. The Lions have invested heavily in their training staff and brought in some of the best people in the business. It’s easy to focus on the injury side of it, but look what this group can do with a guy like Amon-Ra St. Brown, who was supposed to be out maybe two weeks with an ankle injury, then played the next game, and did not miss a beat. He can do stuff like this because of great trainers.
The other big thing, and maybe the biggest, is that the Lions are going too hard too early in the year. We know other teams don’t practice the way the Lions do. New Lions say it every summer, and so do the teams that come in for joint practices during training camp.
I wanted to know if there was anything to this idea. I wanted to know if the Lions are rushing themselves into too much live physical contact, which is causing wear and tear. So I spoke with
Bone and Joint Institute of Tennessee’s Director of Rehabilitation Services,
Dave Kempfert, to get some answers.