Bob Magaw
Footballguy
i was going to post something in foster thread but thought it deserved a separate thread, as it could lead to a general discussion about concept of being injury prone or suffering from bad luck IN GENERAL...
taking a cue from foster, he reminds me a little of retired (ominous) MIN RB robert smith... he also had a rep for being injury prone, possibly rightly, & would miss time nearly every season (not necessarily a lot of games every season)... UNTIL, he got a break (good kind, figuratively) & made it through a season unscathed (possibly a few)... he represented good value & helped some teams, where others that maybe drafted him previous season/s... gave up on him right as he would have helped them, ironically... you don't want to repeatedly back wrong pony in stock market, but sometimes people get burned trying to "time the market"...
of course it is human nature if player gets hurt 10 seasons in a row, to strongly suspect it might happen again... further, i think once a player has rep for getting hurt a lot ("fragile" fred taylor, donte stallworth prior to last season, bennie joppru, etc), there is a tendency to think they are more likely to get hurt sooner than later, & sort of write them off from the beginning, & want no part of them on their teams... not sure if that is the case (that injury prone player more likely to get hurt sooner than later in season?)...
with foster, in his rookie year, he hurt knee & missed entire season... this leads to one question... others have had knee injuries... edge, mcgahee, deuce that are still valued, so a knee injury isn't of itself a deal breaker...
this also leads to another question... if a defensive player launches themselves at you & explode into your knee like mcgahee, does that mean you had weak knee & are "injury prone"... or is it more likely that ANYBODY would have had their knee blown up, just due to physics & anatomy, & there is no stigma of lack of toughness or durability attached?
lets say for arguments sake that isn't the case... how about foster's most recent three seasons?
he played 14 games in 2003
just 4 games in 2004
15 games in 2005 (not counting playoff, i think... otherwise 17?)
in 2004 i think he broke a collarbone (?)... & last year, he broke his leg in playoff game... & we can't LEAVE out rookie knee injury (it happened), but just speaking to last three seasons, in one of them, he missed 3/4 of season... but in other two, he missed just a few games... it should also be pointed out that he didn't exactly have the biggest workload in those seasons in which he made it through the majority (likely contributing factor in his longevity)... about 100 carries second season & closer to 200 last... due to presence of stephen davis... so if he can go 250-275-300 carries, he will be in uncharted territory...
so another question i have... do we know enough in general about players that have had multiple injuries... that they are more likely to get hurt again... how much more he is likely (?)... whether he is infact more likely to get hurt sooner (2004) or later (2003 & 2005)?
this specific question could open up into thread partly about identifying injury prone players currently, in past...
another question about injuries, whether players are injury prone or have bad luck... when foster broke his collar bone, do we think he has a weak collar bone, or ANYBODY would have broken it if hit in that way, that hard, in that place, etc...
same with leg injury... like when steve smith broke his leg (GB?) in game one of 2004 season, would nearly anybody suffer that injury if bent & torqued in some way (same with theismann, napoleon, mccollum, bryant young, tim krumrie)...
this might point to another general discussion that could branch from this one... general consensus that it is bad to run upright... is foster thought to be upright runner, which would be case of identifiable correlation between running style & idea of being injury prone...
another term that i think is thought to make you more susceptible to injury is being long strider (robert smith may have been, & maybe chris brown, too, who is or was definitely upright in style)... guys like emmit had choppier, smaller steps... when those things were pumping like pistons, maybe not as much time where legs are in contact with ground & could get trapped in bad position where leg could be fallen on & broken...
last point i had in mind when talking in general about injury susceptibility & varaince among players... some for identifiable reasons of style... marcus allen had both great field awareness & body control, so he rarely got into trouble, & would usually see the big hit coming & move his body at last second to not have to absorb crushing blow, it would just glance off (gretzky was like this in hockey context)...
taking a cue from foster, he reminds me a little of retired (ominous) MIN RB robert smith... he also had a rep for being injury prone, possibly rightly, & would miss time nearly every season (not necessarily a lot of games every season)... UNTIL, he got a break (good kind, figuratively) & made it through a season unscathed (possibly a few)... he represented good value & helped some teams, where others that maybe drafted him previous season/s... gave up on him right as he would have helped them, ironically... you don't want to repeatedly back wrong pony in stock market, but sometimes people get burned trying to "time the market"...
of course it is human nature if player gets hurt 10 seasons in a row, to strongly suspect it might happen again... further, i think once a player has rep for getting hurt a lot ("fragile" fred taylor, donte stallworth prior to last season, bennie joppru, etc), there is a tendency to think they are more likely to get hurt sooner than later, & sort of write them off from the beginning, & want no part of them on their teams... not sure if that is the case (that injury prone player more likely to get hurt sooner than later in season?)...
with foster, in his rookie year, he hurt knee & missed entire season... this leads to one question... others have had knee injuries... edge, mcgahee, deuce that are still valued, so a knee injury isn't of itself a deal breaker...
this also leads to another question... if a defensive player launches themselves at you & explode into your knee like mcgahee, does that mean you had weak knee & are "injury prone"... or is it more likely that ANYBODY would have had their knee blown up, just due to physics & anatomy, & there is no stigma of lack of toughness or durability attached?
lets say for arguments sake that isn't the case... how about foster's most recent three seasons?
he played 14 games in 2003
just 4 games in 2004
15 games in 2005 (not counting playoff, i think... otherwise 17?)
in 2004 i think he broke a collarbone (?)... & last year, he broke his leg in playoff game... & we can't LEAVE out rookie knee injury (it happened), but just speaking to last three seasons, in one of them, he missed 3/4 of season... but in other two, he missed just a few games... it should also be pointed out that he didn't exactly have the biggest workload in those seasons in which he made it through the majority (likely contributing factor in his longevity)... about 100 carries second season & closer to 200 last... due to presence of stephen davis... so if he can go 250-275-300 carries, he will be in uncharted territory...
so another question i have... do we know enough in general about players that have had multiple injuries... that they are more likely to get hurt again... how much more he is likely (?)... whether he is infact more likely to get hurt sooner (2004) or later (2003 & 2005)?
this specific question could open up into thread partly about identifying injury prone players currently, in past...
another question about injuries, whether players are injury prone or have bad luck... when foster broke his collar bone, do we think he has a weak collar bone, or ANYBODY would have broken it if hit in that way, that hard, in that place, etc...
same with leg injury... like when steve smith broke his leg (GB?) in game one of 2004 season, would nearly anybody suffer that injury if bent & torqued in some way (same with theismann, napoleon, mccollum, bryant young, tim krumrie)...
this might point to another general discussion that could branch from this one... general consensus that it is bad to run upright... is foster thought to be upright runner, which would be case of identifiable correlation between running style & idea of being injury prone...
another term that i think is thought to make you more susceptible to injury is being long strider (robert smith may have been, & maybe chris brown, too, who is or was definitely upright in style)... guys like emmit had choppier, smaller steps... when those things were pumping like pistons, maybe not as much time where legs are in contact with ground & could get trapped in bad position where leg could be fallen on & broken...
last point i had in mind when talking in general about injury susceptibility & varaince among players... some for identifiable reasons of style... marcus allen had both great field awareness & body control, so he rarely got into trouble, & would usually see the big hit coming & move his body at last second to not have to absorb crushing blow, it would just glance off (gretzky was like this in hockey context)...
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