Archive for March, 2009

Finding hope about KG by revisiting the knee expert

March 31st, 2009

Given the setback with Kevin Garnett’s knee, I thought it would be useful to revisit a tremendous interview Celtics Hub’s Zach Lowe conducted with an expert orthopedic surgeon Dr. Donald Rose about KG’s injury. I went through the exchange and specifically looked for answers pertaining to the time it takes an individual to recover from a posterior muscle strain and the extent one can recover fully during that length of time. I did this with a goal of finding evidence that would let me believe Garnett still has a good chance at coming back for the Playoffs at full strength. The entire interview is a great read that I strongly encourage everyone to take a look at, but here are the highlights I picked out from the back and forth.

CH: And with rest, is this injury something you can come back from and be 100 percent, or does it always linger?

Dr. Rose: Absolutely, he can come back 100 percent. There are some muscle strains that linger a long, long time, but those usually involve the hamstring–and usually the portion that is up higher in the thigh, not behind the knee. They say you never get cured of a hamstring injury. But for calf strains behind the knee–those have the potential for a full recovery.

CH: Does this kind of injury ever require surgery?

DR: No, there’s no surgery that would ever be contemplated. That’s for sure. The only invasive procedure that has reared its head lately involves platelet rich plasma, where doctors take your own blood, take out one component and inject it into the injured area–mostly for elbow, muscle or ligament strains.

CH: The team said the injury had been bothering Garnett for a couple of weeks. Is that typical?

DR: Yes. You can have a very mild muscle strain, and then it can be exacerbated by putting too much force on it. A little injury becomes bigger.

CH: The team is saying KG will be back in two or three weeks. Is that a reasonable recovery time?

DR: It really depends on how badly it’s injured. A very mild strain takes two or three weeks to heal. If it’s a moderate strain, it could be four weeks, and if it’s severe, it could take up to six weeks. If you come back too soon, you run the risk of aggravating the injury and starting from ground zero.

Analysis of Dr. Rose’s Answers: Those answers are pretty encouraging in my estimation, but let’s do some math here to make us all feel better. Garnett suffered the injury on February 19th against Utah. He returned March 20th against San Antonio. That is four weeks right there. Now according to Dr. Rose, that is enough recovery time for a moderate strain but if this was a severe strain which generally requires six weeks of healing, KG may have jumped the gun on his return.

If this was the case, Celtics fan can at least be thankful that Garnett is likely not back to “ground zero” in his recovery. Let’s remember that KG was able to play (quite well for that matter) in his four games since returning. Now he clearly had some extreme soreness since those games, but was at least able to play through the pain in practice (perhaps foolishly) before Doc decided to shut him down.

Perk described him as looking 70 percent during practice, which on the surface sounds discouraging. However, 70 percent is far from ground zero. This in my eyes is a good thing when you look at the how the setback will affect Garnett a few weeks down the road

Dr. Rose also seemed adamant that it is completely possible to come back at 100 percent from this injury. I point this out since it is likely many Celtics fan are worrying that this injury will linger for KG for the rest of the year.

There are many injuries which can limit players for months even years after they are cleared to return. This was the case just this past summer with David Ortiz, as a a broken wrist limited his power for the final 2 months of the season once he came back. With an injury like that, you might need a full year to entirely recover from the lingering pain and regain full strength. With Garnett’s knee strain, it does not appear that kind of situation is probable despite his recent soreness.

Therefore I remain confident right now that Garnett can be back at full strength in the playoffs. In fact I would implore Doc Rivers to be overly cautious and rest the Big Ticket for the remainder of the regular season. Let him work off the rust in the 1st round of the playoffs. Even with KG only playing 20-25 minutes, the Celtics should be able to defeat any potential 1st round foe in a 7 game series.

One final reason I would encourage the extended rest is because of this team’s experience. This is not last year when the starting five were still learning how to play effectively with each other and were pushed to the brink in the first two rounds. It is one year later now and they have all developed a very nice understanding of each other’s game which showed in their dominance in the 1st half of this season.

So why risk having Garnett come back before you really need to at the end of the regular season? Give KG the extra rest and increase his chances at being 100 percent. The closer the Big Ticket is to that, the higher this team’s likelihood is of getting back to the Finals.

Breaking: KG out until at least April 12

March 31st, 2009

Per Boston.com:

Celtics forward Kevin Garnett, battling an injured knee, will not play again until three games remain in the regular season, the team confirmed today.

“After watching him move today, we’re just going to shut him down,” said Celtics coach Doc Rivers at practice this afternoon.

“I just think we’ve got to be smart about it,” Rivers said Sunday. “It’s just like when somebody says somebody is going to be back in a week or two, that’s not a guarantee. If a guy gets sore, do we play him because we say he’s supposed to be back playing? You just use your common sense.”

Obama Picks Against Celtics, Let Impeachment Proceedings Begin*

March 31st, 2009

From the New York Times, via TrueHoop:

His prediction: Cleveland would play the Los Angeles Lakers.

The president did not predict a winner, but was effusive about the Lebron James-led Cavaliers. “I’m telling you, those Cavs,” Mr. Obama marveled. “They’ve only lost one game all year at home. Thirty-five and one.” (Actually 33 and 1, as of Friday.)

“And they have home court advantage. That’s pretty impressive.”

*Do not begin impeachment proceedings, please.

I’m Just Sayin’: Mikki Moore’s Shooting Stats

March 31st, 2009

In which I throw up some numbers that may or may not mean anything but are interesting, at least to me. (Note: all stats from 82games, and they haven’t been updated since Sunday’s game, when Mikki went 6-of-8 and got at least a couple of “in close” shots):

 

                                             FG% on Jumpers                                      % of all FGAs that are jumpers           

With C’s:                                      47 percent                                                       65 percent

With Kings 08/09:                       41 percent                                                       46 percent

With Kings 07/08                        40 percent                                                       38 percent

With Nets 06/07                          55 percent                                                       42 percent

 

Source: AP

Source: AP

Celtics Hub’s Brief Tribute to Zo; Also, a Call for One Very Specific Video Clip

March 30th, 2009

I was sitting in my parents’ living room in 1993 watching the Celtics and the Charlotte Hornets–some fake team who wore teal and yet dared to challenge the Celtics–play an excruciatingly exciting Game 4 of a very exciting first-round playoff series. Boston (48-34) was seeded fourth in the Eastern Conference; the Hornets (44-38), were seeded fifth and featured an exciting young nucleus of Larry Johnson, Kendall Gill and Zo. The C’s won Game 1 at home but lost Game 2, 99-98, despite 30 points off the bench from Kevin McHale. The series shifted to Charlotte, where the Hornets won Game 3 easily, setting up a must-win Game 4 for Boston. 

If you’re my age or older, you remember what happened: C’s up 103-102, needing a stop in the final 15 seconds. And then Zo, a brazen rookie, did this:

The refs put 0.4 seconds back on the clock, and the C’s had the inbounds passer (McHale, inbounding from halfcourt) try an alley-oop to Dee Brown. McHale’s pass was perfect. Dee went up on the right side of the rim to lay the ball in, only to have Kendall Gill deflect it away. I went crazy. It was obviously goaltending. Dee Brown had placed the ball on the freaking rim. The C’s were outraged. To this day, I am convinced Gill committed a goal-tending violation, and I’m convinced the referees knew it and didn’t have the guts to make what would have been a heavily scrutinized call in front of a delirious crowd. Here was Dee Brown’s reaction, via an archived NYT story:

“The ball was definitely in,” Brown said. “I thought it was goaltending all the way. I laid the ball in the rim, so I know it was goaltending. If it wasn’t goaltending, then I think there should have been a foul called.”

(Note: I cannot find a clip of this play. If someone finds one, please send it and we’ll post. I’d love to see if my memory is accurate or horribly biased). 

You want a depressing read? Read that entire story. Here’s the lead: The embattled Boston Celtics, already reeling from the potentially career-ending heart condition of Reggie Lewis, suffered a final, bitter defeat of their season when Charlotte’s 104-103 victory gave the Hornets a three-games-to-one triumph in the franchise’s first playoff series.

Yeah, so, really not a good time. Reading that game recap was a fun in that it reveals all the sports data we’re likely to forget as the years pass. For instance, I had no memory of the C’s getting a stop with 24.9 seconds left to preserve the 103-102 lead only to turn the ball over on a 10-second violation. My 15-year-old self was probably cursing Rick Fox for this for days. 

One thing I do remember, though, and it was something I was uncomfortable with at the time: I wasn’t really that devastated by the loss, because it spared the C’s a second round match-up with the top-seeded Knicks, something that meant sure humiliation for me, being surrounded by Knicks fans in Fairfield County. 

In any case, Zo was a beast in Game 4, with 33 points (on 13 field goal attempts!), seven boards and six blocks. It felt right to bring this up on the night when the Heat will retire his number. Zo wasn’t perfect–ask Nets fans about him–but he was, for the most part, one of the hardest workers in the game.