[Grovenet] And why did you think it could last ? ? ?
Allen Warren
osubuckeye59 at yahoo.com
Thu Sep 13 23:31:51 PDT 2007
Today it is *SO* easy for EVERY sportswriter/NBA team official/fan to say "Yeah . . . we were concerned when we checked him out" or "our medical staff did raise potential issues". But what was the mood like for everybody *BUT* Portland and Seattle back on lottery-order day? Was Jerry West relaxed? Was Danny Ainge peacefully resigned to not getting the chance to draft Oden? Absolutely not!
The guy who wrote the article below for Yahoo Sports and any of his sportswriter peers who have or are writing the same kind of "we knew there was something wrong" story should be ashamed. Same goes for any Eastern Conference GM or Team President or Coach 'cause all everybody was talking about up until today was what a franchise-changing player Oden was going to be for the team lucky enough to draft him.
And just as Oden worked his tail off re-habbing and learning how to shoot left-handed foul shots so he could start playing for the Buckeyes sooner than later last season, he'll be just as committed in his knee rehab. What were the first words out of his month after waking up today and learning the extent of the problem and subsequent corrective surgery? Something like "I'm so sorry I let the Blazers down."
Oden's only 18. He's still young. He'll have the best trainers and program and equipment money can buy. And 2 years from now when he's back on the court starting to really make an impact for the Blazers, today's naysayers will be writing a different story/singing a different tune.
Oden's no Sam Bowie and 2 years from now, maybe even as early as next year, he'll start proving it.
Allen Warren
----- Original Message ----
From: Bob Browning <rab at jurislex.com>
To: Grovenet <grovenet at rdrop.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2007 1:48:08 PM
Subject: [Grovenet] And why did you think it could last ? ? ?
Damaged goods?
By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports
September 13, 2007
Just this week on the telephone, there was an Eastern Conference executive studying Greg Oden’s pre-draft physical in his office. Even now, this report still didn’t look like the body of a 19-year old prospect, but that of an older, worn veteran.
“From our (trainers and doctors), there were red flags everywhere,” he said.
The executive started listing the troubled spots – the bulging disc in the back, wrists, the ankles, the hands, a right leg that was an inch longer than the left, and yes, the knees. He wasn’t alone. Several pulled files this week with news of impending knee surgery, and kept wondering if maybe the breakdown of his body was just a matter of time.
Despite it all, this executive believed the Blazers had done the right thing drafting the 7-footer over Kevin Durant. Then again, he never had a practical need for his medical staff to pour over Oden like Portland did. No one else but Seattle did.
“It wouldn’t have stopped us from drafting him but it would’ve probably made us pause about making a deal to move up and get him,” the Eastern Conference executive said.
An unscientific poll of executives, talking prior to Yahoo! Sports' revelation on Thursday that the No. 1 pick in the 2007 NBA Draft isn’t playing basketball this season for the Blazers, agreed with him. As it turned out, the right knee that had a red dot on the Orlando draft camp physicals turned into microfracture surgery for Oden.
Suddenly, he’s no longer the promise of the next Bill Russell.
Suddenly, he’s the fear of Sam Bowie.
Until there’s proof that his body isn’t breaking down, there’s a natural and legitimate worry that the Blazers could’ve passed on a Jordan-esque talent – Kevin Durant – to take a center who will turn out to be more defective than dominant.
Who wants to believe this will be the case? Who would want it to happen? The NBA needs Oden to be a superstar. He’s too talented of a player, too wonderful and grounded of a person, to consider the possibility that he could be a washout.
Several NBA executives conceded that the revelation that an MRI showed a need for exploratory surgery on Thursday didn’t completely surprise them. Some medical staffs who studied Oden’s pre-draft physicals expressed differing levels of concern, on different parts of his body.
“Our trainers did say they thought he had somewhat of an issue (with the right knee), but they weren't sure to what extent,” one Western Conference executive said. “I guess we're starting to see now that it’s more serious than some people thought.”
As one high-ranking basketball official with access to several trainers at the Orlando pre-draft camps remembered being told, “There were some things about (Oden’s knee) that were interesting and that if they had a chance (to draft) him, they would have to look a lot closer.”
All in all, one Eastern Conference personnel man said, “It was not a good physical.”
Nobody studied Oden closer than the Blazers and Sonics, and sources say that both teams would’ve still drafted him with the No. 1 pick. Only Blazers GM Kevin Pritchard knows how much of a risk he believed drafting Oden would be for his franchise. Oden had missed part of his freshman season at Ohio State with wrist surgery, and several teams wondered whether he had regained the complete range of motion in that shooting wrist.
Still, they believed it would return with time, but cartilage damage that causes microfracture surgery? Amare Stoudemire and Jason Kidd made it back the same, but Allan Houston and Penny Hardaway never did. For Oden, you have to wonder: Is this the end of his body breaking down, or just the beginning of it?
For now, Oden, a charismatic and lovable kid, will spend a long, rainy winter in Portland rehabilitating that right knee. Under Pritchard, everything had gone right for the Blazers in the past two seasons – the draft day trade for Rookie of the Year Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge, the winning of the Draft Lottery, the unloading of headcases with bad contracts. All of that contributed to exorcising that lingering Jail Blazers image.
Now, everyone will be thinking about 1984 again, when with the second pick in the draft, the Blazers chose Kentucky’s Sam Bowie over North Carolina’s Michael Jordan. Bowie had a history of leg problems in college, and those never left him in a journeymen’s pro career. No one wants to believe that this is how it will go, how it will all turn out.
Durant thrilled Sonics officials with his scrimmage and practice performances against the Olympic team this summer in Las Vegas. They truly believe they’ve found a generational superstar with him.
Of course, that doesn’t make anyone feel better in Portland, where the most promising future in the sport suddenly looks too much like the darkest days of its past.
One day Russell, the next Bowie.
Nobody else in the NBA dares say, “I told you so,” but deep down they sure did fear it.
Adrian Wojnarowski is the national NBA columnist for Yahoo! Sports. Send Adrian a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
Updated on Thursday, Sep 13, 2007 4:05 pm, EDT
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