Jack McCallum: Stoudemire shut down

coolhandluke

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Stoudemire shut down

Knee injury could knock Suns star out for season

Posted: Tuesday March 28, 2006 2:42PM; Updated: Tuesday March 28, 2006 3:43PM

If the Phoenix Suns are going to win an NBA championship this season -- and that is their stated goal -- they will most likely have to do it without star frontcourtman Amaré Stoudemire.

Stoudemire's comeback from surgery on his left knee lasted only three games before the Suns decided to shut him down, "maybe for three days, maybe for 10 days, maybe for the rest of the season," according to coach/general manager Mike D'Antoni.

The best guess? The rest of the season.

D'Antoni made the decision hours after the Suns' most disappointing loss of the season, a 110-72 torching by the New Jersey Nets on Monday night at Continental Airlines Arena. Stoudemire started that game but played only 14 minutes (missing all six of his shots from the floor) and was obviously at no more than 30 percent efficiency. He jogged up and down the court, had very little lift and even winced from time to time when he landed.

"It's mostly stiffness but I have some pain, too," said Stoudemire on Tuesday morning from Milwaukee, where the Suns, 47-22 and still the odds-on favorite to win the Pacific Division, are scheduled to play the Bucks this evening. "I felt like I was improving -- that's why I came back -- but then the knee just started getting tighter and tighter. It felt like I was going to pull something all the time."

Stoudemire had surgery on Oct. 11, during the preseason, to repair a microfracture (about one centimeter wide) on his left knee. That was about a week after he had signed a five-year extension worth about $73 million. Dr. Tom Carter, the Suns' team physician, compared the lesion to a "pothole," which Carter said would get bigger and become harder to treat as time passed. Carter used a surgical awl to poke five shallow holes around the lesion, three millimeters apart, to facilitate bleeding that would harden and form the "fibrocartilage" that would fill in the tiny hole.

The Suns heard no dearth of dire reminders about other players (Chris Webber, Penny Hardaway, Kenyon Martin, to name three) whose careers had been thwarted by similar surgeries. But the plan all along was to get Stoudemire back for this season, provided there were no extenuating circumstances; the initial projection was for Stoudemire to come back "around the All-Star Game" in February. Carter said comparisons with other injuries were meaningless, considering Stoudemire's age (he's just 23) and the fact that his knee was in otherwise ideal condition.

Stoudemire rehabbed with trainer Aaron Nelson and began limited on-court workouts in January. His surgically repaired knee started to come around, but he began to experience stiffness and fluid buildup on his right knee, probably from overcompensation, and his comeback was pushed to "sometime in March." He would have one good practice, then not be able to go the following day. It was a roller-coaster ride that continued into the second week of March. Finally, after three straight days of work without much pain or swelling in either knee, the man the Suns call STAT (for "Stand Tall and Talented," the slogan Stoudemire gave himself as a teenager) declared himself ready for a home game against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 23.

D'Antoni decided to start him but monitored his minutes. Stoudemire had 20 points in 19 minutes as the Suns breezed to a 125-108 victory. Suns fans began licking their chops: We were already the third-best team in the Western Conference, probably the fourth-best team in the NBA, without him. How good are we now?

But coaches, teammates and the Suns' medical staff weren't so confident, seeing the extent to which Stoudemire's mobility was limited. (On many nights, a player of Stoudemire's talent needs only to be about 60 percent to dominate the Trail Blazers.) He started two nights later against Denver in a 107-96 loss and looked stiffer and slower. And the game against New Jersey, the start of a weeklong road trip that ends Sunday in a showdown against the Detroit Pistons at the Palace of Auburn Hills, convinced D'Antoni, the Suns' medical staff and Stoudemire himself that he wasn't ready.

"As a coach you always want your best players back," says D'Antoni. "But I had to put on my general manager's hat, too. We have a lot invested in Amaré, and we want him around for a long time. He'll be practicing, doing mostly one-on-one stuff. So we'll see. But he won't come back before he's ready."

For his part, Stoudemire concedes that he's disappointed. "I wanted to come back, help us win a championship this year," he says. "And maybe I still will. But I gotta get this thing right."

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This is a HUGE mistake. I really think they should let him labor up and down the court, not be able to move laterally or play defense, dominate the ball, throw team chemistry all out of whack and make them lose to the Timberwolves in the second round. ;) The Timberwolves are going to have to go on one heck of a run to make all that happen. (Hey, the whole Webber thing is over. We ought to be able laugh about it by now. :D )
 
Shut down? They don't seem so sure about it even in this article. If Amare is practicing, scrimmaging, will he not play the 3rd game of the second round, or 4th game of the Conference Finals? That's why he needed these few games in the regular season. He played, now they have an idea of what he's capable of.
 
Packt said:
Shut down? They don't seem so sure about it even in this article. If Amare is practicing, scrimmaging, will he not play the 3rd game of the second round, or 4th game of the Conference Finals? That's why he needed these few games in the regular season. He played, now they have an idea of what he's capable of.

You're missing the point. He's having PAIN and swelling and a lot more problems than he and they expected.

But coaches, teammates and the Suns' medical staff weren't so confident, seeing the extent to which Stoudemire's mobility was limited. (On many nights, a player of Stoudemire's talent needs only to be about 60 percent to dominate the Trail Blazers.) He started two nights later against Denver in a 107-96 loss and looked stiffer and slower. And the game against New Jersey, the start of a weeklong road trip that ends Sunday in a showdown against the Detroit Pistons at the Palace of Auburn Hills, convinced D'Antoni, the Suns' medical staff and Stoudemire himself that he wasn't ready.

"As a coach you always want your best players back," says D'Antoni. "But I had to put on my general manager's hat, too. We have a lot invested in Amaré, and we want him around for a long time. He'll be practicing, doing mostly one-on-one stuff. So we'll see. But he won't come back before he's ready."

For his part, Stoudemire concedes that he's disappointed. "I wanted to come back, help us win a championship this year," he says. "And maybe I still will. But I gotta get this thing right."

Amare is aware of how fragile the whole thing is right now, and he's saying he doesn't want to win the battle and lose the war.
 
"It's mostly stiffness but I have some pain, too," said Stoudemire... "I felt like I was improving -- that's why I came back -- but then the knee just started getting tighter and tighter. It felt like I was going to pull something all the time."

Stoudemire had surgery on Oct. 11, during the preseason, to repair a microfracture (about one centimeter wide) on his left knee. That was about a week after he had signed a five-year extension worth about $73 million. Dr. Tom Carter, the Suns' team physician, compared the lesion to a "pothole," which Carter said would get bigger and become harder to treat as time passed. Carter used a surgical awl to poke five shallow holes around the lesion, three millimeters apart, to facilitate bleeding that would harden and form the "fibrocartilage" that would fill in the tiny hole.

The Suns heard no dearth of dire reminders about other players (Chris Webber, Penny Hardaway, Kenyon Martin, to name three) whose careers had been thwarted by similar surgeries. But the plan all along was to get Stoudemire back for this season, provided there were no extenuating circumstances; the initial projection was for Stoudemire to come back "around the All-Star Game" in February. Carter said comparisons with other injuries were meaningless, considering Stoudemire's age (he's just 23) and the fact that his knee was in otherwise ideal condition.

Looks like perhaps the good Dr. Carter should have paid a little more attention to those who had gone before.
 
webber had pain and swelling as well when he came back. but that's a given when you come back from knee surgery and try to return to intense basketball activity again. imagine doing very limited physical activity for six months, then playing 20-25 minutes in an nba game. the difference between short scrimmages and full on nba contact play is overwhelming.

amare's gonna experience pain and sweeling for a while, at least until his knee reaquaints itself with the rigors of playing nba basketball.

still, the suns would be doing the right thing if they deactiviate him for the remainder of the season/postseason. no need to take possible career-ending risks.
 
So sad. I don't think we'll be seeing the same Amare. The difference should be even more than you see with Webber because Amare was so much more athletic. Hope he is able to come back 100% someday.
 
SacTownKid said:
So sad. I don't think we'll be seeing the same Amare. The difference should be even more than you see with Webber because Amare was so much more athletic. Hope he is able to come back 100% someday.


No he's not "so much more athletic". He was more athletic but it wasn't a huge difference, young Webber/webber when he came here was a monster. He didn't throw it down all the time but he had a lot of really quick moves. Those are gone now. Webber is still a good rebounder, passer, and shooter though. Amare's not. It looks like he's having even more trouble with his knees now, he's never going to be the same.
 
The Kings and Webber made the right call then, and the Suns and Amare are making the right call now. That Kings team had a rapidly closing window, and Webber was rapidly running out of "prime" years. We can go round and round on this one, but ultimately Webber wanted to push it, and that Kings team wasn't in a position to say no.

The Suns, aside from Nash, are pretty young. Nash has an injury history, but unless his back pulls a Larry Bird on him, he's going to be effective for at least three more years considering his style of play. Amare is very young, and has no reason to push himself on such a debilitating surgery. Unlike Webber, he is not a rapidly aging, certified superstar. He's a star in the making, but if he goes too fast on this his career will collapse. Moreover, the Suns just invested a max contract on him. It is in everybody's best interest to take it slow.
 
Good points, Venom...

Everything else aside, Amare has a bright future ahead of him, and with the "I have to get this right" comment I think he'll do the right thing.
 
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