Nice article in Bee on Whiteside:

Excited to see Whiteside play next season. Hopefully he'll come back healthy and it'll be like we got first round picks this season.
 
Whiteside will be lucky to play even 5 games next season. He's too far back on the depth chart big wise.
 
Hopefully the injury bug was a one time thing and he will be healthy this next year. The kid has potential and I could see him getting some spot minutes next year. I remember being intrigued after watching him in the summer league last year. Not as excited as watching DMC, but the potential was there for him to be a big time shot blocker. I hope he turns out more like a Howard than a Thabeet.
 
Whiteside will be lucky to play even 5 games next season. He's too far back on the depth chart big wise.

At this time, we have two bigs under contract besides Whiteside. Doesn't look like much of a logjam right now! Hopefully we resign Dalembert. But even so, if we don't sign anyone else, Whiteside could minutes here and there, just like Jackson did last season.
 
I've been giving this some thought because something bothered me about some of the comments. Then I read a comment on another blog site that rang a bell that should have been obvious to me. Westphal made a comment about a player needing to know his own body and being able to tell the difference between an injury you can play through or one you can't. So basicly, Westphal is saying that the decision on the seriousness of a players injury is left up to the player, and not to a doctor.

To these old eye's, that might work with a 32 year old established player with nothing to prove, but I seriously doubt it would work with a 19 or 20 year old player with everything to prove. And in Whiteside's case, a very immature player. Let me think, has a similar incident happened recently? Oh yeah, there was this guy named Evans, that had some sort of foot problem that drug on for the entire season. So I guess that if you have a young player thats not exactly living up to your expectations, and he complains that his knee is bothering him, do you send him to a doctor? Hell no! You send him to Reno!

Maybe I'm off base. But I detect some sort of odor here. I suspect if one went back and looked at past history, we might find other incidents of little attention being paid to injuries that turned out to be far worse than originally thought. But all that aside. I don't think you leave the decision of how bad an injury is, up to the player. Isn't that what doctors are for?
 
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I've been giving this some thought because something bothered me about some of the comments. Then I read a comment on another blog site that rang a bell that should have been obvious to me. Westphal made a comment about a player needing to know his own body and being able to tell the difference between an injury you can play through or one you can't. So basicly, Westphal is saying that the decision on the seriousness of a players injury is left up to the player, and not to a doctor.

To these old eye's, that might work with a 32 year old established player with nothing to prove, but I seriously doubt it would work with a 19 or 20 year old player with everything to prove. And in Whiteside's case, a very immature player. Let me think, has a similar incident happened recently? Oh yeah, there was this guy named Evans, that had some sort of foot problem that drug on for the entire season. So I guess that if you have a young player thats not exactly living up to your expectations, and he complains that his knee is bothering him, do you send him to a doctor? Hell no! You send him to Reno!

Maybe I'm off base. But I detect some sort of odor here. I suspect if one went back and looked at past history, we might find other incidents of little attention being paid to injuries that turned out to be far worse than originally thought. But all that aside. I don't think you leave the decision of how bad an injury is, up to the player. Isn't that what doctors are for?

I agree. You may know how much your injury hurts, but you don't necessarily know how significant the injury is unless someone examines it and tells you. Even then, the doctors have pressure to get players back on the court from the team. A young player who is not getting playing time has pressure on him as the organization may be rolling their eyes because they are not getting what they want out of their investment. Bottom line.....don't get hurt.
 
Yes and no. There are gray areas in medicine and some things can't be measured scientifically. Soft tissue injuries are difficuklt to assess sometines. Bottom line is that doctors sometimes have to relay on what the patient tells them about how things feel. If the patient minimizes how bad it feels, the doctor may have to accept it.
 
Yes and no. There are gray areas in medicine and some things can't be measured scientifically. Soft tissue injuries are difficuklt to assess sometines. Bottom line is that doctors sometimes have to relay on what the patient tells them about how things feel. If the patient minimizes how bad it feels, the doctor may have to accept it.

True, but that didn't support my point, so I left it out.
 
Hassan had "jumper's knee" with a twist. His tendon was torn and not simply inflammed. I will bet money that no one took him seriously as the type of pain he was describing is very common in basketball. I'm sure he was told to shrug it off and get on with it by everybody. If it was bothering him at the end of his college experience, I doubt very much he wanted to reveal it to anybody and simply soldiered on. He wanted to protect his place in the draft is my guess. Nobody wants a whiner and more importantly, no one wants a guy with knee problems as most people think of a knee problem as being potentially career threatening and not what Hassan actually had/has. How's he to know?

Here's an article documenting the lack of attention Kings' staff paid to his complaints: http://www.sactownroyalty.com/2011/6/20/2233003/hassan-whiteside-injuries-and-responsibility

There is no way anyone can know the difference between a bad problem with inflammation and an actual tear in the tendon without an MRI. A tear can be seen. There was even an article by Jason Jones saying he had a small tear but would be out only 4-6 weeks. This is what Jones was told. No tear heals in 4-6 weeks and it shows the ignorance of the people around Hassan and by that I mean the Kings' staff.

MRI's are not that expensive compaired to the investment a team has in an athlete.

On the positive side, if his patellar tendon was slowing him down in college and that's why we got him in the 2nd round, we got a big time bargain. As the surgeons say, "where there is a chance to cut, there is a chance to cure." Well, it's true. Hassan can come back with a fully functioning knee and the team has learned a lesson.

We have also gotten a first rounder in the 2nd round.
 
Yes and no. There are gray areas in medicine and some things can't be measured scientifically. Soft tissue injuries are difficuklt to assess sometines. Bottom line is that doctors sometimes have to relay on what the patient tells them about how things feel. If the patient minimizes how bad it feels, the doctor may have to accept it.

Unfortuneately, most players in their early twenties would have trouble knowing the difference between what should be played through and what they should sit down for. When you ar that young, you are most likely to error on the side of trying to play IMO.
 
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