1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

<ESPN> Rockets planning to adjust Yao's activities to keep him fresh

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by hancock.corey, Oct 1, 2008.

  1. hancock.corey

    hancock.corey Member

    Joined:
    Jan 9, 2008
    Messages:
    565
    Likes Received:
    1
    I dont' know if this has already been posted or not.


    Here's the Link: http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3618626


    HOUSTON -- Yao Ming's birthday wish: getting through an NBA season without getting hurt.

    The 7-foot-6 center -- who turned 28 on Sept. 12 -- has missed more than 80 games across the last three seasons with four separate injuries. In 2005-06, he contracted an infection in his left big toe that required surgery, then broke his left foot later. In 2006-07, he broke his right leg. Last February, he broke his left foot in a different place, had surgery and sat out the playoffs.



    Yao acknowledges that he has to change something, whether it's his workout routine or the number of minutes he logs in games.

    "I need to learn something from the last three years. Seriously," Yao said after the Rockets' first practice on Tuesday. "Maybe I need to be careful with my pregame workout or something, lay down a little bit, not get my body too tired before a game. Let's try some new schedules, put my best shape into the game."

    Coach Rick Adelman said he'll carefully monitor Yao's day-to-day schedule and hold him out of segments of practice to keep him fresh. Yao played 37 minutes per game last season and often resisted when Adelman tried to replace him.

    "He's such a hard worker, he just runs himself into the ground," Adelman said. "He keeps saying he wants to rest, but he never wants to sit out. We're going to try to monitor him as much as we can, be smart in how we use him."

    Yao was averaging 22 points and a career-high 10.8 rebounds when he sustained the stress fracture in his foot on Feb. 26. He recovered enough to play for China at the Olympics, but said his foot was only 70-80 percent healed.

    His Houston teammates nervously watched his games in Beijing.

    "You cringe because you don't want to see him fall down," said point guard Rafer Alston. "And then he falls, and things like that. Then, he's doing an interview, and he falls over a writer or a camera."

    Yao averaged 19 points and 8.2 rebounds in Beijing, leading China to the quarterfinals.

    "The Olympics was a very good tryout for me to prepare for the Rockets season," he said. "Some Chinese fans probably won't be happy, but that's just being honest. It feels great to come out of the injury. I had a good recovery. I feel fresh and ready for next season."


    Houston assistant coach Jack Sikma made two trips to China -- one before the Games and one after -- to work individually with Yao. Sikma said Yao has lost about 10 pounds and just needs to regain his game conditioning.

    The Rockets acquired Ron Artest and Brent Barry in the offseason and Adelman hopes that the improved versatility will give Yao more chances to rest -- and fewer opportunities to get hurt.

    Adelman is starting his second season in Houston and also has more confidence now in frontcourt players like Luis Scola, Carl Landry and Chuck Hayes, who can come off the bench to replace Yao. Dikembe Mutombo backed up Yao last season, but Mutombo has yet to sign a new contract.

    "I'm very comfortable playing two of those guys together and that would help keep Yao's minutes down," Adelman said. "We had to play without him last year and those guys had to play, so I think having a versatility, we have some more things we can go to offensively."

    Until then, Yao said he's not afraid to test his foot and go full-bore in practice to rebuild his stamina.

    "The foot feels all right. I can't say it's like brand new, but it's like it's my foot," he said. "I can't wait to go, for the first preseason game, the first regular-season game."

    Yao isn't the only Rockets player whose health worries Adelman.

    Tracy McGrady said Monday that his left shoulder is arthritic and his left knee is healing slower than expected from surgery in the spring. Alston had surgery to repair ligaments in his right ankle and forward Shane Battier had surgery to remove bone spurs in his left ankle. Battier now has inflammation in his left foot that will keep him out at least four weeks.

    "I never had a team where I had four starters have surgery," said Adelman, starting his 18th season as a head coach. "That's been one of my major concerns, how these guys are going to come to camp, where they are physically and how we are going to monitor that as we go through this first month. "
     
  2. hancock.corey

    hancock.corey Member

    Joined:
    Jan 9, 2008
    Messages:
    565
    Likes Received:
    1
    I remember when some fans were angry because they felt he wasn't making playing with Houston a big enough deal compared to China.
     
  3. kaocsaephan

    kaocsaephan Member

    Joined:
    Sep 30, 2007
    Messages:
    1,269
    Likes Received:
    26
    In before the lock. You know, this is a pretty busy forum in terms of traffic. Chances are an article that is 24hours (or older) old has already been posted. It doesn't hurt to look around either.
     
  4. superx

    superx Member

    Joined:
    Dec 21, 2007
    Messages:
    265
    Likes Received:
    0
    Yea,do anything to avoid injury.
     
  5. aussie rocket

    aussie rocket Member

    Joined:
    Apr 3, 2006
    Messages:
    6,096
    Likes Received:
    201

    Wow, that's very...umm.... elitist of you to say.

    If your going to arc up about it, maybe YOU should of looked around to see whether the article was already posted.

    If it hasn't been, then you should apologise to the OP.... Hell you should
    probably apologise anyway.
     
  6. kaocsaephan

    kaocsaephan Member

    Joined:
    Sep 30, 2007
    Messages:
    1,269
    Likes Received:
    26
    It has been posted already. I didn't mean to offend the OP.
     
  7. aussie rocket

    aussie rocket Member

    Joined:
    Apr 3, 2006
    Messages:
    6,096
    Likes Received:
    201

    Provide the link then to the thread if that's the case.

    Pay due respect to the OP rather than telling them to do exactly what you couldn't be bothered doing yourself.
     
  8. sauce

    sauce Member

    Joined:
    Sep 22, 2003
    Messages:
    10
    Likes Received:
    0
    http://bbs.clutchfans.net/showthread.php?t=154746

    Dude, you posted in that thread. :p
     
  9. aussie rocket

    aussie rocket Member

    Joined:
    Apr 3, 2006
    Messages:
    6,096
    Likes Received:
    201
  10. Raven

    Raven Member

    Joined:
    Jul 24, 2002
    Messages:
    14,984
    Likes Received:
    1,025
    Yao needs to play fewer minutes period and if that means fewer regular season victories, I'm willing to accept that trade off.
     
  11. zhaozhilong

    zhaozhilong Member

    Joined:
    Dec 14, 2002
    Messages:
    784
    Likes Received:
    1
    Athletes have freak injuries once in a while. But this many injuries occuring in this many players over so many years in the same team? It's not natural. I don't think this has happened by chance.

    Something is wrong somewhere in the physical training department or somewhere else in the Rockets organization. Something MUST be wrong. Maybe it's a human related error, a loophole in someone's professional knowledge. Maybe it's a system flaw. Or it could just be a software bug in whatever physical training software that they are using for record purposes. There must be a major flaw somewhere. It's just that the flaw has managed to escape detection so far.

    There is no way a team can be so injury prone for so many years, with bad luck being the only explanation.

    I hope Morey is engaging some 3rd party experts outside of the organization to have a fresh look into what they are doing. Sometimes people can't spot their own mistakes in something that they've been doing for so long routinely.
     
  12. kaocsaephan

    kaocsaephan Member

    Joined:
    Sep 30, 2007
    Messages:
    1,269
    Likes Received:
    26
    If it was on front page, I would have but I'm not going to spend time looking for a thread for someone who wasn't willing to do it himself. Knock him down? What are you? Some sort of sensitive internet police? :rolleyes:

    I simply stated that the article had already been posted and that (for future reference) this forum is pretty busy so news from popular/main sources such as ESPN/Yahoo/NBA/Chron would be posted pretty quickly. Unless you have an article from a really small/private website that very few are aware of, you should probably check before starting a thread.

    And even then, it wouldn't hurt to check either.
     
  13. AntiSonic

    AntiSonic Member

    Joined:
    Feb 13, 1999
    Messages:
    8,318
    Likes Received:
    57
    I have to agree with this.

    The most frustrating thing last year was knowing Dikembe could still contribute while riding the pine. Everybody was afraid of having to rely on him to spot Yao and then he wound up having to start.

    Artest really shores up a lot of our problems in other areas, so I don't think we're going to be in as much trouble limiting Yao's minutes.
     

Share This Page