Sports journalist

Month: October 2011 (Page 1 of 3)

Hockey: Why Tyler Seguin’s Possible Hip Problems Aren’t Much To Worry About

ESPNBoston published a story on Saturday reporting that Boston Bruins second year forward Tyler Seguin has an “congenital hip condition that makes him more susceptible to a hip injury.” Bruins’ general manager Peter Chiarelli isn’t too bothered by this, telling ESPNBoston‘s Joe MacDonald:

“I don’t want to get into details what we think it is or isn’t and I don’t want any alarm bells going off. Like I said, you can go through our roster and there are probably 12 or 13 guys with something similar or the same thing.”

Welcome to making a mountain out of a molehill.

There are two reasons why any worry about this amongst the Bruins is somewhat unfounded. One, the motion of skating wears on your hips. Be it hockey or figure skating, if you do it long enough, you are more apt to have a hip issue. On the Bruins alone, both goalie Tim Thomas and winger David Krecji have had hip surgery. On the other side of skating, at least two of the last twenty years of Olympic gold medalists in ladies figure skating have had serious hip injuries.

Skating is not necessarily a movement the human body was designed to do, and because of that, there are parts of the body that will suffer from intense use that they were not designed to do. An analogy: Do you use a screwdriver as a hammer? No. If you did, you’d eventually damaged the tip of the screwdriver, because it is not designed to perform a repeated hammering motion. The human body is much the same way. Make it do something repeatedly and intensely that it wasn’t engineered to do, and it will eventually wear.

Therefore, Seguin will not be unique to his sport if he ever has hip issues; he is more apt to have them because his sport involves skating, and skating causes hip issues.

Secondly, many athletes have “congenital” physical issues that they play through. You can’t make news out of every single one. Odds are, there is at least one person on the Bruins who has hypermobility. That is a genetic type of flexibility that can make you more susceptible to injury because your joints can easily move in ways they should not. I have it. It made me a good dancer and gymnast, but it made me a horrible runner, because my knees can slide in ways they shouldn’t, and be pounded on in positions that they shouldn’t be pounded on. The instance of this in the general population is such that there are tons of people with it, and it usually doesn’t materialize into anything. In fact, it helps you be successful in several sports.

So is ESPNBoston and the rest of the hockey media going to next sniff out the Bruins player with hypermobility and make that a story? No, because it doesn’t really matter. Athletes get hurt. It’s a way of life. We can hypothesize all we want, but Seguin could easily be sidelined tomorrow by an injury completely unrelated to his hip. He could be boarded. He could be slashed with a skate blade. He could trip over a teammate. The odds are good that Seguin will some day get hurt – but the odds are good that any hockey player, any athlete in fact, will some day get hurt.

That’s the cross they bear for making a living in a physical sport.

The Sabres Green Team: Nathan Gerbe Couldn’t Be More Thrilled

When you’re a professional athlete, it can be really difficult to get excited about promotional videos. Especially videos that few fans in attendance will pay attention to (though they should.)

In today’s installment of “Did you just roll out of bed or are you making a promotional video?”, former Boston College sneaky forward Nathan Gerbe stars alongside fellow Buffalo Sabres player Mike Weber to promote the team’s Green Team:

Is The Baseball Community Overprescribing Tommy John Surgery? If So, Is John Lackey The Perfect Example?

Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox.New Boston Red Sox general manager Ben Cherington had his introductory (or re-introductory?) press conference overshadowed Tuesday afternoon by an announcement he made about 45 minutes into the event. In one of his first public acts as GM, he announced that beleaguered pitcher John Lackey would be going under the knife for Tommy John surgery.

My first thought was, “Isn’t that a bit…convenient?”

I do not have the ability to argue that Lackey does not need an ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction (UCL, the medical term for Tommy John surgery.) I am not a member of the medical community. But we have reached the point where it seems like every time a major league pitcher needs to take a “vacation” for a spell, they’re sent down to visit Dr. James Andrews (the nation’s best surgeon for this particular procedure) in Birmingham, Alabama.

This leads me to ask: Is the baseball community overprescribing Tommy John surgery? Continue reading

College Hockey: Consider The Boat Missed

Picture 291It’s a football-less Sunday in New England. The New England Patriots are on a bye week, and thus Boston sports fans are looking for something to fill their Sunday. Looking for the reigning Stanley Cup Champion Boston Bruins to fill the void? They’re off today, having played the San Jose Sharks Saturday night.

Why, for the most part, is the New England college hockey scene also quiet today? Why not take advantage of the region being sportless* for the day and showcase some early season action?

Even Boston College, who have created quite the Sunday afternoon game niche at Conte Forum over the past few years, is off today. The only game today is Minnesota hosting Vermont, as the Catamounts try to avoid getting offensively overpowered like they were Friday night. (Dartmouth is hosting Norwich in an exhibition at 7pm, but that doesn’t count.)

The excuse that college hockey schedules are set in a year in advance and thus are inflexible is a weak one. Dates and times are changed several times during the summer and even during the season. A month before this season started, a few games were moved after the second edition of Frozen Fenway was announced. Times are changed during the season to take postseason play by professional teams into account. And if a television broadcast opportunity becomes available, some games will move times to accommodate that.

So the powers that be within Hockey East didn’t take a gander at the NFL and NHL schedules when making this season’s final slate and see a gaping open Sunday? Why not move Boston College’s league tilt against Northeastern from Saturday night to Sunday afternoon? Both the NFL and NHL schedules were known far enough in advance that the change could have been made before tickets were printed and team training schedules were set. Given the Eagles and Huskies proximity to each other, no travel would have to be accounted for. And instead of NESN filling time by broadcasting Fox Sports North’s feed of the Minnesota-Vermont game, they could broadcast a league game between two teams that would draw much higher ratings. (And they could show local commercials, a revenue source they miss out when they simulcast from another channel.)

If Hockey East wants to further promote the idea that they are the “premiere” college hockey league (and the recent addition of Notre Dame was made with that in mind), they need to begin looking for opportunities to expose their sport to new audiences. Waiting for February to catch casual fans with the Beanpot isn’t enough. Channel hopping casual fans could be lured in this afternoon and hooked in for the rest of the season.

The league missed the boat by not having a league game on a Patriots-free Sunday. If they want to grab any more of the very saturated New England sports market, they need to start making the most of rare empty spaces in the seemingly endless sports cycle and promote college hockey in them.

 

* Sportless – A word I made up. Definition: being without sports. Like being homeless, just must less dire.

 

I Can Has Hard Handshake?

While on the commuter rail into work this morning, I asked the following via Twitter:

Has anyone started a Tumblr full of captioned Jim Harbaugh-Jim Schwartz tiff photos yet? We’ll call it, “I Can Has Hard Handshake.”

I was slammed with work all day, but the minute I got home, I knew what had to be done. Ladies and gentlemen, may I present “I Can Has Hard Handshake?”

But wait, there’s more! I’m not exactly great at these (it’s my first time), but I tried my best. Give me at least a B for effort.


By the way, word came out early this evening that the NFL will not fine either coach for their confrontation.

« Older posts

© 2026 Kat Cornetta

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑