dammit! you beat me to it!
lol
http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slu...yhoo&type=lgns
As the NBA draft approached, the grim truth about Yao Ming’s(notes) broken left foot hung like an anvil over the Houston Rockets. The fear isn’t that he’s just lost for next season, but longer.
The Rockets and Yao’s reps are frightened over his future, and the concern is the most base of all: Does Yao Ming ever play again?
“The realization has hit them that this is grave,” one NBA general manager said.
For now, the Rockets have privately told league peers it could be a full season before Yao might be able to return to basketball. Multiple league executives, officials close to Yao and two doctors with knowledge of the diagnoses are describing a troubling re-fracture of his navicular bone. Three pins were inserted a year ago, but the foot cracked in the playoffs and isn’t healing.
“It sounds like he’s missing most of next season, if not the entire 82 games,” one league executive who has had recent discussions with the Houston front office told Yahoo! Sports. “That’s all that [the Rockets] will concede quietly, but they know it’s probably much worse.”
Houston general manager Daryl Morey refused comment on Monday and a team spokesman said the Rockets will not have further comment until Yao undergoes additional medical tests.
There’s no reason for the Rockets to disclose the severity of the injury, nor the uncertainty over Yao’s future. Before the Rockets go public with a dire diagnosis, they plan to send him to three more specialists this week, a source said. For now, the Rockets have season tickets and sponsorships to sell. For now, the Rockets will publicly decry these doomsday revelations as premature, but this is the reality that they’re working under within the organization.
This has turned into an impossible situation for the Rockets’ capable GM. Even if Yao plays again, Morey knows it’s just a matter of time until his lower body breaks down. His feet and ankles just can’t support the mobility of his 7-foot-6 frame.
With four surgeries in three years, the Rockets worried they were reaching a breaking point. Well, it’s here. After missing 86 games in the previous three seasons, the 28-year-old Yao missed a mere five this past regular season before injuring his foot during the Rockets’ second-round playoff series against the Los Angeles Lakers.
It wasn’t until last week when Houston issued a statement saying Yao’s fractured foot hadn’t healed properly, that he would be unavailable “indefinitely.” Prior to Thursday’s draft, Morey tried desperately to trade into the high lottery to take Spanish prodigy Ricky Rubio(notes). Houston needed a young star, but had too few assets to make a deal with Memphis or Sacramento. It seemed odd to teams that Houston had thrown Shane Battier(notes) and Aaron Brooks(notes) into offers within weeks of pushing the NBA champion Lakers to seven games in the Western Conference semifinals.
Now, the Rockets have tough decisions to make: Do they keep pushing Tracy McGrady(notes) and his expiring contract on the market or let the $22 million expire next summer? So far, Morey is getting offered bad contracts and junk talent for him. What’s more, does Houston re-sign Ron Artest(notes) to a $40 million-plus contract when contention is no longer viable? Why not create cap space for the summers of 2010 and 2011? Why not get younger now? Yao could opt out of his contract next summer, but odds are that Houston won’t be so fortunate.
The Rockets should do themselves a favor and just start over. That isn’t easy in a sophisticated and rabid NBA market like Houston, but what everyone long suspected has reached fruition: Yao and McGrady are no longer a faulty foundation, but a collapsed one. Houston needs to proceed with an understanding that they’re no longer chasing the Lakers, but beginning again.
Rest assured, Houston has long been fearful that Yao’s responsibilities to the Chinese national team were rapidly contributing to his breakdown, and perhaps they’ve finally been met. Yao wouldn’t have missed the Beijing Olympics for the world, but it was clear he wasn’t fully healed in those Games. The Rockets paid a price for his nationalism, his obligation and now the darkest fears are close to confirmation: It isn’t just a season on the brink for Yao Ming, but perhaps a career.
Damn that sucks. It says his career could be over.
I'm Yao's biggest fan, I get right on Yao news whenever I can. I get text alerts whenever he gets hurt- good thing I have unlimited texting
This guy has some ty luck. Or physical make up. Either or.
This is what I got when I googled "Glue Factory"
that sucks. there was so much potential in that rockets team.
the problem is, at 7'6" his feet aren't meant to take the stress of every day nba playing
I feel bad for Yao. He seems like a good guy.
I feel sorry for Yao but ThunderDan's post was too funny regardless of whether or not I feel sorry for him.
why do you feel bad for him? He gets the best job in the World now, he gets paid to just hang out. He also can just pick up his option and collect more money next year.
I mean let's be honest, the Rockets weren't going anywhere. Now he just gets to take it easy, pay Chinese Government their cut of his contract, and just hang out. That's nothing to feel sorry for
I like Yao so hopefully he recovers. But he's definitely a prime candidate for any kind of experimental surgery where his feet are amputated and replaced with robotic Terminator feet.
I do not feel bad for Rockets fans however. Or the Rockets. you guys.
There is no such thing as a healthy Rockets team. I would pay to see one.
now we know why they went after rubio. to blow it up
Dang that sucks, Rockets definitely have to look to rebuilding now, I would definitely not resign Artest
Today you are the worlds biggest bag taking pleasure in someone's demise. I'm with Robbie off!
it is sad
Yao was one of the few NBA players that actually wanted to play hard and win
I'll never feel sorry for NBA players, just as I never feel sorry for people who win the lottery
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