Gasol curse
Derek Fisher has a partially torn tendon in his right foot, an injury that typically requires six to eight weeks of rest, although the Lakers point guard will try to play through it.
An MRI exam Friday confirmed that Fisher injured his peroneus longus tendon after pushing off the foot while changing direction in Wednesday's game against Charlotte.
"I feel good enough to see if I can help the team," Fisher said. "That's basically what the decision is going to be based on, is how I feel out there and whether I can really be effective enough to be a positive influence on helping us win games. If at any point I start to feel like I can't do that, then I'll make a decision at that point."
Fisher said he initially felt tightness under his foot a couple of weeks ago that was similar to the sensation of plantar fasciitis, which is painful swelling in the arch of the foot. The flash point came against Charlotte, although further damage cannot be done to the tendon, Lakers officials said.
"If this happened during the middle of the season or something like that, he would probably rest for six to eight weeks in order to heal," team spokesman John Black said Friday. "It's a pain and inflammation thing. If he can play, he'll be on anti-inflammatory and pain medication, and try to play through it."
The Lakers will officially list Fisher as day-to-day.
Fisher, 33, has been a steadying influence in the locker room during his second tour with the Lakers. He was averaging 12 points and 2.9 assists before Friday and has played in all 73 games this season.
If Fisher's injury eventually sidelines him, Jordan Farmar will pick up a majority of his minutes. Sasha Vujacic would also assume some ball-handling duties.
"My concern is more about Fish and his health," Farmar said. "But if need be, I'll step in and try to help this team win any way I can."
Thats a pretty significant blow as Fisher is huge for stretching the floor for Kobe and Pau.
Too bad, I want every teams at full strength for this epic playoff battle out west.
I don't. Injuries are part of the game. Real men play through the pain, like Tim Duncan did in 2005 and 2006.
That's an injury a player can perhaps play through, loosing it up in the course of a game. But it's more than likely to have a big impact on his performance.
0.4 curse.
There are very few players who I don't feel bad about when they get injured. DFish is definitely at the top of that short list.
No doubt that pull down of Monte was crap.
DD
I don't think this was the Lakers year anyways to get to the Finals as everyone thought. They have way too many injuries to significant players to think everything will fall magically into place in the playoffs and stay healthy while going through the Brutal Western Conference Playoffs.
Next year, with a healthier team, and Gasol and Bynum having a whole season to play together, that's when I think the Lakers are going to be a serious threat.
Hornets and Jazz are the scariest teams in the West for the Spurs I think. Followed very closely by the Pheonix Suns.
The Jazz are still a defensive donut team. Boozer made Oberto look like a f'ing All Star in that series last year, and I imagine that in the intervening year, he has neither grown or learned how to block shots and defend the basket.
NO is really good. To get to them, you have to attack Peja and CP3. They're both pretty soft on D. They'll probably put Peja on Bowen, so TP is key in any series we may play them.
I hope Dfish, Bynum, and Gasol get better for the Lakers. I hate it when teams aren't at full strength. Also, I hate how the excuses come out when teams have injuries. It just bugs me.
Anyway, I think that the Lakers will still be very tough this year. They are still compe ive, and they are missing two very good frontcourt players. They were very good with Gasol even without Bynum. It's a Phil Jackson coached team with Kobe, a good all-star, two good role players, and a deep bench. They won't be easy.
Agreed with everything you said. The Jazz still cannot play defense nor win on the road. And with a bunch of good road teams in the West, they shouldn't count on winning every homecourt game. They won't get past the second round, if they even get out of the first IMO.
As for New Orleans, they are a damn good team....as long as everything is going smoothly and their way. When they aren't hitting shots, or when the other team steps up the defense, or when the calls don't go their way, they fall apart. To me, that shows they are mentally weak and still immature as a whole. They don't have championship level defense and they don't have the individual defenders to lock down all-stars and superstars (as last night showed). I still think they won't be easy though.
I hope he gets better soon. He's always been a classy guy, so I hate seeing him down.
Fish is one of the classiest players the NBA has. Wishing injury on his is just downright de able. I expect it from Warrior fans, but I thought Spurs fans had a lot more class.
The other day I read a post by someone who said Derek Fisher's daughter deserved to have eye cancer![]()
link?
It looks like injury is making the Spurs drive for 5 a little easier. The Lakers, the Rockets, and the Mavs have all been hit by the injury bug.
I've stretched my peroneous longus many times![]()
I was never much of a Fisher fan but I always respected him as a compe or and last year when his daughter got sick I respected him even more for making his family his priority. Injuries suck, I agree with DazedandConfused wishing them on others is not acceptable. I hope Fisher and his daughter get well soon. Dazed, how is Fisher's daughter doing?
Parker would have a field day with him
Looks like the 2 guys wishing injury on him were a Knick and Rocket fans.
God love the Spurs.
Just add this to the list!
What about Yao, and Steve Francis?
DD
I don't wish injury on anyone, but I am not going to cry for Fisher about it either.
DD
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