Found November 04, 2008 on
Black And Gold Soul:
If Steve Irwin were still alive today, he would have two
words to describe injury information in the NFL these days: An elusive creature. I don't know if this starts and ends
with the Saints or if it is a league wide phenomenon, but this season I've noticed
that injuries have been going unreported for way longer than they should
be.
It began after the Saints' Week 1 win over the Bucs. During that game Marques Colston
sustained an injury to his thumb which required surgery. Normally, a club would release that
type of information after the game or maybe early the next morning. But in Colston's case, it took until
Wednesday of the following week for an announcement to be made.
Saints fans were blindsided, having no idea that Colston had
even sustained a serious injury.
The same thing happened today with Charles Grant. Here I was early this morning, eating a
bowl of Cheerios and minding my own business. I log on to nola.com to see
what's going on in the city, and all of a sudden I'm smacked in the mouth with
the news that Charles Grant is done for the year.
Where was this information a week ago? Why must the coaches hold out on us
fans? When the game is over and
there are no significant injuries, we like to know that there are no
significant injuries. We don't
like being surprised with season-ending injury news. It doesn't sit well with morning Cheerios.
Anyway, delayed injury news is not the purpose of this
post. Injuries in general are what
concerns me. This has been the
hardest hit Saints squad in terms of injuries that I can remember.
It seems like every week there is a new Saint going
down. And they aren't Cie
Grant-type scrub players. They're
key contributors.
First it was Hollis Thomas in training camp. Then in Week 1 it was Colston and Scott
Fujita. Then later on came Antwan
Lake, Sedrick Ellis, Tracy Porter and Aaron Glenn. After that, Jeremy Shockey and Reggie Bush. Now it's Charles Grant. And that doesn't even take into account
Deuce McAllister and Mike McKenzie missing time early in the year because of
their own injuries.
Granted, some of these players have returned to play. But that doesn't make up for the fact
that most of them missed considerable time in important games when the Saints
could've used them.
Injuries are not an excuse, I know. Everyone has them, therefore no one
should complain about them. So in
that vain, let me say that the Saints have done a remarkably good job in
getting to a .500 record after sustaining such a vicious bite from the injury
bug.
I still maintain that they should be at worst 6-2, but
that's another story for another day.
The reality of it is that New Orleans is 4-4 and heading
into the second half of the season where hopefully they can put their injury
woes behind them.
If they can't, it'll be another wasted year for the
Black-and-Gold. But if the Saints
can avoid injury, they've got a shot to get in the thick of things. With a stable full of healthy horses,
there's no telling how far they can run.
Original Story:
http://mvn.com/blackandgoldsoul/2008/...
THE BACKYARD
BEST OF MAXIM
AROUND THE WEB
NFL Forum Discussions
57 replies,
1 day ago
90 replies,
2 days ago
1 replies,
2 days ago
10 replies,
2 days ago
2 replies,
2 days ago
5 replies,
2 days ago
| Latest Rumors |
|
|
|
|
Today's Best Stuff |
For BloggersJoin the Yardbarker Network (YBN) for more promotion, traffic, and money. |
Company Info |
Help |
What is Yardbarker?Yardbarker is the largest network of sports blogs and pro athlete blogs on the web. This site is the hub of the Yardbarker Network, where our editors and algorithms curate the best sports content from our network and beyond. |












