AnonCommentary
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- Jun 4, 2024
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This is a Medicine Hat reporter fwiw. Seems like we don’t really know. Only one claiming for sure done. The primary individual isn’t a CBJ writer like Scheig is.
As of today, Demidov also has 0 NHL points.Heads should roll , and I like Don .. just have no clue how you draft this kid over Demidov , and that’s before the back issues . How you still draft this kid after the back issues at 4 was nuts
It's a common approach on these boards, expect the worst so you can either say you were right or can be pleasantly surprised
I saw him walk into the building on his own without assistance New Year’s Eve.
So that’s good
Still a lot of questions and information we will never have the answers to. What level of rehab is he at? Are they working in other area's because they see things in his everyday life that made him susceptible to this? Are they fixing how he trains? Most people assume athletes are good in the gym but often they suck technically in many lifts. Is the team just being incredibly cautious, maybe even more than they need to be?You know I try to be as neutral as possible (emotionally) and not err too negatively or positively on outcomes. I've been positive on Lindstrom. But if this news is true then I think there is solid grounds for taking a negative view. A recovery period until next Fall is longer than typically needed for this surgery, which suggests that the underlying problem was not resolved by the surgery.
That said, I still hate it when people start acting like they know it for sure or acting like it's all over for an 18 year old kid and we can start writing it into the history books with Alex Picard and all of that. That or acting like they know better than the doctors who examined him. Yes, the doctors maybe said there was an x% probability that he would recover well without surgery. That's how probabilities work, they don't operate in false certainties. They're still smarter than you and know this stuff better than your roofer cousin who still has back problems.
This is a surgery that people are supposed to walk out of the hospital the same day as the operation. Don't ask me how, that's what it says.
Still a lot of questions and information we will never have the answers to. What level of rehab is he at? Are they working in other area's because they see things in his everyday life that made him susceptible to this? Are they fixing how he trains? Most people assume athletes are good in the gym but often they suck technically in many lifts. Is the team just being incredibly cautious, maybe even more than they need to be?
He has looked good in terms of being able to do simple everyday things from any public appearance we see of him. I know when my back was mangled I didn't make it look good I couldn't sit for more than a minute or 2 before getting a real nasty crooked back.
This is a surgery that people are supposed to walk out of the hospital the same day as the operation. Don't ask me how, that's what it says.
I doubt he's under a bar either, too many ways to get all the work you need without stress on your lower back.I don't think that's it but I know what you mean.
I really doubt that they've had him under a bar yet. Probably zero squats with weight. It does happen a lot that people can't wrap their heads around the little things - like if all the doctors and PT constantly tell you to do your planks and stretches in an exact way exactly this many times per day - folks will still not do it correctly.
But I think with Lindstrom we've probably had our trainers physically by his side. He's in the team facilities.
I don't think we would keep him out until next year unless there was a clear pain and/or mobility issue. It can't just be precautionary. You don't choose to keep a player that young away from the game that long, it's too costly in terms of development.
To the last point it's obviously a balance between development and risk of reinjury.
Why would a team trade a “sure thing” in a deal for Lindstrom?The clearest and cleanest path forward to me is to trade him. I wanted to believe in the pick due to the upside but was skeptical even when the pick was made. Since then it's been nothing but bad news and that is dovetailing with the team apparently being ahead of schedule due to positive roster development up front (although I think Werenski and a few others might be at their absolute peaks). As such if Lindstrom could be a key piece in a deal for someone from either Buffalo or Vancouver it would make a ton of sense to pull the trigger now rather than gamble that the recovery from surgery is perfect and that he develops into the top 6 playoff center we all hope(d) he could become.
Unfortunately DW blew his first big opportunity to make a huge improvement to this club 1st by failing to pull the trigger on the Blackhawks deal if the rumored return was accurate and then by selecting Lindstrom rather than a handful of other players like Iginla, Demidov, Yakemchuk, etc.
That's a terrible idea honestly.The clearest and cleanest path forward to me is to trade him. I wanted to believe in the pick due to the upside but was skeptical even when the pick was made. Since then it's been nothing but bad news and that is dovetailing with the team apparently being ahead of schedule due to positive roster development up front (although I think Werenski and a few others might be at their absolute peaks). As such if Lindstrom could be a key piece in a deal for someone from either Buffalo or Vancouver it would make a ton of sense to pull the trigger now rather than gamble that the recovery from surgery is perfect and that he develops into the top 6 playoff center we all hope(d) he could become.
Unfortunately DW blew his first big opportunity to make a huge improvement to this club 1st by failing to pull the trigger on the Blackhawks deal if the rumored return was accurate and then by selecting Lindstrom rather than a handful of other players like Iginla, Demidov, Yakemchuk, etc.
It wouldn't be a straight up trade, Lindstrom would be part of a package and you would have to assume that the value would still be high in the estimation of the team trading for him. Something like Lindstrom+Proverov+? for Elias Pettersson. It assumes Lindstrom has significant remaining value and our desire is to shift our risk profile/ competitive window. If Lindstrom really is toast no one is trading anything, for him, right now we are still in a Schrodinger's Prospect situation so our choice as I see it is to leverage Lindstrom like a lottery ticket that you can package with other assets to maximize return.Why would a team trade a “sure thing” in a deal for Lindstrom?
Fair enough, if you believe his value will go up this view make sense. Unfortunately, I seriously doubt the medical capability of this team's medical staff and referral network. In addition Neck and Back injuries are the most likely to destroy a career, particularly in a contact heavy sport.That's a terrible idea honestly.
You only make that trade if you think he's never going to play hockey again, which they obviously dont think.
Again, I have to say it every thread, he's 18 years old. This doom and gloom is insane.
Fair enough, if you believe his value will go up this view make sense. Unfortunately, I seriously doubt the medical capability of this team's medical staff and referral network. In addition Neck and Back injuries are the most likely to destroy a career, particularly in a contact heavy sport.
There is no doubt that if Lindstrom hits his ceiling he will be more valuable than anyone we could reasonably get in trade for him. The problem is that for a prospect whose value is primarily in his physical attributes and physical play and injury like this even in a best case scenario is likely to at a minimum alter how he plays and his effectiveness even if it is just a mental shift. I truly hope I am wrong and he is back and ready to go as only a teenager can be when it comes to injuries.
Why do you doing the medical capability of our medical staff exactly? Just seems like doomer talk.Fair enough, if you believe his value will go up this view make sense. Unfortunately, I seriously doubt the medical capability of this team's medical staff and referral network. In addition Neck and Back injuries are the most likely to destroy a career, particularly in a contact heavy sport.
Why do you doing the medical capability of our medical staff exactly? Just seems like doomer talk.
I mean, we both hope Lindstrom works out, but this seems unfair to blame on the medical staff. Jenner catches a rut and crashes into the boards in practice, I can't hold that against the medical staff. I mean come on. DW has done a great job dumping the injury prone players off this team, and we've been better for it.We've been in the top 5 in man games lost to injury for the last 2 years, top 10 for the last 4. We've had major issues with high profile recurring player injuries dating back to the disaster that was Nathan Horton and continuing through Jenner, Dubinsky, Laine, etc.
I tend not to believe that our players are just a lot more fragile/less lucky then other teams and I put that failure on the medical team and their evaluation. If there is one bright spot I see in this Lindstrom situation, its that the team actually appears to be exercising a true abundance of caution being with his treatment and evaluation. If he is going to recover back to 100% this is the way to do it, it is just the fact that every piece of news has been negative that makes me doubt that his recovery is likely.