Some players we were aware were more injury prone like Laine, Horton,etc. Some players who were known to not miss much time like Provorov and Gaudreau also didn't miss time here. I'd be all for a tough evaluation of the training staff but the medical staff is a pretty tricky one. Strength and conditioning deficiencies can definitely lead to more injury. On the medical side though that's a tough gig. Some of your evaluation comes from what the player tells you and some players will say some pretty stupid things. Look at Monahan in Calgary, that was a massive fail all around. Dude was barely able to move and had his game fall off a cliff but neither he or the team did what needed to be done. There is still the old school mentality in some of these guys who will try to play through anything and not be open about what is going on. There are some more modern guys who will get pulled from a game a period in when their old team is mean to them though.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.
What have been some of our teams common issues? Shoulder, ankles and oblique? That's where I'd start. Some of them are freak incidents but some of that is worth looking into. Not sure the medical staff is the right direction to point the finger though