Is what Landeskog did worth it?

Jacob

as seen on TV
Feb 27, 2002
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27,411
His knee might not be healthy enough to return to the NHL but that doesn't necessarily mean he's going to have chronic issues for life. It might be good enough for normal activity, even strenuous activity, just not elite athlete activity.
 

Soups On

Registered User
Apr 27, 2012
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If he's able to live a fulfilling life post hockey in which his injuries do not negatively impact his activities of daily living, mental health, and social health, why not? He likely hit his professional goal of winning a cup and earning a f*** ton of money.
 

LokiDog

Get pucks deep. Get pucks to the net. And, uh…
Sep 13, 2018
12,338
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Dallas
For sure. He still gets paid, is still loved by his teammates and around the team - likely will be an Av for life like Sakic. Had a great career, got paid big money, won a Cup, spent his whole career with one team where is looked at as a hero, has a beautiful family, seems super happy in Colorado. I’m sure he would give almost anything to play again, but I doubt he’d give the Cup win.
 

Cousin Eddie

You Serious Clark?
Nov 3, 2006
40,238
37,594
I bet I know what Landy’s answer would be.

IMG_7328.jpeg
 
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pont

Registered User
Jul 1, 2019
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He already has more money than he probably knows what to do with. The whole point of money is to have better experiences in life. I think a cup championship is money well spent on an experience.
 

The Nuge

Some say…
Jan 26, 2011
28,058
9,471
British Columbia
If he did it in year 8 of his contract it’s probably a mistake, but he did it in year 1. He got his cup and still had 49 million coming to him. Sounds like a pretty good tradeoff

His knee might not be healthy enough to return to the NHL but that doesn't necessarily mean he's going to have chronic issues for life. It might be good enough for normal activity, even strenuous activity, just not elite athlete activity.

Exactly. Same as Klefbom. He retired at 26 due to arthritis, with 30 million in the bank, and is living the good life now. It’s not worth completely destroying your body
 

hotcabbagesoup

"I'm going to get what I deserve" -RutgerMcgroarty
Feb 18, 2009
11,023
15,374
Reno, Nevada
But I could be totally wrong. Least he didn't have to pay for his surgery?
In a way, he will be paying for his surgery for the rest of his life.

I have sciatic nerve pain and it never goes away, less so now that we get older and our bodies less resilient every passing day.
 

Golden_Jet

Registered User
Sep 21, 2005
27,256
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i feel like that extra 7-10 years of playing also guarantees him living the rest of his life with crippling pain
You made that up, as you have no idea.
Some players have pain when they retire, but when stop playing and stop stressing the area, they are fine.
 

timmeh

Registered User
Nov 8, 2009
1,394
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In a way, he will be paying for his surgery for the rest of his life.

I have sciatic nerve pain and it never goes away, less so now that we get older and our bodies less resilient every passing day.
I can't find the clip now but I remember him saying he doesn't have any pain or issues in day-to-day life.
It's when he puts pressure on the knee for extended periods of time that he feels the strength isn't there. And with that staying off ice to avoid a new injury and risk chronic pain.
 

Jyrki

Benning has been purged! VANmen!
May 24, 2011
13,653
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溫哥華
Seems like Landeskog is still able to live a good life off the rink, while still having years of fat paychecks coming his way. He shouldn't have any regrets.

If he played through a bad concussion though, that'd be a different story.
 

Jixer19

Registered User
Dec 19, 2015
1,161
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Edmonton, Alberta
Landy has his cup, is among the Avs greats and will always be loved by Avs fans for what he did for this team. He would still have this issue even if he didn't play in the playoffs that year, as the injury was from the bubble (as others have pointed out). From all reports he can still do everyday things, just skates and the intensity on the ice is when issues arise (as others have also pointed out as well), so I would lean towards thinking he thinks it was worth it though to win the cup.
 
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The Burdened

Registered User
May 1, 2017
3,257
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so long as he doesn't have chronic knee issues that impact his quality of life, then it was absolutely worth it.

chronic pain and issues tho for the rest of his life and have quality of life deficits? that changes it. a championship isn't worth a penny compared to that. i don't think he is gonna care about a worthless stanley cup if he can't run in the yard with his kids etc
hopefully it's not that.
 

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