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View Full Version : Poll: Did UW fix Watson and/or Stokes?



Patler
05-31-2024, 01:44 PM
Has Watson fixed his hamstring problems?
Has Stokes?
Both of them?
Neither of them?

MadtownPacker
05-31-2024, 02:04 PM
How can we know if Watson hasnt caught a big TD pass yet? Seems that is when he has gotten hurt

Joemailman
05-31-2024, 02:54 PM
Hard to know, but this is Kool-aid season . It does seem like lack of strength in the injured leg was a common culprit.

sharpe1027
05-31-2024, 03:05 PM
What do you mean by fixed is the key here.

They probably lowered the odds of the injury reoccurring, but it's a fact there's no way to 100% prevent injuries.

NewsBruin
05-31-2024, 04:09 PM
Usually they dock a bit of his ear before they release him back to his nest.

MadScientist
05-31-2024, 04:19 PM
I hope they aren't fixed. We need players with balls on this team.

bobblehead
05-31-2024, 05:04 PM
I'm happy that they both went to great lengths to do something about the issue instead of getting busted with 8 pounds of weed in their trunk during the offseason.

As sharpe said, no promises, but they addressed an issue if not the only issue. That can only help the odds.

Patler
05-31-2024, 06:25 PM
Not expecting for no issues ever, the rest of their careers. Basically, last year Stokes contributed nothing, and Watson not much more. So I guess by "fixed" I mean available and able to contribute for most of the season without hamstring issues.

sharpe1027
05-31-2024, 06:43 PM
Not expecting for no issues ever, the rest of their careers. Basically, last year Stokes contributed nothing, and Watson not much more. So I guess by "fixed" I mean available and able to contribute for most of the season without hamstring issues.

Sure, but it's still just a game of chance, even for just one year.

They could have done nothing and not get injured or do all the right things and get injured in training camp.

texaspackerbacker
05-31-2024, 07:21 PM
I voted yes on both, but without a whole lot of confidence. LUCK is the primary cause of injuries and thus could strike either or both again. The therapy or whatever probably nudged LUCK a little bit in the good direction, though.

RashanGary
05-31-2024, 08:13 PM
The discouraging thing about Watson is he’s had quite the string of hammy issues. It’s starting to inch into Clay Matthews territory.

The discouraging thing about stokes is he hasn’t really played since half way through 2022 and he wasn’t an above average player even at 100%. He’s starting to inch into David Bakhtiari territory as far as taking a really long time and having setbacks. But he’s not the caliber of player Bakh was so I don’t know how much less than 100% he’ll be able to succeed with.


I give Watson a better chance than Stokes. I truly have no clue.

Probably the most interesting aspect is going to be seeing if UW starts showing an exciting new ability to get these situations going in the right direction. It’s brand new. I’d love for it to be the next new thing that advances injury prevention for our team. But I’Ve become increasingly crusty like Cleft Crusty and I doubt all this new age foo foo shit.

bobblehead
06-01-2024, 08:30 AM
Diet and daily routine plays a pretty big role in injury as well. Guys who don't eat right, and spend too much time on the couch playing video games when not on the practice field get injured more. Just the way it is.

texaspackerbacker
06-01-2024, 10:32 AM
I can say personally, that's bullshit, the "eating right" thing. In addition to my own experience, though, I will cite the era of Max McGee, Fuzzy Thurston, etc. who ate and drank whatever they damn well pleased. Even less wild and free type players in those days didn't follow the diet crap like now, and were there more injuries? Hell no. At worst, it was the same level then as now, and probably there were less. Those also were the days of probably less good safety equipment and obviously less of the stupid safety crap in terms of rules.

sharpe1027
06-01-2024, 11:13 AM
Injury rates were higher back then.

texaspackerbacker
06-01-2024, 01:12 PM
hahahaha One of the "usual suspects" chimes in. How old were you during the Lombardi era? (negative numbers are acceptable)

HELL NO there were far less games missed for injuries in those days (if that's wrong, I challenged somebody to prove it).

sharpe1027
06-01-2024, 02:10 PM
You made the original statement. I have provided just as much evidence as you have.

Scott Campbell
06-01-2024, 05:07 PM
I voted Watson. But it's a monkey throwing a dart vote.

texaspackerbacker
06-01-2024, 07:04 PM
What do you mean by fixed is the key here.

They probably lowered the odds of the injury reoccurring, but it's a fact there's no way to 100% prevent injuries.

You actually got something right in this post. In your others, not so much. You failed to mention how old you are or were during the Lombardi era. I was around and late teens, early twenties then, and I'm here to tell you, there wasn't remotely close to as many games lost to injury back then. Now partly, maybe that was due to playing through things that they sideline players for now, but regardless of that, the stupidity (IMO) of "eating right" absolutely has not done any significant good injury-wise.

sharpe1027
06-01-2024, 07:14 PM
Eating right might not matter. There weren't less injuries back then.


Following an initial higher rate of
significant injuries (two or more games
missed) during the first five years of
study (1960 through 1964), injury rates
have not changed significantly and av¬eraged 0.7 per game.
2. The rate of major injuries (eight or
more games missed) has declined significantly (r,= -
.56; P<.01) from 1960 to
1985.
3. Rates of injury on turf and grass
did not differ significantly when cor¬
rected for games played on each
surface.
4. The lower extremity, particularly
the knee suffered the most injuries of
any site on this team. However, the rate
of major injuries to the knee declined
from 1969 to 1985.
5. The high rates of major injury on
special-teams play noted during the
first nine years have shown a significant
decline from 1969 to 1985 (P =
.04).



https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://nismat.org/wp-content/plugins/zotpress/lib/request/request.dl.php%3Fapi_user_id%3D2488608%26dlkey%3DC L3H55VC%26content_type%3Dapplication/pdf&ved=2ahUKEwi7loCy0LuGAxUznokEHSeTCSYQFnoECBwQAQ&usg=AOvVaw0lxeB6bxDe80mizWYWI0ZR

bobblehead
06-01-2024, 07:33 PM
yea, I remember reading about Max ordering Grub hub fast food all the time. He would use his smart phone. And don't get me started on his video game habit on the Nintendo.

edit: I forgot I was addressing Tex. That was sarcasm Sheldon.

texaspackerbacker
06-01-2024, 08:05 PM
Those injury stats end 39 years ago. It certainly seems like there are more games missed due to injury now in the past 5, 10, 15. 20 years than way back when.

Thanks for labeling it, bobblehead, but who the hell is Sheldon.

sharpe1027
06-01-2024, 08:59 PM
Poster makes claim with no evidence. Calls out another poster for having no evidence when they disagree. Second poster provides evidence supporting, but not completely proving their point. First poster claims evidence isn't of any value because it's not perfect. Fails to offer any evidence and claims victory in the discussion.

Congrats on your victory.

More recent stats exist. If you're right, they would can help you prove your point that injuries have to gone up from the 60s, but you won't bother.

texaspackerbacker
06-01-2024, 11:58 PM
Whine on hahahahaha.

My original claim that you speak of was that diet crap - "eating right" have little or nothing to do with injuries or that lack of them. Or were you referring to the evidence I cited - that Maxie, Fuzzy, really nobody back in those days ate the way imbecilic nutrition Nazis of the present would like people to. I'm pretty sure that claim isn't even controversial. I further surmised that there seemed to be a helluva lot less players sitting out games than now ....... To which you provided your "evidence" - a study showing what? That after increasing the first four years of the study (60+ years ago), there was a gradual decrease in injuries from about 1964 until the end of the study - 39 years ago! You yourself stated that diet didn't seem to have much to do with it. My assessment of that set of conclusions of the study was: BFD.

Did I say that injuries have gone up since the '60s? Or that it seems like more games missed due to injuries since then - even as a percentage of games played?

Does that about sum it up? hahahaha

sharpe1027
06-02-2024, 12:18 AM
You said there were far less games missed for injuries back then. That's false, unless you have the stats to prove it. I'll wait

bobblehead
06-02-2024, 08:20 AM
First, the game was entirely different back then so who cares how the "injury" rates compare. Half the time those guys just went out and played on a bad hammy until they couldn't walk. They wore leather helmets, so no one in their right mind lead with the crown. I could go on and on.

Second, diet doesn't affect injuries? There are only about 700 Trillion studies saying you are wrong so I won't even bother just because you ate a big mac and didn't blow your ACL playing tennis against a Philippino lady in a Retirment community. I'm positive you are correct and that directly translates to Watson running 30 MPH to beat a guy to the corner. In other news I ate a candy bar yesterday and didn't develop diabetes so all that hub bub is bullshit too.

call_me_ishmael
06-02-2024, 08:48 AM
Those old players would get destroyed in today’s game lmao. Stupid comparison. I’m sure Tex’s comparison as an overweight retiree occasionally beating older, fatter retirees at tennis is the same as the top .01% of athletes. What a world.

Patler
06-02-2024, 09:12 AM
First, the game was entirely different back then so who cares how the "injury" rates compare. Half the time those guys just went out and played on a bad hammy until they couldn't walk.

That's my feeling, too; and I was a fan during the Lombardi era. Guys played with their "trick" knees and shoulders, and suited up so long as they could get their jersey on. In the early Lombardi years roster sizes varied but were in the mid 30s until stabilizing at 40 in the late 1960s. Most significant to this discussion, there were no inactive lists. Everyone on the roster dressed for a game. Injured players dressed even if there was no intention for them to play. They were there "just in case" because there was no one to take their place. If a player was too injured to play now, but would be back in a month, he stayed on the roster, probably dressed, but may not have played. Injuries were not always publicized, so you often didn't know why someone didn't play. Often, seriously injured player might still play a snap or two. Technically, they didn't miss a game.

Players had to minimize their injuries, because if they were out too long the only alternative for the team was to cut them, until IR came around but that meant they were out for the rest of the year.

Patler
06-02-2024, 09:57 AM
Those old players would get destroyed in today’s game lmao. Stupid comparison.

Yes and no. Many (most) of those older players, playing as they did then, if inserted into todays game, would get destroyed. Some (e.g. Jim Brown, Willie Wood, probably Jim Taylor) would still make their mark. Others, if given the opportunity to train and practice as today's players have, would still be good. Forrest Gregg would be 35-40 pounds heavier; just like if Joe Thonmas played in the 1960s he would have done so at maybe 260 lbs instead of 300 and probably would have been just as good for then.

Heck, in the '60s players didn't even do extensive weight training. It was thought to be detrimental to their flexibility, making them "muscle-bound". Gale Gillingham was one of the earliest to commit to extensive weight training.

So, wrt the topic, are today's players more injury prone because they are simply too big and too fast for the human framework? Consequently, do they injure themselves and others because of their size and speed?

smuggler
06-02-2024, 10:27 AM
Stokes will never be the same. There's hope for Watson.

RashanGary
06-02-2024, 12:16 PM
Awesome post, Patler.


I get a kick out of how most people argue that those guys couldn’t play today. Have human beings changed so much in 70 years that they’re a completely different physically superior species now?

With training many of them probably could have played today.


Here’s where I estimate that many and maybe most probably couldn’t play today. The population was what? Half the size then. Black people rarely played. It’s safe to say you’d end up skimming more cream off of 2 gallons of raw milk than 1 gallon. And 2:1 isn’t the ratio we’re talking about here. Sports has become one of the ways people become extremely wealthy in more recent years. Many who would not have played then would give it a try now. Football was also newer and less popular than baseball and even basketball. Not to mention there seem to be a few physical traits that are found more often in black people or mixed people and not many black people played.

Probably, most of them didn’t have the athletic potential, even with training to compete with the best of the much larger pool of competition that we have today.

But when you did get one of those super rare ones, like Don Hutson, they end up outperforming the league so drastically that as long as football is popular, you’ll never see again. I’ll bet Hutson could have played.

I’m not nearly as well versed in watching the 60s players play as Tex and Patler, so I have to go off of stats and second hand information, but I’ll bet Patler hit the nail on the head with the guys he picked and I’ll bet there are a bunch more in that 50 year early span who could have not only played, but excelled today.

I would think the entire 50 year span of early NFL athletes could produce at least as much legitimate NFL talent as one draft today. One of them might even be the GOAT at one of the positions even today. Never know.

But to brush it off as a conversation that shouldn’t be had because there is no way one of them could ever play today, that’s a lot asinine.

texaspackerbacker
06-03-2024, 05:34 PM
Stokes will never be the same. There's hope for Watson.

Even most serious injuries run their course in a couple of years. I tend to believe what Stokes says about how he feels and how he can do what he did in the past.

The question is, will he get unlucky and have something happen again?

red
06-09-2024, 11:31 AM
i'm hopeful they're both "fixed"

but i have serious doubts

Fritz
06-09-2024, 02:59 PM
i'm hopeful they're both "fixed"

but i have serious doubts

"Fixed"? God I hope they're not fixed!

Got my dog fixed when he was a pup and he hasn't been quite the same since.

red
06-09-2024, 05:09 PM
"Fixed"? God I hope they're not fixed!

Got my dog fixed when he was a pup and he hasn't been quite the same since.

might not be a bad idea.

if a dog isn't worth breading, or has some kind of problem, the vet tells you to get them fix so the problems don't continue on down the line

elite athletes with chronic hamstring problems?

if they were race horses and not humans, they would probably get fixed

red
06-09-2024, 09:21 PM
actually, if they were race horses, they would have been shot in the middle of the field in front of everyone when they first pulled their hammys

MadtownPacker
06-14-2024, 03:55 PM
That’s might have BEEN the early NFL. Where is Red? He get put down?

red
06-14-2024, 05:38 PM
That’s might have even the early NFL. Where is Red? He get put down?

are you stoned, or am i?

i can't figure out what you're saying

MadtownPacker
06-14-2024, 05:43 PM
Both. I meant that maybe in the old days they might do that. Likely was mafia ran so wouldn’t doubt some shady shit.

bobblehead
06-15-2024, 11:33 AM
Stokes will never be the same. There's hope for Watson.

All accounts you are correct...He is better than ever. I hope its not off season fluff.

bobblehead
06-15-2024, 11:35 AM
Both. I meant that maybe in the old days they might do that. Likely was mafia ran so wouldn’t doubt some shady shit.

I agree. If there's a poll I'm voting Both. (to Red's question of which is stoned).

MadtownPacker
06-15-2024, 05:14 PM
I agree. If there's a poll I'm voting Both. (to Red's question of which is stoned).You don’t believe at least 1 person has ever been murdered for NFL business?

bobblehead
06-16-2024, 10:10 AM
You don’t believe at least 1 person has ever been murdered for NFL business?

Certainly. I also believe that both you and Red are stoned at the same time quite often (although likely different drugs of choice).

MadtownPacker
06-16-2024, 11:25 AM
Believe Red’s thing is called tweaking….

Fritz
06-17-2024, 11:34 AM
Thank god it's not twerking.

bobblehead
06-17-2024, 01:06 PM
Thank god it's not twerking.

Great, now that image is stuck in my brain.

Joemailman
06-17-2024, 04:51 PM
Hope tweaking doesn't lead to twerking.

red
06-17-2024, 09:53 PM
my legs and back are too shot to try twerking, i'd pry blow out a hip trying

i do have the urge to try it now in the mirror

MadtownPacker
06-18-2024, 08:20 PM
Hope tweaking doesn't lead to twerking.
I believe that’s the right order.