Chiefs WR Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, who suffered a dislocation of his sternoclavicular shoulder joint Saturday night, was discharged from a Jacksonville-area hospital this morning and now has been cleared to return to Kansas City.
#Chiefs WR Marquise “Hollywood” Brown is expected to miss four to six weeks with the sternoclavicular injury he suffered, per multiple sources. Opening night is three weeks from this Thursday night.
Sources: The #Chiefs are placing WR Marquise "Hollywood" Brown on IR, and he will undergo surgery to repair his dislocated SC joint. After multiple imaging studies, it was determined that, although Hollywood felt better, his injury was not healing correctly. Without corrective… pic.twitter.com/xtRRMvmseq
Andy Reid said Hollywood Brown is “ahead of schedule” and attacking his rehab, but he wouldn’t commit to a certainty of seeing him this season. Called him “a relentless worker.”
DeAndre Hopkins has 11 regular season games to get up to get fully comfortable within the #chiefs offense and with Patrick Mahomes. By the time the postseason arrives, I'm told there is a real chance Hollywood Brown could return. Which would make KC's it's most complete at the…
Originally Posted by Gravedigger:
Gotta hope that Rice's inevitable suspension doesn't hit at the same time to allow Brown to come back healthy, or at least as healthy as he can be, then try to mitigate contact through different routes as best as possible. Patrick will be fine regardless, always has been. When my sister was asking questions this weekend like, "We look terrible, what the hell!?" I'm like i'm going to tell you the same thing that Dad told us every year, and those are the years when we sucked, "It's only Preseason."
On the contrary imagine, we lose Rice, Browns out. We fight and claw our way to another Super Bowl and the rest of the league gives up. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
Yes, the NFL is notoriously known for bigger players getting hurt more than smaller guys.
It seems that the smaller players would get injured more often. This is a big boy game. But, getting to the NFL for a smaller player shows that they can take a hit without getting injured. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
Yes, the NFL is notoriously known for bigger players getting hurt more than smaller guys.
Yes.
Offensive lineman suffer the most frequent injuries. They aren't even in high contact or dangerous spots either.
"In general, the offensive lineman positions are found to sustain the highest number of injuries while the individual position with the highest rate of injury is the running back. Other dangerous positions include the linebacker and wide receiver positions."
Offensive lineman suffer the most frequent injuries. They aren't even in high contact or dangerous spots either.
"In general, the offensive lineman positions are found to sustain the highest number of injuries while the individual position with the highest rate of injury is the running back. Other dangerous positions include the linebacker and wide receiver positions."
The guys that are contacted every play, every snap, with multiple other big bodies around them aren't in high contact or dangerous spots. Seems right. [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
"Aren't in high contact or dangerous spots".
Do you watch football?
The guys that are contacted every play, every snap, with multiple other big bodies around them aren't in high contact or dangerous spots. Seems right.
Offensive lineman aren't contacted at high speed like smaller guys (running backs, wide receivers, returners, and sometimes quarterbacks) and even then they still have the most frequent injuries. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
Offensive lineman aren't contacted at high speed like smaller guys (running backs, wide receivers, returners, and sometimes quarterbacks) and even then they still have the most frequent injuries.
And you are relating this to the fact that they're bigger, hence they get injured more.
Nothing to do with the fact that they're in contact on every play, with multiple other bodies around them. Play in play out.
But it's because they're big. THat's the argument you are making here? [Reply]
Originally Posted by O.city:
And you are relating this to the fact that they're bigger, hence they get injured more.
Nothing to do with the fact that they're in contact on every play, with multiple other bodies around them. Play in play out.
But it's because they're big. THat's the argument you are making here?
In the NBA too, the bigger you are the more difficult it is to have a long career. Not many 7ft 1+ guys make it over a long career. Same with really heavy guys.
There is no evidence to suggest smaller guys are more injury prone than larger guys. In the real world, there is actually evidence to the contrary. [Reply]
Originally Posted by BWillie:
In the NBA too, the bigger you are the more difficult it is to have a long career. Not many 7ft 1+ guys make it over a long career. Same with really heavy guys.
There is no evidence to suggest smaller guys are more injury prone than larger guys. In the real world, there is actually evidence to the contrary.
Simple physics would dispute it, but carry on. [Reply]
Originally Posted by loochy:
But a separated shoulder or collarbone isn't an "injury prone" type injury - it's a freak injury that happens from falling wrong. It's not a chronic ankle or foot recurrence or a hammy that pulls all the time.
The why, what, and where's of these injuries don't matter...It's the NFL and they're paid a lot of money to be on the field (that's why Mahomes is more focused on flexibility than being yoked). Based on all of these tweaks and dislocations and fractures he's got something like an eight to nine percent chance that he gets hurt every game he plays. Mahomes is probably less than one percent. Tyreek or Cooper Cup are something like 4-5% and Cooper Cup gets killed for his injuries.
Originally Posted by BWillie:
Seems it wouldn't. More lbs creates more strain on tendons, joints, knees etc. Gravity and kinetic energy are undefeated.
You are aware of Newton's Third Law of Motion, right? [Reply]