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Dehydration and full body cramps.
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[QUOTE="Palatine, post: 3912117, member: 974"] Just a couple of weeks ago we were progressing nicely into March. Then out of nowhere our best player, who was also trending upward, collapsed in MSG tunnel with full body cramps and had to be carried to the locker room. It was painful just to watch. The last time I remember seeing a player so debilitated by cramps was Kellen Winslow on a hot, humid day in Miami in 1993. And it wasn't just weather and cramps, he had a pinched nerve in his shoulder, a strained rotator cuff and lost 13 pounds during the game. But that was almost 30 years ago when sports medicine was nowhere near as advanced as it is today. How did James Bouknight end up on the tunnel floor? How on Earth can a major college basketball program allow such a situation to develop? Who is to blame? The program has a health and conditioning program and full time trainers. This wasn't some run of the mill cramp that we see from time to time. It was a two bag IV dehydration by the player on the team that receives (or should receive) the most attention. The rehab of an elbow shouldn't have this kind of reaction. What was the state of his overall conditioning? Doesn't Bouk have a pre-game routine? Was it followed? Did someone make sure it was followed? Did the coaches make sure the conditioning staff was on the job? What happened to Bouk should never happen in a two hour basketball game in an air conditioned arena. Bouk's jumpshot never returned in the three games after the incident. The jump shot starts in the legs. Bouk was not the explosive, stop and go, jump out of the gym athlete we had watched in the past. So the questions remain. What happened? Why did it happen? Who was responsible? Who is responsible for making sure it doesn't happen to Husky again? They are reasonable questions. I will NOT hold my breath waiting for the university to respond. [/QUOTE]
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Dehydration and full body cramps.
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