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Dreaded ACL

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HuskyFan1125

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Minnesota guard Rachel Banham tore her ACL and is out for season. Hate it for this kid. I watched her in the Gulf Coast showcase.


Jordin Canada left game last night with a back injury and did not return. Hope she is well
 
Dude - don't you know that OLD people read this board? Your thread title may be scaring some to death right now :eek:
 
Some positive news, Cal sophomore Courtney Range, who injured her knee in Sundays loss at Kansas, only has a sprained knee. Not sure how long she will be out but much better than what it could have been.
 
ochoopsfan said:
Some positive news, Cal sophomore Courtney Range, who injured her knee in Sundays loss at Kansas, only has a sprained knee. Not sure how long she will be out but much better than what it could have been.

That's good news.
 
Will she be eligible for a redshirt? Because she's a senior. Hate to see her college career end like that.
 
Banham is a legit star playing a bit out of the spotlight. Real shame.
 
Will she be eligible for a redshirt? Because she's a senior. Hate to see her college career end like that.
She's played in 10 games this year and was leading the team at 18.6 ppg. Guessing the college career has to be over.
 
She's played in 10 games this year and was leading the team at 18.6 ppg. Guessing the college career has to be over.
While she may not come back, she very well may be eligible to red-shirt. Minnesota has 30 scheduled games this year (they were in the Gulf Coast Showcase) and the B1G tourney counts as one game so she appeared in less than 1/3. Thanks to Beknighted on the RU board for the info.

But, as I say, would she want to come back or move on? No idea.
 
I saw on another site that Tori McCoy's season is over due to ACL injury :(
 
R. Badham is one of my favorite WCBB players! I feel so bad for her, senior year and everything!
Knight you are so right, a gold nugget buried in MN! Hopefully she'll be able to have a great pro career.
 
While she may not come back, she very well may be eligible to red-shirt. Minnesota has 30 scheduled games this year (they were in the Gulf Coast Showcase) and the B1G tourney counts as one game so she appeared in less than 1/3. Thanks to Beknighted on the RU board for the info.


Actually the rule is not 1/3, it is 30%. Her team has 31 games for purposes of the formula. Take 30% of that and you get 9.3 games. Then round up, per the rule, and you have 10 - which is the max she could play and still be eligible for a hardship waiver. So she just makes it.
 
Medical science needs to find out why these injuries still happen.........Praying for a speedy recovery........
 
Medical science needs to find out why these injuries still happen....Praying for a speedy recovery...

I read an article some months back in which the researchers believed that the higher rate of ACL injuries among women athletes is due to the differences in the actual composition of a woman's knee joint. I'd agree that sports/medical science needs to develop a lightweight but strong brace that would assist strength without impeding movement. If available, such a device would eventually become as standard a piece of equipment as the batter's and pitcher's mask is now becoming in softball after way too many head injuries.
 
I read an article some months back in which the researchers believed that the higher rate of ACL injuries among women athletes is due to the differences in the actual composition of a woman's knee joint. I'd agree that sports/medical science needs to develop a lightweight but strong brace that would assist strength without impeding movement. If available, such a device would eventually become as standard a piece of equipment as the batter's and pitcher's mask is now becoming in softball after way too many head injuries.



Two issues:

1. There appear to be multiple reasons for women's ACL injuries. One is likely the way the knee is put together (specifically the gap in the intercondylar notch), but there are many others that may also contribute.

2. Most women's ACL injuries are non-contact and a brace doesn't help prevent most of those, i.e. the ones that occur when a player plants a leg to cut or to jump - or on a jump stop.
 
Thanks, Stamford. I recall mention of your first point. But I am not so positive about your second. My experience is very limited, but those knee injuries I've seen all involved contact. So, you may still be correct anyway.
 
Thanks, Stamford. I recall mention of your first point. But I am not so positive about your second. My experience is very limited, but those knee injuries I've seen all involved contact. So, you may still be correct anyway.



Depending on the study, it appears that 60-90% of female ACL injuries in sports such as soccer or basketball are non-contact. One big study was the one done by Agel and Arendt in 2005 that looked at a pool of NCAA data from 1990-2002. Based on 514 ACL tears to basketball players, 75% were non-contact.
 
Amazing. And it makes me wonder then, how many of the injuries involved game competition as opposed to practice?

It just dawned on me that as a broadcaster, those injuries I did see were in a game context. But as I think more about it, I wasn't around the practices near as much. And we know that ACL injuries do occur during practices.
 
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I've personally witnessed 14 torn ACL's at games I've been at - and 12 were non-contact. Thinking back to some of the UConn ACL's:

- Mel Thomas: non-contact
- Caroline Doty: 2nd non-contact, 3rd non-contact (1st - H.S. soccer: contact)
- Shea Ralph: non-contact
- Jess Moore: contact??
- Briana Banks: contact but not on the leg where the ACL tore
- Sue Bird: non-contact

Gabby Williams' first one was reportedly non-contact as well. Not sure about the second one - which was a partial tear.
 
Maybe this explains, at least partially, why so little progress appears to have been made in prevention of these injuries. What can be done? I have no useful idea.
 
Just anecdotal evidence here- my sister blew her ACL & MCL while going up for a spike during a pick up volleyball game. Nobody touched her but she knew the minute her foot touched the floor that her knee was blown.
 
Two issues:

1. There appear to be multiple reasons for women's ACL injuries. One is likely the way the knee is put together (specifically the gap in the intercondylar notch), but there are many others that may also contribute.

2. Most women's ACL injuries are non-contact and a brace doesn't help prevent most of those, i.e. the ones that occur when a player plants a leg to cut or to jump - or on a jump stop.
Yeah, I saw the game in which Becky Hammon tore her ACL last season and she did it when she was on the baseline getting ready to drive around another player.
 
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