That’s three - Jana, Azzi, and Ayanna. Caroline is a ?
At some point, we need to stop accepting the 'they've been injured since High School' excuse. If that were the case, the responsible thing for the team to do would have been to deal with it last year.
Excuse?At some point, we need to stop accepting the 'they've been injured since High School' excuse. If that were the case, the responsible thing for the team to do would have been to deal with it last year.
Best wishes to Ayanna, and looking forward to seeing her at 100% next season.
UConn obviously recruits quality individuals/athletes who are highly motivated.
The downside of their year round effort to continually improve is susceptibility to overuse injuries. I think that explains a lot of what we are seeing.
“we need to stop accepting they’ve been injured since high school excuse”At some point, we need to stop accepting the 'they've been injured since High School' excuse. If that were the case, the responsible thing for the team to do would have been to deal with it last year.
You learned a valuable lesson--never accept a negative diagnosis. It may be best to travel out of your area to get the help you need. Doctors are human, often large ego's if surgeons, and don't know everything.Overuse is one factor, but genetics can also be part of it. Sometimes people don't know until they get involved in high level sports.
For me, I'm susceptible to knee issues because I'm flat footed. Spent the second half of my HS basketball career going to physiotherapy to deal with patella femoral syndrome in both knees.
The first half was spent seeing my regular doctor and being told nothing was wrong because they didn't have the expertise to diagnose the issue. If it wasn't for a volleyball coach I babysat for, who sent me to a specialist I don't know if I would have ever known.
Why!UCONN needs to find some new orthopedic doctors.