Yahoo Sports: Yao's Career in Jeopardy?

kTXe

On To The Next One
Messages
1,546
Reaction score
94
link



Rockets could lose Yao for season, if not longer

By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports






As the NBA draft approached, the grim truth about Yao Ming’s(notes) broken left foot hung like an anvil over the Houston Rockets. The fear isn’t that he’s just lost for next season, but longer.
The Rockets and Yao’s reps are frightened over his future, and the concern is the most base of all: Does Yao Ming ever play again?

“The realization has hit them that this is grave,” one NBA general manager said.

For now, the Rockets have privately told league peers it could be a full season before Yao might be able to return to basketball. Multiple league executives, officials close to Yao and two doctors with knowledge of the diagnoses are describing a troubling re-fracture of his navicular bone. Three pins were inserted a year ago, but the foot cracked in the playoffs and isn’t healing.
“It sounds like he’s missing most of next season, if not the entire 82 games,” one league executive who has had recent discussions with the Houston front office told Yahoo! Sports. “That’s all that [the Rockets] will concede quietly, but they know it’s probably much worse.”

Houston general manager Daryl Morey refused comment on Monday and a team spokesman said the Rockets will not have further comment until Yao undergoes additional medical tests.
There’s no reason for the Rockets to disclose the severity of the injury, nor the uncertainty over Yao’s future. Before the Rockets go public with a dire diagnosis, they plan to send him to three more specialists this week, a source said. For now, the Rockets have season tickets and sponsorships to sell. For now, the Rockets will publicly decry these doomsday revelations as premature, but this is the reality that they’re working under within the organization.

This has turned into an impossible situation for the Rockets’ capable GM. Even if Yao plays again, Morey knows it’s just a matter of time until his lower body breaks down. His feet and ankles just can’t support the mobility of his 7-foot-6 frame.

With four surgeries in three years, the Rockets worried they were reaching a breaking point. Well, it’s here. After missing 86 games in the previous three seasons, the 28-year-old Yao missed a mere five this past regular season before injuring his foot during the Rockets’ second-round playoff series against the Los Angeles Lakers.

It wasn’t until last week when Houston issued a statement saying Yao’s fractured foot hadn’t healed properly, that he would be unavailable “indefinitely.” Prior to Thursday’s draft, Morey tried desperately to trade into the high lottery to take Spanish prodigy Ricky Rubio(notes). Houston needed a young star, but had too few assets to make a deal with Memphis or Sacramento. It seemed odd to teams that Houston had thrown Shane Battier(notes) and Aaron Brooks(notes) into offers within weeks of pushing the NBA champion Lakers to seven games in the Western Conference semifinals.

Now, the Rockets have tough decisions to make: Do they keep pushing Tracy McGrady(notes) and his expiring contract on the market or let the $22 million expire next summer? So far, Morey is getting offered bad contracts and junk talent for him. What’s more, does Houston re-sign Ron Artest(notes) to a $40 million-plus contract when contention is no longer viable? Why not create cap space for the summers of 2010 and 2011? Why not get younger now? Yao could opt out of his contract next summer, but odds are that Houston won’t be so fortunate.

The Rockets should do themselves a favor and just start over. That isn’t easy in a sophisticated and rabid NBA market like Houston, but what everyone long suspected has reached fruition: Yao and McGrady are no longer a faulty foundation, but a collapsed one. Houston needs to proceed with an understanding that they’re no longer chasing the Lakers, but beginning again.

Rest assured, Houston has long been fearful that Yao’s responsibilities to the Chinese national team were rapidly contributing to his breakdown, and perhaps they’ve finally been met. Yao wouldn’t have missed the Beijing Olympics for the world, but it was clear he wasn’t fully healed in those Games. The Rockets paid a price for his nationalism, his obligation and now the darkest fears are close to confirmation: It isn’t just a season on the brink for Yao Ming, but perhaps a career.


Adrian Wojnarowski is the NBA columnist for Yahoo! Sports. Send Adrian a question or comment for potential use in a future column or webcast.
 

Rampage

Benched
Messages
24,117
Reaction score
2
Houston needs to get rid of him. they will never win a title with him being such a liability on defense
 

TellerMorrow34

BraveHeartFan
Messages
28,358
Reaction score
5,076
This isn't surprising about his injury. The guy has a silly schedule that doesn't allow him to heal properly and has been causing lots of extra stress on his legs for his whole career. I've said since he began that if he didn't quit playing all those extra games for China in the offseason that he'd wind up hurting himself badly, in the long run. Looks like that stuff is finally starting to catch up with him.
 

Nav22

Well-Known Member
Messages
13,817
Reaction score
16,976
That's terrible news. Yao's a terrific player and an even better person. He's been invaluable for the globalization of the sport.
 

kmp77

Well-Known Member
Messages
6,276
Reaction score
370
Houston was better without Yao and McGrady....which was suprising. McGrady definitely should be cut or traded. Yao just isn't dominating.
 

big dog cowboy

THE BIG DOG
Staff member
Messages
97,998
Reaction score
101,226
CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
BraveHeartFan;2826562 said:
This isn't surprising about his injury.
I couldn't agree more. All along I thought he only had so much basketball in his body. It seems his time may be up and that is a shame. He should have saved more playing time for the NBA.
 

burmafrd

Well-Known Member
Messages
43,820
Reaction score
3,379
He was abnormally tall with fairly thin ankles and feet- so this was inevitable and should have been clear to everyone. He would have only so much basketball before his body broke down. Instead he played as much as he could and more. Not surprising how much pressure he got from the Chinese government- its not like they give a crap about any individual.
 

Mavs Man

All outta bubble gum
Messages
4,672
Reaction score
0
Some conspiracy theorists think this is a way for the team to scare the Chinese from playing him yet again this summer so he can actually rest. But where there's smoke there's fire, so chances are it's as serious as they say it is.
 
Top