View Full Version : Heard high ankle sprain for Prather
LoyalGatorFan
01-12-2013, 06:12 PM
A buddy of mine texted me Prather suffered a high ankle sprain...must have been mentioned during the game I'm assuming....if true, I would say out 2-4 weeks...bummer...he is my fav player
akaGatorhoops
01-12-2013, 06:15 PM
good grief. i have never seen a season like this.
i didn't hear it mentioned
GatorPlanet
01-12-2013, 06:20 PM
good grief. i have never seen a season like this.
The amazing thing is, we keep playing at a very high level in spite of the injuries.
Another tough break for Prather. This is his breakout season but these injuries just keep setting him back.
HALLGATOR
01-12-2013, 06:21 PM
All I heard was nothing showed as being broken
LoyalGatorFan
01-12-2013, 06:23 PM
Hopefully we can get Rosario back for A&M...after their performance @ Rupp I think we will need him lol...and if this turns out being true about Prather, I would rather it be high ankle than anything in the foot...sprained foot you're out normall 4-6 wks and a broken foot you're out usually 8-10...
LoyalGatorFan
01-12-2013, 06:25 PM
i didn't hear it mentioned
Maybe he was referring to the radio broadcast....I don't know
born2beagator
01-12-2013, 06:27 PM
This isn't fair. :(
akaGatorhoops
01-12-2013, 06:27 PM
billy just said they "think it is a high sprain" and that "those are tough to come back from".
he was told at halftime that it was broken. . . it is not.
lean_gator
01-12-2013, 06:30 PM
Mike Frazier, all eyes on you young man
GatorPlanet
01-12-2013, 06:32 PM
How bad was Rosario's sprain?
HALLGATOR
01-12-2013, 06:33 PM
Casey can't seem to catch a break.
LoyalGatorFan
01-12-2013, 06:34 PM
How bad was Rosario's sprain?
I don't know but didnt he come back and play some more against UGA? If that made it worse I don't understand why BD or the training staff allowed that..in a blowout game why even risk it? Oh well...
InstiGATOR1
01-12-2013, 06:42 PM
Well,
1. My non-MD view is you can play on a regular sprain in the same game and not hurt it further. It is later when it swells up that you have issues.
2. I am just happy Prather did not break anything.
GatorPlanet
01-12-2013, 06:43 PM
I don't know but didnt he come back and play some more against UGA? If that made it worse I don't understand why BD or the training staff allowed that..in a blowout game why even risk it? Oh well...
Ankle sprains hurt immediately, but a lot of lower ankle sprains feel much better after 10 or 15 minutes. Then they hurt again hours later. He probably said he was okay.
trufloridagator
01-12-2013, 06:49 PM
It's too early to assume anything about a HAS. Not all High Ankle Sprains are created equal. They typically have a long recovery though, we could be without Prather all of February.
hgators
01-12-2013, 06:56 PM
I've never seen anything like you cats. You have him out for as much as 6-8 weeks based on two offhand "wait and see" comments. Having had all of the above including ribbing my ligament off the bone he didn't look like he was in that kind of agony. Lots of rest, ice a boot and elevation and who knows.
Let's hope for the best. Good road win today with lots of guys getting minutes for this team.
Go Gators!!!
HALLGATOR
01-12-2013, 06:58 PM
You guys remember getting shin splints? Those things hurt like hell.
It didn't look that bad when it happened in the game. Hopefully Prather can come back soon. He's been looking much more comfortable on the offensive end lately.
gatorev12
01-12-2013, 07:05 PM
It's hard luck on Prather (who'd been playing well all season and finally turning his considerable potential into production), but hopefully it isn't too bad and he's able to come back at some point before the tourney.
The optimist in me thinks that we'll be alright for a few weeks given the quality wins already on our resume and the fact the SEC is slightly down this year. If we can get through this week (with what looks like a much-underestimated A&M team and a solid Missouri squad), then we'll be in good shape through conference play. Not to mention: Frazier and Graham have played well in their minutes on the floor and are capable of doing well against most of the teams we play in that stretch.
themistocles
01-12-2013, 10:02 PM
Not to mention: Frazier and Graham have played well in their minutes on the floor and are capable of doing well against most of the teams we play in that stretch.
I am a Prather fan, but your last statement is very appropriate.
Neither is the shut-down defender or rebounder that Prather is, but both have played reasonably well, and even Walker has shown a few good things.
Hopefully the Gators won't be like the Cats, with 4 Frosh on the floor regularly, but this group might even be able to weather that.
rserina
01-12-2013, 11:32 PM
good grief. i have never seen a season like this.
What about 2000-01? That was crazy. Dupay's back, Wright's foot, Hamilton's knee, just a terrible stretch and it really killed our chances in March.
MichaelJoeWilliamson
01-13-2013, 11:28 AM
The Gainesville Sun‘s Kevin Brockway spoke with trainer Dave “Duke” Werner after the game. He relayed that Rosario’s ankle sprain should not keep him out of the team’s next contest against Texas A&M on Thursday.
HALLGATOR
01-13-2013, 12:41 PM
The Gainesville Sun‘s Kevin Brockway spoke with trainer Dave “Duke” Werner after the game. He relayed that Rosario’s ankle sprain should not keep him out of the team’s next contest against Texas A&M on Thursday.
That would be great news!
themistocles
01-13-2013, 12:59 PM
With Rosario, you have a 7-man rotation, and Frazier is a decent rebounder.
Any news on Prather?
I really think that Prather is of somewhat greater importance for overall team functionality, because he can play either the 3 or the 4 quite well. Admittedly, even Wilbekin can play the 4 some, but Rosario is not as strong a rebounder as Prather, so that is a disadvantage.
Good point about the 2000-01 team Rserina. How quickly we forget. I mean, that was only about a dozen years ago.
rserina
01-13-2013, 01:11 PM
I really think that Prather is of somewhat greater importance for overall team functionality, because he can play either the 3 or the 4 quite well. Admittedly, even Wilbekin can play the 4 some, but Rosario is not as strong a rebounder as Prather, so that is a disadvantage.
Agreed. If you want to go with an eight-man rotation, then you need versatile guys who can play more than one position. That is sort of implicitly built into our guard positions, but the four is the real wild card. If Prather ends up out for a few weeks, I think we experiment more with the four guard lineups. You are right that we did that some with Wilbekin last year, so there is a little precedent there. In any event, it will only be for very short stretches and ordinarily with Young at the five.
gator7_5
01-13-2013, 02:05 PM
Must be a REALLY high sprain if they first confused it with a broken shin.
LoyalGatorFan
01-13-2013, 09:31 PM
What about 2000-01? That was crazy. Dupay's back, Wright's foot, Hamilton's knee, just a terrible stretch and it really killed our chances in March.
And didnt that team go on to win/share the SEC title? Amazing resiliency..
InstiGATOR1
01-13-2013, 10:05 PM
Must be a REALLY high sprain if they first confused it with a broken shin.
Have you ever had a high ankle sprain? It can feel like the ligament is coming off the leg bone. So I could see the confusion.
LoyalGatorFan
01-13-2013, 11:03 PM
The problem with high ankle sprains vs the normal lateral (outside) sprains is that high ankle sprains involve the tissue that connects the tibia and fibula...the motion that is most painful with this type of injury is moving your foot up and down...which all of us do millions of times a day when we walk...so obviously if Prather hurts to walk, hes gonna hurt to run, jump, cut, etc...its named "high" more so because its higher up the leg vs "high" in terms of grade of severity..even tho it is the most severe ankle sprain there is
your_perfect_enemy
01-14-2013, 09:45 AM
It didn't look that bad when it happened in the game. Hopefully Prather can come back soon. He's been looking much more comfortable on the offensive end lately.
That's what I was thinking. Not questioning his toughness in any way, but I couldn't believe they needed to x ray him, much less that he was even injured after seeing it on tv.
InstiGATOR1
01-14-2013, 09:58 AM
That's what I was thinking. Not questioning his toughness in any way, but I couldn't believe they needed to x ray him, much less that he was even injured after seeing it on tv.
Right like the Yeguete foot injury last year. It looked like a normal play.
NorthCaptivaGator
01-14-2013, 10:22 AM
That's what I was thinking. Not questioning his toughness in any way, but I couldn't believe they needed to x ray him, much less that he was even injured after seeing it on tv.
That was the scary part, it looked like he hurt it on his take off rather than on his landing, just like Wil last year, I was afraid it was his foot but it appears maybe they were thinking more fibula up on the lateral aspect of the lower leg.
themistocles
01-14-2013, 11:27 AM
The problem with high ankle sprains vs the normal lateral (outside) sprains is that high ankle sprains involve the tissue that connects the tibia and fibula...the motion that is most painful with this type of injury is moving your foot up and down...which all of us do millions of times a day when we walk...so obviously if Prather hurts to walk, hes gonna hurt to run, jump, cut, etc...its named "high" more so because its higher up the leg vs "high" in terms of grade of severity..even tho it is the most severe ankle sprain there is
Thanks for the clarification Loyal. I have had a ton of "Low" angle sprains during my basketball life (which ended up eventually making it painful to do much of anything now, at 64), but I never remembered taking more than a couple of weeks to fully heal.
The high sprain sounds rather nasty given the way the lower leg and foot function mechanically.
GatorPlanet
01-14-2013, 12:10 PM
Thanks for the clarification Loyal. I have had a ton of "Low" angle sprains during my basketball life (which ended up eventually making it painful to do much of anything now, at 64), but I never remembered taking more than a couple of weeks to fully heal.
The high sprain sounds rather nasty given the way the lower leg and foot function mechanically.
I too had tons of low ankle sprains, which are by far the most common. Usually you get over them in a week or two, as you said.
Only once did I incur the dreaded high ankle sprain, and it was no picnic. A day after I got it, my foot was swollen like an elephant's foot and was black and blue from my toes to well above the ankle. I had to get x-rays (I was sure I'd broken something). I couldn't walk on it for a week, and it took a good six months before I was without pain.
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