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Bills face harsh realities of balancing offseason workload with health risks


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Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott. (Harry Scull Jr./ Buffalo News file photo)
Buffalo Bills head coach Sean McDermott. (Harry Scull Jr./ Buffalo News file photo)
By Vic Carucci|Published 7:00 a.m. May 28, 2019|Updated 4 hours ago
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Every year, there’s a discussion about the gamble NFL teams take with their September-through-January fortunes by putting players on the field April through June. With each so-called low-intensity, non-contact offseason practice, players chance blowing out a knee or breaking a bone or tearing a muscle, injuries that threaten seasons and even careers.

The subject has hit home particularly hard in recent days with the Washington Redskins, who lost linebacker Reuben Foster to a season-ending torn ACL on the first day of OTA drills, and the Atlanta Falcons, who lost Buffalo-born defensive end Steven Means to a season-ending ruptured Achilles tendon on the first day of their OTA workouts.

Then, there’s the Buffalo Bills. Coach Sean McDermott opened a grim news conference last Tuesday with word that tight end Tyler Kroft, a key free-agent signing, had suffered a broken foot during the first day of OTAs. McDermott wasn’t finished. We found out that center Mitch Morse, arguably the most important free-agent addition, and receiver Cole Beasley, another key pickup from the open market, are recovering from core-muscle surgeries they underwent a few weeks ago. For good measure, the coach shared that wide receiver David Sills, perhaps the most promising of the team’s undrafted free-agent acquisitions, had suffered a hamstring injury in rookie minicamp earlier in the month.

Other than that, it’s been a delightful offseason, folks.

 

https://buffalonews.com/2019/05/28/buffalo-bills-sean-mcdermott-brian-billick-josh-allen-kyle-kroft-mitch-morse-cole-beasley-nfl-football/

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1 hour ago, HOUSE said:

We found out that center Mitch Morse, arguably the most important free-agent addition, and receiver Cole Beasley, another key pickup from the open market, are recovering from core-muscle surgeries they underwent a few weeks ago.

 

So what does this have to do with the "harsh reality" of offseason workouts?

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7 minutes ago, Koko78 said:

 

So what does this have to do with the "harsh reality" of offseason workouts?

I was thinking the same thing. They have one injury as a result of OTAs - Kroft. As far as Sills, I don’t consider a hammy a real injury in May.

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47 minutes ago, Koko78 said:

 

So what does this have to do with the "harsh reality" of offseason workouts?

I think Carucci (or more likely, his editor) is overdramatizing again.  With just the [BN] Blitz and ‘Smiles At’ photo galleries, they have to drum up interest in their online content somehow.

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So if it happens during Week 3 of the regular season that’s somehow better? SMH. If anything, you almost want the inevitable  injury bug earlier than later so that most of these guys will be ready to go by TC or preseason at latest. There’s never a “good” time though obviously. 

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Is the premise of the article that there should be no team activities in the offseason?  The article is absurd.  Teams have to practice and athletes have to hone their individual skills.  The article makes Vic look like he is lacking for anything intelligent to write about. 

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1 hour ago, Mr. WEO said:

Every year, same thing.  Not in proper shape.

 

These guys need year round mandatory workouts.  Go to work every day.

 

spring training is for working off the Molson Muscle built lazing around at the cottage

 

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