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Post by bigblind168 on Oct 14, 2009 18:24:00 GMT -5
I think honestly, he will be fine by december. Eitherway, hes always a lock for every tournament i doubt it will be different
think guys, how long does it take for someone to heal a dislocated shoulder? like 2 weeks tops! you guys are panicing like he broke both his collar bones, his noes and his left leg was eaten by a shark with swine flue monkey aids. he will be back for the next sasuke, fully healed. Infact, he probably was fully healed by the time SASUKE aired
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Post by zbch on Oct 14, 2009 19:15:12 GMT -5
I think honestly, he will be fine by december. Eitherway, hes always a lock for every tournament i doubt it will be different think guys, how long does it take for someone to heal a dislocated shoulder? like 2 weeks tops! you guys are panicing like he broke both his collar bones, his noes and his left leg was eaten by a shark with swine flue monkey aids. he will be back for the next sasuke, fully healed. Infact, he probably was fully healed by the time SASUKE aired The problem with dislocations/subluxations isn't so much the healing, which might be over with shortly, but damage to the connective tissue. This makes more shoulder dislocations more likely in future... essentially 'loosening' the shoulder and making it more unstable. But Yamamoto's always had this problem, he keeps going in spite of it, and will be back to conquer at least the first stage in December I reckon The fact that he said he couldn't feel anything really worries me though... it would really suck to get permanent nerve damage from SASUKE.
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arsenette
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Post by arsenette on Oct 14, 2009 19:39:19 GMT -5
Shingo's had problems for years with his shoulder. Multiple dislocations and actually breaking it in Sasuke once requiring surgery.. yeah.. he's pretty fubarred. And quite frankly it is extremely common to have nerve damage when a shoulder has that much trauma. He seems to deal with it just fine in his regular life (similar to me) but when put in these situations it has a tendency to get aggravated. He's done it before and honestly I think with some rest he will be fine.
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Zorn
Satō Jun
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Post by Zorn on Oct 15, 2009 19:19:21 GMT -5
With all this talk about Shingo's shoulder it amazes me that he gets by every single competition with his injury and doesn't seem bothered by it.
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arsenette
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Post by arsenette on Oct 15, 2009 19:27:19 GMT -5
It's just something you live with
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Oct 15, 2009 20:32:43 GMT -5
Exactly. I injured my right shoulder in a jujitsu seminar 3 years ago and now I have tendonitis in it. After a while you get used to something like that. You learn to ignore it and just go on. Actually, Shingo was my inspiration to start working out more and to try to get my shoulder better. In the dojo I often wouldn't spar or grapple if my shoulder was hurting. Sparring or grappling wouldn't have injured the shoulder, it simply would have made the tendonitis flare up a bit. I knew that, but still didn't spar or grapple. Then I started watching Sasuke. I would watch Shingo compete even when his shoulder was hurting and I realized that his injury was worse than mine, but he didn't let it stop him; he trained and competed even when he was hurting. I started working out more and started doing some exercise to strengthen my shoulder. It's better now. I still have tendonitis, but it's better than it was a year and a half ago. Shingo's injury may slow him down a bit, but it doesn't stop him. After all these years of dealing with the injury, he knows how to handle it.
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