Yes and one out of the 4 unvaccinated dummies probably won't play again.
You might as well just burn that money now.
They have good doctors and good doctors would never give them any of that stuff for covid because, as we have seen, it does sweet snot all.
Also, what players are given for any issue has to be on the list of approved treatments for that specific issue and neither of those are anywhere near the approved list.
Now you want to be in skates?
HAVE YOU NOT LEARNED FROM SKIS?
I’ve spent plenty of time on skates. Mostly hockey, but I raced some on speed skates as a kid. Figure skates were always dangerous for me. In 79/80 I rented a pair at the Olympic oval in Lake Placid and whacked my head pretty hard as I meant to just spin around to look towards the ski jump at the finish line but did more of a toe loop with a half gainer. I’d skates a few times every year up in the north country but always on hockey skates.
I played defense and goalie as a kid. Playing 3rd base in baseball gave me a good glove hand. And I was always pretty quick skating backwards so I was destined to play defense. Worst day ever I was playing goalie at a retention pond in a place we really weren’t supposed to be at along the railroad tracks. I was probably 11. Fell through the ice. It was only chest deep but my skates went into the mud and everyone was afraid to help pull me out. After a few minutes of screaming a high school kid laid down, grabbed me by the hoodie and pulled me out. The kid absolutely saved my life. I had to run home about a half mile to try and warm up. Never skated there again.
Behind my house we had half of a baseball field. It had a backstop and a pitchers mound. The plot of land was only wide enough for the bases and left field. Center fielder and right fielder always stood in the street. About 20’ past third base they had dug down about a foot for an ice skating “pond”. The city would flood it using a fire hydrant in the winter to skate on. The first few years that’s all there was. When I was about 12 they installed boards and we had an actual hockey rink. About 2 years later they installed lights. Up until then all we had was the lights from a huge bowling alley parking lot that was next to it. Living there was pretty decent for city life. Not unlike that movie Sandlot. In the summer we played pickup games of baseball and softball all day every day. In the fall it was football and baseball. In the winter hockey. Springtime was a mess because it could take awhile for left field to dry out enough to play baseball.
I love winter sports. I’ve skied, snowboarded, drove the 2 man, rode number 2 on the 4 man, had 18 trips on the luge and was one of the few to try the luge from the mile start at Mt Van Hoevenberg. I really wanted to try Cresta when I was in St Moritz but one of the coaches grabbed me and said if I got injured in the slightest I was being sent back stateside. Snow shoes and cross country skis were a good way to get some cross training in to break up the monotony of running in the winter.
I never tried ski jumping but I used to run the wooden stairs at the old ski jump. There were a few guys that offered to teach me how to jump but I never took them up on it. I never tried barrel jumping either. I was comfortable on speed skates and one of my bobsled coaches was willing to teach me the basics. His father was Bunny Sheffield who used to be a really good speed skater and barrel jumper. When I was really young I remember watching barrel jumping on wild world of sports.
I enjoyed the few times I have tried snowmobiling. If I lived where it snowed I would probably have one or two. I’ve been blasting up the river beds in the Adirondack mountains and out on lake Champlain ice fishing. But not since 1980. My gf is actually from
@Walks_At_Night neck of the woods and many of her friends have snow machines. There’s a chance we may head up there some winter for a trip to northern Michigan or the UP for an overnight tundra excursion.
I love skiing but I was never really that good at it. I never had a lesson and once I got stationed at Plattsburgh I could only really ski after the bobsled season ended. I did learn how to get down no matter how icy the runs were. I never had a chance to ski much in powder. Once I lost my eye I decided to become an expert skier. I refused to just sit around feeling sorry for myself. I remember the first time I got off the gondola at Vail and looked around at the snow covered peaks. I don’t have depth perception but I had a new found appreciation for the beauty of the snow covered mountains. I couldn’t afford many days each season but I got better every year. Once I decided to buy a season pass to Vail resorts I was pretty much all in. I got to where I was pretty fearless and would ski anywhere as long as there wasn’t moguls. Lack of depth perception makes that too tough for me. But I have a blast. In the last 10 years I have skied well over 1 million vertical feet - and that’s just counting the places I skied on my Epic pass. Approaching 1000 lifts/runs and have fallen less than a dozen times. Many would say I’m not trying hard enough. I still have troubles with powder. I’m much more comfortable on hard packed or icy runs because of my orientation in the Adirondack and Green mountains. I enjoyed slalom courses for a few years doing the Nastar stuff but didn’t do it enough to get that good. I love doing the downhill type skiing. Using the technology in a pair of goggles my gf bought me pushed me to see what I could get my top speed up to. 56mph was my personal record. Then I retired the goggles. I was starting to scare myself. A person has to know his limitations. I knew if I kept wearing them I was going to strive for 60 which would then make me switch them to metric to break 100kph. I sensed something else would break along the way.
I’ve been slowing down since my concussion and compression fractures last February. I switched to shorter skis. I’m looking for a decent pair of snow blades to try. My current skis I use the most are only 145s but I’d like to try the shorter, wider blades. I used to be comfortable skiing backwards. Since the concussion it’s not quite as much fun. Harder to relax.
In 2010 I took a snowboarding lesson at Heavenly and was actually pretty comfortable with it. I had started wakeboarding in 2008 and it was a similar technique. I was going to switch to snowboarding when I needed new equipment but by that time I had progressed and become so good at skiing that I didn’t want to start over.
Last year I skied 25 days. That’s the most in one year for me. 15 of those days were after my concussion/compression fracture incident in Park City. I don’t remember much of those 15 days but when I look at the pictures it appears I was having fun. This year I should get at least 20. I have 5 now. Driving to Colorado, Utah and then back to Colorado in at the end of the month. That’s 3 more weeks of skiing. Not sure if I’ll make another trip in March. I’m trying to find a reasonable place to stay for a 4th and 5th week since we’ll already be up there. Part of me wants to set a new personal best for number of days but part of me wants to save the money so I can go back to Thailand for 6-8 weeks later this year.
3 or 4 years ago I decided to revisit bobsledding. I was at Whistler for a week and signed up for the bobsled experience. My thought at the time was to do all 4 runs in North America. Whistler, Calgary, Park City and finish up back in Lake Placid. I gave up those plans. The run at Whistler was uneventful but it triggered too much PTSD for me. It was the first time I sat in a sled since my accident right before the LP Olympics. The run was smooth, fast and the sled itself felt much safer than the ones we raced in but I didn’t like it. I don’t see myself going down a run again unless I get a chance to drive a monobob. I don’t think I would trigger the ptsd if I was driving. Depth perception would still be a challenge but it can’t be any worse than the trip that I had a contact pop out in the middle of the first curve at Mt Van Hoevenberg. The run there now is completely reconfigured. No more Shady curve. No more zigzag. Much safer than it was when I was competing. I could drive it and drive it well.
Sadly, I have hung up my skates. I used to enjoy it but the ice seems to be getting harder as I get older.
Just remember. A body at rest tends to stay at rest. A body in motion tends to stay in motion. Keeping that in mind and seeking something every single day that brings me joy keeps me going.