Thursday, August 7, 2014

Paul George Injury



Paul George, while playing in an exhibition game for Team USA last Friday, suffered a fracture of both his tibia and fibula.  I'm not going to post a picture of the injury or the video, because it was a horrific injury, but you can find it on the internet.  George has been playing basketball his whole life, landed thousands of times, and never had anything like this happen.  In fact, almost all basketball players jump and land thousands of times throughout their careers and never sustain an injury like this.  Many players do sprain their ankles when landing, and occasionally tear an ACL (see Derrick Rose), but this type of injury is very rare.  Kevin Ware from Louisville suffered a similar injury during last season's NCAA tournament.  So what went wrong this time for George?

As you can see in the picture above, George lands with his right leg at approximately a 45 degree angle in relationship to the ground.  He actually hits the base of the goal with his foot before hitting the ground.  Newton's 3rd law of motion tells us that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.  Most of the time when basketball players jump, they land with their feet directly under their center of mass, and the force from the ground (ground reaction force) is transmitted straight up the leg without much of a problem. In George's case, because he is landing at this angle and his foot is a large distance from his center of mass, the ground reaction force creates a bending moment around the middle section of both the tibia and fibula, causing them to fracture.  Many times when these fractures occur, it's not because of the magnitude of the force, but more about the angle of force application and its relationship to the person's center of mass. George has a long road ahead but I am sure he was operated on by the best orthopedic surgeons and will receive the best therapy possible.

No comments:

Post a Comment