That's the scariest looking safety I have ever seen...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/...0YVR_blog.html
That's the scariest looking safety I have ever seen...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/...0YVR_blog.html
Paging SubliminalHorn in 5...4...3...2...1
Those pics don't add up. No tats on his right arm in the pic up top.
15lbs a muscle a day?
Based on his wiki page, he must be terrified of surgery.
2010 season: Landry injured his Achilles tendon playing the Eagles in Week 10, and eventually landed on injured reserve December 13, ending his season having only played in 9 games. Landry avoided surgery on his left Achilles tendon and instead received platelet-rich plasma treatments.
2011 season: On January 23, 2012, it was announced that Landry has decided to go with alternative medicine, receiving the stem cell treatment known as, Biological Matrix, on his left Achilles tendon in hopes to avoid surgery, but will finally decide on whether or not to get surgery in six to eight weeks.
Last edited by B00M; 02-23-2012 at 05:32 PM.
Bottom one is taken in a mirror so you see a reverse image.
dude is stupid not to have aurgery, going to cost himself a lot of money in free agency...
A right arm is a right arm wether a mirror image or real.
"Hey $#@!s, see this jar of Creatine?! It works"
Is that the cream or the clear in his hands?
He looks like a $#@!ing idiot.
im going to invite him to SXSW and point out CTJ to him and tell him he thinks he's an idiot...
Guys who take pics of theirselves in a mirror are Ghey. I wouldn't say that to his face.
reminds me of david boston several years ago... that isn't the size you want to play safety.
Are you guys who don't understand how a mirror works just trolling or are you complete $#@!ing idiots?
No wonder he gets hurt every year. Can't play safety at that size. Clown.
Whoever neg repped me... $#@! off.
Is Tony Mandrich his strength and conditioning coach? He's going to David Boston himself out of the league.
yea but can he bench 225 9.5 times? That's what I wanna know
Torbush
I don't give a $#@! what he looks like, I'd take him over any of the "Safeties" the Cowboys have.
that's just what you want from your fullback
To point out something that's pretty well-known about the sauce - just because your muscles get (way) bigger and stronger, doesn't mean that your connective tissues (tendons, ligaments) have increased their strength and effectiveness accordingly. Tearing/rupturing these key components due to extreme strength gains via steroid abuse is a very common occurrence, and may be the root problem for LaRon. Bigger, stronger, faster...and a higher risk factor for injury.
Why is he taking pics in the men's shower?
Props to KissingSuzyKolber for this pic of LaRon getting destroyed by Brandon Jacobs.
Why is he wearing receiver gloves in the bathroom?
May just be an illusion but his right arm looks way bigger than his left?? I'm guessing that's his masturbation arm?
Actually, nonoperative care of achilles tendon ruptures is arguably superior.
http://www.jbjs.org/article.aspx?Volume=92&page=2767
Of course, this doesn't make his fear of surgery rational, nor him a good decision-maker in general.
I've heard that too but for the regular joe, you gotta have the surgery b/c you don't have access to the same, top of the line rehab procedures/options, also the % chance at rerupture is much higher for nonoperative....I'd rather take the surgery and have a ~ 5% chance at tearing it again rather than a 25%+ chance with nonoperative, plus a much longer recovery time...Actually, nonoperative care of achilles tendon ruptures is arguably superior.
Last edited by ballrific; 02-24-2012 at 11:30 AM.
No significant difference in rerupture rates in the most recent study in jbjs. More complications overall in the surgical group. No surgery for me if mine tears.A total of 144 patients (seventy-two treated operatively and seventy-two treated nonoperatively) were randomized. There were 118 males and twenty-six females, and the mean age (and standard deviation) was 40.4 ± 8.8 years. Rerupture occurred in two patients in the operative group and in three patients in the nonoperative group. There was no clinically important difference between groups with regard to strength, range of motion, calf circumference, or Leppilahti score. There were thirteen complications in the operative group and six in the nonoperative group, with the main difference being the greater number of soft-tissue-related complications in the operative group.
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