enlightenment wrote:I cant wait for any day to 4 weeks for Bynum!!!
lol
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enlightenment wrote:I cant wait for any day to 4 weeks for Bynum!!!
Erik Eleven wrote:
Gasol can't defend big Z very well either because of Z's length, he's not strong enough to D up Perkins, he has no chance in hell guarding Dwight. Bynum always plays great against Duncan. How exactly do we not need him? You mean on offense?
Erik Eleven wrote:Wow. Made my heart stop, too. I was thinking, oh no, my guy is a glass man. Judging by his demeanor on the bench, he looks like he's coming back sooner than projected.
Has it only been two weeks? Really?
Before L.A. took the floor against Atlanta, Phil Jackson was asked how Andrew Bynum’s doing.
“I saw him this morning,” Jackson responded. “He was on the floor shooting toe-up shots and looked relatively active for his condition. He’s doing pretty well. It’s still been mostly rehab work, not an exercise regimen, but that will start soon.”
A reporter followed up by asking if Bynum’s expected to come back earlier than the original 8-to-12 week timetable.
“No,” Jackson said. “Until he’s on the floor sometime in March, we won’t know anything about that. Getting on the floor, doing activity drills, core strength and those types of things he has to do to get those things tied together again … The healing aspect still takes a while, but when we feel like he’s healed, then (he’ll start) the (training).”
Alas, we didn’t learn much, but it’s fair to say everything’s gone normally thus far for Bynum.
Nobody wants to say it out loud, for fear of a jinx, but there are whispers around the Lakers that Andrew Bynum will be back by the end of March or early April. Sooner than most thought and in plenty of time for the playoffs.
Tuesday he showed up to a Lakers practice and was quick to show off how fast he is recovering.
"He said the swelling is minimum right now that he has," Jackson said. "He's walking without aid. So he feels pretty good about what he's doing. We know that this first two weeks is going to be kind of sketchy. As he starts healing, things will start changing a little bit."
After last season, when Bynum’s recovery dragged on worse than a Gray’s Anatomy story line, everybody around the Lakers is gun-shy about saying anything positive this time around.
But the whispers are there — he looks good. He’ll start rehab soon. And with a little luck he will be back with plenty of time to get in shape before the playoffs.
Just don’t say that too loud.
dcash4 wrote:the original article was posted FEB. 11, so that gives us the same time line from the article on pg. 2...so without any further updates of any setbacks, looks like we're down to 5 to 9 weeks.
Erik Eleven wrote:Spanish_Laker wrote:... do we need him? I don´t think so. We´re playing our best basketball without him...
Are you saying we can afford to trade him? What did he average before he went down again? How many blocks? How many rebounds?
If you don't like him back in the starting line-up because Gasol is now flourishing offensively at the five spot, then maybe you should propose Bynum coming off the bench. But saying we don't need him is insanity. He's our defensive anchor. Gasol is not.
Against Cleveland, Jazz, Celtics, Orlando et cetera, Bynum will singlehandedly change the opponent's game plan altogether.
Okur is much stronger than Gasol, but has nothing on Bynum. Enter Bynum and all of a sudden Okur won't be able to stay on the floor. With Gasol guarding Okur, Memet will push Pau out of the paint all night and then on the other end shoot weak side threes all night long, and make life hard for Gasol.
Gasol can't defend big Z very well either because of Z's length, he's not strong enough to D up Perkins, he has no chance in hell guarding Dwight. Bynum always plays great against Duncan. How exactly do we not need him? You mean on offense?
It's not about offense. This game is won with defense.
By JEFF EISENBERG
The Press-Enterprise
Andrew Bynum did not attend practice on Wednesday, but a Lakers spokesman said the injured center has begun riding a stationary bike and using a Precor machine as part of his rehab.
Bynum has been out since Jan. 29 as a result of a torn medial collateral ligament in his right knee. The prognosis when his injury ocurred was that he would miss about 8 to 12 weeks.
Also the right ankle that Kobe Bryant tweaked late in Tuesday's victory at Oklahoma City is a non-issue, and he will be ready to play Thursday against Phoenix.
Before we get started, I present the obligatory Andrew Bynum Medical Update:
For several days, he's been riding the stationary bike and using the elliptical machine.
No word on whether or not it was set to "Hill" or "Fat Burner," but it's good to know AB is getting active again. Oh, and Kobe's ankle? Not an issue. As you were.
Andrew Bynum, walking without so much as a slight limp, showed up in the Lakers locker room Thursday and declared himself pain-free.
Not home-free, just pain-free.
Bynum has been sidelined since suffering a tear of the medial collateral ligament in a game Jan. 31 and only recently began riding a stationary bike and working out on an eliptical machine. His return date is pegged for sometime between late March and early April and there isn’t any rush to get him back on the court.
Sean Zarzana, Bynum’s personal trainer, couldn’t pinpoint an exact date for Bynum to return playing, saying that the 21-year-old center has a long future ahead of him, so “we don’t want to rush things.”
“I’m optimistic,” Bynum said. “It feels really good and there’s nothing that I’m really concerned with.”
SmartWentCrazy wrote:It's extremely unlikely that they end up in the top 3.They're probably better off trying to win and giving Philly the 8th pick than tanking and giving them the 4th.
MaxwellSmart wrote:I hate to say this, but Go Lakers....
Andrew Bynum working toward return
Lakers center Andrew Bynum (27 points, 15 rebounds) and Timberwolves center Al Jefferson (34 points, 13 rebounds) played big in a Jan. 30 meeting, but each went down to injury soon after this game. Injured center hasn't started running yet. Nuggets Coach George Karl wonders how much the team really misses him. The Lakers might not seem as if they miss Andrew Bynum, losing only one game since his knee injury, but they'll obviously welcome him back whenever he returns. He has started riding a stationary bike, using an elliptical machine and doing partial lunges and squats with his lower legs
He continues to lift weights to maintain his upper-body strength but has not yet started running.
All indications are that he will return between March 30 and April 27, within the original eight-to-12 week forecast released by the team after Bynum suffered a torn medial collateral ligament in his right knee. "It feels fine, very little pain," Bynum said Thursday. "The swelling's all the way down. I'm optimistic. I just hope it keeps going the way it's going now." Bynum never returned to the court last season after injuring his other knee in mid-January, though he said circumstances were different this time.
He wasn't sure when he would return. "I have no idea," he said. "Right now, all I know is it feels good to me and I think I'll be able to at least come back and contribute. "It's cool because when I come back in, they'll all be jelling together and I'll just have to work my way back." With the way Lamar Odom and Pau Gasol have been playing down low, Bynum is almost a certainty to come off the bench when he returns. Bynum is averaging 14 points, 8.2 rebounds and 1.9 blocked shots in 29.1 minutes a game.
The Laker Kid wrote:Rush his recovery... we need him ASAP
The Laker Kid wrote:Rush his recovery... we need him ASAP