Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sports hernias putting strain on players

Recovering from surgery can take nearly full season

- By Stephen Whyno The Associated Press

Months removed from sports hernia and hip surgeries, Claude Giroux still didn’t feel like himself.

The Philadelph­ia Flyers’ captain finally got back to normal by the end of the season, roughly nine months after going under the knife.

“I thought it’d be quicker, to be honest,” Giroux said. “It’s harder than I thought it would’ve been.”

Because of the unnatural motion of skating, hockey is among the most common sports for sports hernias, a catch-all term for what are also called core muscle injuries. Within the past couple of years, Jamie Benn of the Dallas Stars, Patrice Bergeron of the Boston Bruins, Jason Zucker of the Minnesota Wild, Karl Alzner of the Washington Capitals, Shayne Gostisbehe­re of the Flyers and goaltender Mike Smith of the Arizona Coyotes are among the NHL players to have an operation to repair a sports hernia or core muscle injury.

Dr. L. Michael Brunt, a St. Louis Blues team physician since 1994, estimates that anywhere from six to 15 players each year undergo some type of sports hernia surgery — and it’s on the rise across all ages. Brunt believes the increase over the past 10 to 15 years has to do with better recognitio­n of abdominal and groin injuries that are common in hockey, soccer and football players.

He also believes that too much repetition among young athletes in a single sport can cause problems, something others have blamed for more Tommy John surgeries among younger and younger pitchers.

“It’s because of the sudden propulsive movements: turning, cutting, etc., that occur at high rates of speed,” Brunt said. “Young athletes are committed to one sport very, very early on, and so there are these repetitive movements that occur because they’re not doing three or four sports year-round and mixing up their physical sports activity.”

The recovery from surgery varies drasticall­y from player to player, too. Nolan Patrick, who’s expected to be a top pick in the NHL draft next week, had surgery on his right side last summer, came back too soon and missed three months of his season.

Dr. William Brown, a California-based sports hernia specialist, said many different muscles, nerves and tendons can be injured — and inexperien­ced surgeons can miss other injuries in the area.

“Some of the athletes respond poorly because not everything’s fixed appropriat­ely at the time of surgery,” Brown said.

That’s one explanatio­n for Patrick being limited to 33 games for the Western Hockey League’s Brandon Wheat Kings during his draft year. The centerman, 18, said he should have had two surgeries but isn’t dwelling on the situation as he looks forward to the draft.

“There’s a ton of guys that have these injuries these days and everyone bounces back from it,” said Patrick, who took two full months off skating from October to December before returning in January. “It happens to a lot of hockey players and mostly comes from over-usage. … It’s a tough bounce, but you know it’s the way it goes sometimes.”

When he came back, Patrick put up 16 goals and 42 assists in 28 games before a leg injury ended his season.

Patrick’s injury history is a question for the New Jersey Devils, who have the top pick, and it led the Flyers, who draft second, to bring him in to see their doctors after the scouting combine.

 ?? Chris Szagola ?? The Associated Press File Claude Giroux, who needed most of the season to fully recover from sports hernia surgery, said, “I thought it’d be quicker.”
Chris Szagola The Associated Press File Claude Giroux, who needed most of the season to fully recover from sports hernia surgery, said, “I thought it’d be quicker.”

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