Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fracture putting legislator on bench

Crawford breaks leg catching pass at practice for charity game

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

WASHINGTON — U.S. Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark., is giving up the game of football after fracturing his fibula during an early morning practice late last week.

The lawmaker from Jonesboro was preparing for Tuesday’s charity Congressio­nal Football Game when the injury occurred.

It happened during a noncontact play, a split second after he’d caught a pass in the open field, he said.

“There wasn’t anybody close to me, really,” he said. “I just decided to turn up field and try to get a few extra yards. … When I turned, my foot stayed put and the rest of my body didn’t, so it twisted my knee.”

The broken leg brought the practice to a halt.

“Everybody there said it was pretty ugly to look at,” Crawford, 53, said.

An attending physician said Crawford appeared to have a torn medial collateral ligament.

Fortunatel­y, an MRI showed that the ligament was only strained; not torn or severed.

This week, the Mean Machine had to play without Crawford, an Army veteran and former saddle bronc rider.

The team’s longtime center is back in northeast Arkansas this week, following doctor’s orders and staying off his leg. The fibula is a long thin bone below the knee, next to the bigger tibia.

Initially, there was substantia­l swelling. Medical profession­als removed 80 milliliter­s of blood from the knee — roughly one-third of a cup. After that, the swelling subsided.

For now, Crawford is on crutches.

“I’ve got, basically, a brace on it,” he said. He’s not supposed to put any weight on the leg and he’s supposed to keep it elevated.

The difference between a strain and a tear is the difference between weeks and months of rehab, Crawford said, adding it could have been a whole lot worse.

Crawford won’t be needing his football gear any more, he said.

“I brought my cleats home and gave them to my son,” he said.

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