3rd Monkey
Debutant
- Mar 14, 2009
- 75
- 92
- AFL Club
- Collingwood
- Other Teams
- Green Bay, Liverpool
On the Treloar status:
Balme mentioned OP, but given he claimed to have been managing an ongoing groin issue last season, it was expected to be OP anyway.
OP, or similar ailments, take a long time to fix. You need a period of no running on it to allow the inflammation to go down. I've had OP & tried to play through it for 12 months. It took another 18 months for the inflammation to fully subside for me once I finally let it rest (no doubt everyone's different though). Next thing needed is to build up all the immediate, surrounding muscle, to stop reoccurrence (this will be an ongoing thing). Finally, once both of these are done (depending on the exact nature of the OP, operations can sometimes assist in those steps too), you need to gradually re-start your running.
If Treloar comes back too quick, if he feels the groin get sore again at all, then he'd have to stop again for several weeks/months. It's a slow process, and I'd expect him to be taking this long or I wouldn't be confident the club was fixing it properly.
St Kilda made Ball play through it for years and he got worse and worse (then we fixed it in his first pre-season with us). West Coast made Naitanui play through OP for two years and only last pre-season did he finally get fully over it, and now look how good he was in 2015. Redden has it for the Eagles now too. If you missed it, Redden needed to have a follow-up operation this pre-season already due to coming back too soon and experiencing further soreness (Redden has adductor tendinitis but it is essentially the same as OP).
So basically, it will take Treloar time to build up, but that's a good thing. He likely will be better in 2017 for us than 2016 due to a very limited pre-season. But as we saw with Luke Ball, his kicking penetration & fitness etc got better in his 2nd year with us, and he was fully over his OP, so Treloar should be completely fine in the medium/long run
Balme mentioned OP, but given he claimed to have been managing an ongoing groin issue last season, it was expected to be OP anyway.
OP, or similar ailments, take a long time to fix. You need a period of no running on it to allow the inflammation to go down. I've had OP & tried to play through it for 12 months. It took another 18 months for the inflammation to fully subside for me once I finally let it rest (no doubt everyone's different though). Next thing needed is to build up all the immediate, surrounding muscle, to stop reoccurrence (this will be an ongoing thing). Finally, once both of these are done (depending on the exact nature of the OP, operations can sometimes assist in those steps too), you need to gradually re-start your running.
If Treloar comes back too quick, if he feels the groin get sore again at all, then he'd have to stop again for several weeks/months. It's a slow process, and I'd expect him to be taking this long or I wouldn't be confident the club was fixing it properly.
St Kilda made Ball play through it for years and he got worse and worse (then we fixed it in his first pre-season with us). West Coast made Naitanui play through OP for two years and only last pre-season did he finally get fully over it, and now look how good he was in 2015. Redden has it for the Eagles now too. If you missed it, Redden needed to have a follow-up operation this pre-season already due to coming back too soon and experiencing further soreness (Redden has adductor tendinitis but it is essentially the same as OP).
So basically, it will take Treloar time to build up, but that's a good thing. He likely will be better in 2017 for us than 2016 due to a very limited pre-season. But as we saw with Luke Ball, his kicking penetration & fitness etc got better in his 2nd year with us, and he was fully over his OP, so Treloar should be completely fine in the medium/long run