A Stitch In Time Saves Nine
I feel Jane Galt's pain.
Countless friends (and few Yankees fans among them) told me when the Yanks were up 3-0 and 3-1, and even 3-2 and when it was tied, that there was no need to worry -- the Yanks would win. I told each of them that the BoSox were powerful vampires who rise from the dead, and that the only way to assure victory to to drive a wooden stake through their heart, preferably in the form of a Louisville Slugger.
Little did I know just how undead they were. From a comment to Jane's post, this:
Somewhere on a slab in Boston is a citizen of Red Sox Nation who actually gave his body to the cause.I've heard that a stitch in time save nine, but this is ridiculous. Still, kudos to Red Sox for thinking outside the box.
With the team's future increasingly dependent on Curt Schilling's right leg, doctors decided to try an apparently unprecedented procedure to keep a tendon from slipping around in his ankle. But first, they wanted to test it out.
So they used a cadaver. No way to know if it was a Red Sox fan.
*****
The Red Sox training staff thought of various ways to keep the tendon in place. Special high-top shoes didn't work, and they hit upon the idea of sewing skin in Schilling's leg to the tissue underneath, creating a wall that would keep the tendon in place.
``It seems extreme. We couldn't find a case of it ever being done before,'' Epstein said. ``It was the best way to allow him to have his normal mechanics.''
Schilling had three stitches put in at about 2 p.m. on Monday, about 90 minutes before he tested his ankle on the bullpen mound in Fenway Park.
``If it didn't work, he's in the same situation he was before,'' manager Terry Francona said. ``We went out to the bullpen, he did pretty well without it. ... Schill kind of bought off on it, and they did it a day early to see if he could get used to it and let him get comfortable with it. And it certainly seemed to do the trick.''
Although there was some fluid and blood leaking through Schilling's sock on Tuesday night, Epstein could see after the first pitch that Schilling was throwing like normal.
The sutures were taken out after the game to avoid infection; if Schilling pitches again, they would be put back in. Epstein said there was no problem repeating the procedure a couple of more times.
``We only have one more series,'' he said. ``People think it's reasonable to do it a couple more times.''
[Linked to the Beltway Traffic Jam].
Comments
This reminds me of when the Yankees had a pitcher named Wickman, and the manager was Buck Showalter. Wickman had at one time had an accident with a lawn mower that removed the tip of the middle finger on his pitching hand. Someone suggested to Showwalter that this was maybe why Wickman's sinker was so wicked. Showalter replied that it wasn't true, because if it was, "we'd cut the tips off ALL of our pitcher's middle fingers."
Posted by: Glenn | October 22, 2004 10:05 PM