232 views0 answers0 votes
157 views0 answers0 votes
154 views0 answers0 votes
140 views0 answers0 votes
117 views0 answers0 votes
121 views0 answers0 votes
169 views0 answers0 votes
188 views0 answers0 votes
173 views0 answers0 votes
200 views0 answers0 votes
143 views0 answers0 votes
A viewer asks: “During a walk-though practice (no pads or tackling) C.J. Gardner-Johnson suddenly collapsed to the turf clutching his knee. Turned out he could not put any weight on it, and after more than ten minutes, the medical golf cart came out to take him back to the locker room for further examination and diagnosis. Nine times out of ten, when you see this kind of thing happen there is nearly always significant knee damage, usually, a torn ACL ligament. When that happens, the player’s season is automatically over, and he must undergo surgery to fix the tear, and recovery takes more than a year. So everyone feared the worst, as that has been the usual outcome, historically, for the Lions. But, shockingly, just four or so hours later, word leaked out that his MRI of the knee was CLEAN, and there was no detectable damage to any structural component of the knee. He was ultimately diagnosed with a knee sprain. So he went from “season over” to back practicing in less than a week. This was a high-value player who played in the Super Bowl last February for the Philadelphia Eagles, but was let go due to “salary cap issues” and was seen as a key acquisition by the Detroit Lions. Was there divine intervention to prevent the common and expected outcome of this event? Was the knee simply protected, or was it severely damaged and subsequently HEALED sometime between his leaving the field and the MRI examination?”162 views0 answers0 votes
129 views0 answers0 votes
124 views0 answers0 votes
A viewer asks: “Was listening to some more Lions talk, and an old time Lion’s beat reporter, Mike O’Hara shared a story he was reminded of when he first heard about the knee injury to C.J. Gardner-Johnson. He recalled a running back the Lions drafted in the second round in 2012 – Mikel Leshoure. Leshoure was a top prospect, never fumbled even once in college, could block, run, catch, could do it all. On the second play of the first day of training camp during a non-tackling drill, he had “light” contact with a defensive player and tore his Achilles tendon. He was gone for the year, and when he returned from the injury, was never the same – which is often the case. This also just SCREAMS “targeting” – especially when you consider the severity of the injury occurring during a play where by all rights and measures, such a serious injury has astronomically LITTLE chance of occurring. That seems to be a theme of some these injuries. Some of the most severe seem to occur with the most innocuous and unthreatening of physical movements. What can Creator tell us about this injury more than a decade ago?”192 views0 answers0 votes