Saturday, January 28, 2006


EXAMINING THE NBA'S ARRHYTHMIAS WITH HEAT CARDIOLOGIST

In the past several months, a startling six NBA players have suffered some form of heart disease. Former Atlanta Hawks center Jason Collier died from cardiac arrest due to an enlarged heart. New York Knicks center Eddy Curry and Los Angeles Clippers center Zeljko Rebraca were diagnosed with irregular heartbeats. Minnesota Timberwolves guard Fred Hoiberg (pictured), Cleveland Cavaliers forward Robert Traylor and Los Angeles Lakers forward Ronny Turiaf underwent open-heart surgeries to fix enlarged aortic roots.


Just a year ago, not a single stethoscope detected a potential problem in any player. Now that six have been sidelined during the season and the All-Star break is still weeks away, that begs the questions: What is going on all of a sudden and will it continue? Well, I spoke with Miami Heat cardiologist, Dr. Edward Neff, to get a first-hand look into the NBA’s heart irregularities and to see how he would handle the future of cardiovascular checkups throughout the league.

Q: Why has there been a recent jump in heart disease throughout the NBA?
A: It’s not entirely clear why that would be this year - the players all had different problems. I just think it’s all fortuitous. There have been really a few significant problems over the years. [Former Boston Celtic great] Reggie Lewis and [former Loyola Marymount University star] Hank Gathers had myocarditis. They shouldn't have been playing - they had infections of their hearts. The guys would be alive today if they didn't play. Those are two guys that if they were treated appropriately, or agreed to be treated appropriately, they wouldn’t have died. They may have gotten better and played again, or maybe not. You can’t blame them because sports was their whole life. More recently, there was a guy by the name of Monty Williams, who played for the Knicks, that I evaluated. He had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - an abnormally thickened heart muscle. But that was well known to a lot of teams. The Heat turned him down. Philadelphia didn’t want to draft him. New York took a risk and the guy had a 10-year career in the NBA. This year, it was hard to believe that Ronny Turiaf got through the combine. The NBA has the combine every year at Northwestern. They have about 80 players. They all get stress tests and they get examined. Turiaf went through all that stuff and it was sort of missed. He was drafted and no one said anything about it.

Q: In the wake of what’s happened this year, have you noticed that players are more cautious about their cardiovascular health?
A: I don’t think athletes are concerned that much about their hearts. If you had somebody in your family who had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and died at 26, you might really be interested. But the average person isn’t interested. The players do what they do because the teams say, “This is what you do. You have to go see Dr. Neff.” And then I write a letter and say, “They’re OK to play.” And then they play. They just have to come through me. If they can get away without doing it, they would. Some people are very interested, but I would say the average person isn’t particularly interested. You have to realize that we’re dealing with young, healthy athletes, which is a lot different than dealing with middle-aged and older people who have different outlooks on life. The outlook on life when you’re a young adult is that you’re going to live forever. It’s inconceivable that you’ll get sick, it’s inconceivable that you’ll die. That’s just the way people are. Every once in a while, I’ll find a ballplayer who’s interested in something because his father had it or his grandfather had it. And they say, “I want to check this, I want to check that.”

Q: Before the season, Eddy Curry was traded from the Chicago Bulls to the New York Knicks mainly due to his arrhythmia. Do you think there will be new health clauses added to contracts?
A: The contracts are usually dependent on the player passing the physical. When the Heat got Antoine Walker, he had some sort of orthopedic problem, so the team had to restructure his contract. Let’s say in your contract you can’t ride a motorcycle like with [ex-Chicago Bulls] Jason Williams. He broke his leg from a serious injury riding his bike. In his contract, he wasn’t allowed to ride his motorcycle, so Chicago voided his contract. The Celtics offered to pay Reggie Lewis to retire when he had his heart problem. They said, “Just retire, get a different lawyer and you’ll get your money.” But he didn’t listen to them and he ended up dying. I think the problem is that a lot of athletes aren’t forthright because they’re afraid that their health will interfere with their contract. So a lot of players keep things to themselves. Most people who die from heart disease as athletes have symptoms. It’s very rare for people to have their first symptom as death. Usually people have dizziness, chest pains and unusual shortness of breath that they didn’t experience before. They have had these symptoms before, they ignore the symptoms and then they drop dead.

Q: Which heart disease has the highest death rate among athletes?
A: About 40 percent of sudden deaths in young athletes are from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Usually the people who die suddenly usually die through exercise due to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. And that’s the number one cause of death in young athletes. There’s about six or seven common causes of sudden deaths, such as aneurysms and arrhythmias, but hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the most common cause. It’s fairly easy to diagnose if the person gets an echocardiogram.

Q: What are some new cardiovascular technologies used for detection?
A: We have echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and cardiac CT angiograms. All these things are noninvasive ways to make all the diagnoses you usually make. It’s not a mystery how you make the diagnosis. If the person gets tested, they have screenings because there’s a lot more risk. It makes sense before you sign a guy to a 100-million-dollar contract that you certainly want to make sure you’re going to get your 100-million dollars worth.

Q: Doctors said that Curry’s massive size (6-11, 285 lbs) was one of the reasons he suffered from arrhythmia. How does height and weight play a factor?
A: If you’re growing too fast, it’s not good for you. But I don’t think that height and weight play a role unless you have Marfan's syndrome. Flo Hyman was an All-American volleyball player who played on the Olympic team [in 1984] and she dropped dead in competition because she had Marfan’s. It’s a disease when the connective tissue that holds everything together is very weak. People can get a dissection, or a tear, of the aorta and they can die, so we have to replace the aortic root like with Ronny Turiaf. Their aortic valves can deteriorate and they can get aortic aneurysms. These people can have sudden death. I don’t think there’s any more heart disease in anyone else, other than in usually tall, skinny people who can get Marfan's syndrome. They have a high-arched palette, they have long, spider-like fingers and they get ectopic lenses - the lenses in their eyes can dislocate. They also have excessively long legs. These people, if they’re lucky, can have their aorta replaced like Ronny Turiaf or it will fall apart.

Q: It has been reported that Fred Hoiberg will play this season with a pacemaker. What are your thoughts on that?
A: Pacemakers are very sophisticated. They can be very responsive now depending on what Hoiberg’s problem is. If his upper chamber, or the atrium - which is where your heart beats faster and pumps more blood when you do activity - is working fine and he just has a block between the upper and lower chamber, they can program the pacemaker so that he can have a normal cardiac output. If he doesn’t have that and it’s another problem, then they have rate-responsive pacemakers depending on how much activity he’s doing. You have accelermometers - they’re either heat-related, related to how much you’re breathing or how much you’re jumping up and down. The pacemaker increases its rate according to what the activity is. So Hoiberg could go back and play. The question is: Will he have enough cardiac output to be an elite athlete? And the answer is no. I don’t know if anybody has ever played with a pacemaker before - I’m sure they played pick-up. Yes, he can play with a pacemaker, but the real questions are: What is his problem? What kind of pacemaker does he have? What’s his electrical problem? And can he achieve enough cardiac output to play competitive athletics?

Q: What is your role with the Heat?
A: What I do with the Heat is that I check everybody once a year before the season starts. When the Heat brings in people for tryouts before the season, including anybody that doesn’t go to the combine, we give them physical examinations and echocardiograms before the team works them out. We don’t want to miss hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and other problems. We do a full physical examination every year. Plus, we do an ultrasound of the heart and we do an exercise stress test on every player annually.

Q: If the NBA consulted you to help prevent these heart problems from recurring, what would you recommend?
A: I think the NBA is going to come out now with new guidelines. See, right now it’s up to the team. The Heat does everything on every player every year; whereas, there are some teams who cheap out and don’t do everything on every player. They don’t do much of an exam or they have their orthopedic guy exam them. If you have an orthopedist exam the patients, they’re going to be looking at their joints, but not really looking for cardiovascular disease. That’s the problem in the NBA now. Whereas in the Women’s Tennis Association, all the players who have played competitive tennis professionally have to get one physical examination in the first year that they play. One year when I went to the Lipton [now called the Nasdaq-100 Open], I examined the players because everybody had to get it done that year. But that’s the WTA’s standard for physical examinations. As far as the NBA goes, up until now the teams can do whatever they want. There is no NBA guideline for how they examine their players. I think what you’re going to see coming up after the All-Star game are certain guidelines for physical examinations. You’re also going to see guidelines for trainers to use automatic defibrillators.

Q: There was already some resentment from the players over the new dress code. What difficulties face the league in requiring each team to comply with mandatory medical tests?
A: You can only go so far. I mean, you can’t get everybody to do every test on every person. It becomes extremely expensive and you find a lot of information that you have difficulty understanding. But by doing regular history and physical examinations, routine studies, stress tests and echo’s, you can pretty much get a clue most of the time. The number one cause of death in young athletes - hypertrophic cardiomyopathy - is easy to pick up. That you can get on an echocardiogram. You can see an abnormality in the way the electricity goes through the heart. You can see if their aortas are enlarged and if they have an increased risk in sudden death. If they have Marfan's syndrome, maybe you can pick it up on the physical examination. One thing that may not be easy to pick up is congenital anomalous arteries like with Pistol Pete Maravich. He had a left coronary artery coming off the right coronary side. It came from the wrong side, went behind the heart in-between the aorta and the pulmonary artery and got squished. The guy played a whole NBA career and then died playing pick-up basketball. It’s bizarre, but that’s what happens. You can detect it by doing an angiogram or doing a coronary CAT scan, but you have to have some sort of inkling.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

CLASS OF '96 OUTSCORES ALL OTHERS

Some of the most historic teams ever in sports boosted their worldwide reputation in 1996.

The New York Yankees claimed the World Series. The Green Bay Packers were Super Bowl Champions. The Chicago Bulls won 70 games - a single-season record - and eventually hoisted the NBA Finals trophy (the first in their second three-peat). The Kentucky Wildcats' men's basketball team cut down the NCAA Championship nets. Dream Team II took home the gold medal in Atlanta. Heck, even Tiger Woods - who is basically his own franchise - became the first golfer to win three consecutive U.S. Amateur golf titles.

More? Well, how's this - some of the biggest names in today's sports were drafted in 1996. I was browsing through a recent Sports Illustrated issue (Dec. 5, 2005) and came across an article about the class of 1996 NFL wide receivers who are currently some of the best in the league (Bobby Engram, Terry Glenn, Marvin Harrison, Joe Horn, Keyshawn Johnson, Eddie Kennison, Eric Moulds, Muhsin Muhammad, Terrell Owens and Amani Toomer). That got me thinking about other league drafts and I realized the NBA wasn't too bad either that year (Shareef Abdur-Rahim, Ray Allen, Kobe Bryant, Zydrunas Ilgauskas, Allen Iverson, Stephon Marbury, Steve Nash, Jermaine O'Neal, Peja Stojakovic and Antoine Walker).

In short, 1996 cracked open a leak of talent, which in the last few years has peaked into a consistent waterfall of points and yards. Here are some front-page snapshots from the NBA and NFL players' standout careers:

NBA
Allen Iverson (1st pick) - 1996-97 Rookie of the Year...2000-01 MVP...four-time scoring champion (1998-99, 2000-01, 01-02, 04-05)
Shareef Abdur-Rahim (3) - career 19-point scorer...2000 Olympic Gold Medalist...2002 All-Star
Stephon Marbury (4) - career 20-point scorer...two-time All-Star (2001, 03)...only player to rank in the top 10 in points (23.9) and assists (7.6) in 2000-01
Ray Allen (5) - 2000 Olympic Gold Medalist...five-time All-Star (2000-02, 04-05)...third all-time in three-pointers made (over 1,600)
Antoine Walker (6) - career 19-point scorer...three-time All-Star (1998, 2002, 03)...led the Boston Celtics in scoring (17.5 ppg), rebounds (9.0 rpg) and blocked shots (53) as a rookie
Kobe Bryant (13) - three-time NBA Champion (2000-02)...seven-time All-Star (1998-2005)...recently became the youngest player in history to score 15,000 points (currently the scoring leader at over 34 ppg)
Peja Stojakovic (14) - career 18-point scorer...three-time All-Star (2002-04)...one of the greatest international players ever (from Serbia-Montenegro)
Steve Nash (15) - 2004-05 MVP...three-time All-Star (2002, 03, 05)...currently ranks first in assists (over 11 apg)
Jermaine O'Neal (17) - four-time All-Star (2002-05)...Gold Medal winner in the 2001 Goodwill Games...2001-02 Most Improved Player (raised his scoring average from 12.9 to 19.0 ppg)
Zydrunas Ilgauskas (18) - career 15-point scorer...two-time All-Star (2003, 05)...named MVP of the Rookie Game in 1998 (he officially began his NBA career in 1997-98)

NFL
Keyshawn Johnson (1st pick) - 2002 Super Bowl Champion...three-time Pro Bowler (1998, 99, 2001)...co-MVP of the 1998 Pro Bowl
Terry Glenn (7) - 2001 Super Bowl Champion...1999 Pro Bowler...finished seventh in receptions (90) as a rookie
Eddie Kennison (18) - tied for ninth place in receiving touchdowns (9) as a rookie...gained 1,801 total yards (924 receiving, 454 kick returning, 423 punt returning) as a rookie...led the Kansas City Chiefs in receiving yards (1,102), average (16.2 ypc) and touchdowns (5) this season
Marvin Harrison (19) - seven-time Pro Bowler (1999, 2000-05)...recorded most ever receptions (143) in a season (2002)...two-time single-season leader in receiving yards (1999, 2002)
Eric Moulds (24) - three-time Pro Bowler (1998, 2000, 02)...ninth among active wide receivers in receptions (675) and 10th in receiving yards (9,091)...ranked in the top 10 in receptions (100), receiving yards (1,287) and touchdowns (10) in 2002
Amani Toomer (34) - helped lead the New York Giants to the Super Bowl in 2000...finished with five straight 1,000-plus yard seasons from 1999-2003...ranked in the top 10 in receiving yards (1,343) and touchdowns (8) in 2002
Muhsin Muhammad (43) - two-time Pro Bowler (1999, 2004)...tied for the league lead in receptions (102) in 2002...league leader in receiving yards (1,405) and touchdowns (16) in 2004
Bobby Engram (52) - led the Seattle Seahawks in receiving yards (778) this season...finished seventh in receptions (88) in 1999...gained 1,251 total yards (389 receiving, 580 kick returning, 282 punt returning) as a rookie
Terrell Owens (89) - five-time Pro Bowler (2000-04)...fourth all-time in receiving touchdowns (101)...20th all-time in receiving yards (10,535)
Joe Horn (135) - four-time Pro Bowler (2000-02, 04)...led the New Orleans Saints in receiving yards from 2000-04...ranked in the top 10 in receptions (94), receiving yards (first with 1,405) and touchdowns (11) in 2004

Thursday, January 12, 2006

GETTING TRADED INCLUDES EMOTIONAL BAGGAGE, TOO

Earlier this week, Herman Edwards was traded from the New York Jets to the Kansas City Chiefs as the new head coach, replacing Dick Vermeil who retired after five seasons. During his introductory news conference, Edwards was very complimentary about his former career with the Jets.

"I owe a debt of gratitude to [owner] Woody Johnson. He gave a young coach a chance to be a head coach when maybe a lot of people wouldn't do that. I thank him for that, and I thank the organization for that. And I thank my players my last five years in New York for making me a better man. I hope I made a difference, and I hope I make a difference here."

But Edwards refused to discuss why he departed The Big Apple.

"What happened in New York stays in New York. So if you ask any questions about what happened, I'll tell you right now, it stays in the family."

Solely through the announcement and coverage of the trade, the public knew Edwards was exchanged for a future fourth-round draft pick. But Edwards' private manner led the public to believe that he wanted to catch a one-way flight out west because he was frustrated coaching the Jets. He endured a 39-41 five-year record (4-12 this season) and recurring injuries to his two star players - quarterback Chad Pennington and running back Curtis Martin. On the flip side, Edwards' new team, the Chiefs, are an organization on the rise (finished 10-6), thanks in large part to a breakout season by halfback Larry Johnson who was third in the league in rushing with 1,750 yards.

Although Edwards gave praise to his previous owner and players, his secretive point-of-view symbolizes the lack of information the public knows about the trials and tribulations of trades in professional sports. It's more than the reactions from players and coaches on representing a new logo. Those quotes can be easily accessed through a press conference recap.


There just isn't enough behind-the-scenes reporting on this significant type of sports business transaction. How do players and coaches prepare to move? How do they adjust to living in a new city? What is the process like of fitting in with a new team? How are their families and friends affected by the whole ordeal?

Furthermore, there should be detailed issues raised on trading technicalities. How are trade talks initiated and finalized between teams? Besides player value, what other factors contribute to a deal? What are the hot topics and future trends in the trading business?

It's important to realize that players and coaches may be multi-millionaires, but it's the team's management - with some making less money incidentally - which can treat them like indentured slaves. They can feel cheated and abused suddenly and constantly, so getting traded includes emotional baggage, too. Some players, such as Eddie Jones of the Memphis Grizzlies, have received word they were traded while on vacation. Others, such as Jim Jackson of the Phoenix Suns, have suited up for more than 10 teams.


As Edwards demonstrated by his restrained comments, some players and coaches may remain hush-hush when they're traded because it can be a difficult and irritating transition. It's one of the ultimate cold sores in professional sports because deals are sometimes unpredicted and completed behind closed doors, so it can be a touchy subject. But it's worth investigating further.

Monday, January 02, 2006

NEW YEAR LACKS PLAYERS' POINT-OF-VIEW

Unless you have been as oblivious as Ron Artest's conscience, you know that 2005 was marred with tragedy. The Indian Ocean tsunami aftermath, the London suicide bombings and Hurricane Katrina were the year's most prevalent themes.

Although sports suffered no such catastrophe, some of its stars took the fun out of life's largest playing field. And with increasing fragmentation where seemingly every country's telecasters are producing ridiculous reality shows, that's especially not a good thing because there's less and less substance to watch. Sports is needed as a distraction from all the terrible trends accumulating in our television sets.


But the 2005 sports calendar was overwhelmed by the Artests (off-the-court distractions), Terrell Owens (contract disputes) and Rafael Palmeiros (criminal offenses) who laid out a buffet for reporters to consume multiple helpings of heated commentary. For that, you could have easily switched the station to "Judge Judy," "Jerry Springer" or even "Being Bobby Brown" and received the same content.

Well, as the New Year arrived in a Dwyane Wade-like "flash" of disco balls, I realized something had been missing in the final wake of sports' disgraceful tidal wave.

During several game broadcasts in the past holiday week, occasional pre-tapings aired of players wishing everyone a Happy Holiday and New Year. But they also could have personally addressed their own New Year's resolutions, especially in light of all the negativity that surrounded the sports world this past year. It might sound like a subtlety, but it ripples a more important issue.

After most sporting events, journalists provide an outlet to hear or read about players' reactions to their performances in various competitions. But once the holiday hits, reporters from near and far transform into Bill Murray's character in "Groundhog Day." Over and over again, duplicate articles appear discussing their best and worst moments and what the year in sports meant to them. It's one of the several times in sports, including the Super Bowl and March Madness, where the story is pre-determined and they know exactly what to write.

But journalists seem to lose sight of the authentic sources - the players - who are the ones ultimately competing under the Friday night lights. Players should be given the opportunity to discuss amongst themselves in a roundtable format the games they thought were memorable, the accomplishments they hoped to achieve and the valuable lessons sports taught them. In addition, they should get a chance to recognize their mistakes, suggest how to solve them and give their thoughts on the state of sports heading into 2006.

Journalists can use whichever words they want to make up players' resolutions, but doing so separates both sides even more because athletes don't like to be assumed. Not only would air time or page space give them a chance to speak for themselves, but it would also provide a personal touch to their personalities.