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re: How did Dee Anderson lose 34 lbs but fail the Conditioning Req?

Posted on 8/5/19 at 8:30 am to
Posted by Bayou_Tiger_225
Third Earth
Member since Mar 2016
10535 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 8:30 am to
It sounds to me like the extra conditioning is the punishment. Probably for something like missing meetings or workouts. I know at my highschool after your third missed workout, you spent one practice running for every workout you missed.

The other side of this punishment is that because he isn't practicing, he is falling behind on the new installs and reps.
Posted by lsutiger2010
Member since Aug 2008
14790 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 8:37 am to
(no message)
This post was edited on 10/19/21 at 11:59 am
Posted by OceanMan
Member since Mar 2010
20032 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 8:48 am to
quote:

you miss games for a failed drug test not practice


My goodness there are some argumentative mf’s on this forum
Posted by Buckeye Jeaux
Member since May 2018
17756 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 9:28 am to
quote:

RA'd to remove this stupid shite
What in the hell are you talking about? Do you know the precise reason that a highly conditioned athlete lost 34 pounds?

The same thing happened to a highly recruited player at Florida in Tebow's era. Doctors were baffled for many months to maybe over a year.

Posted by LSU_30A
Member since Jan 2019
2921 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 10:05 am to
Maybe he lost way too much weight and they are keeping him out until he puts on a few pounds. At his height 197 lbs he will get killed when he gets hit. He should be around 220.
Posted by Buckeye Jeaux
Member since May 2018
17756 posts
Posted on 8/5/19 at 10:23 am to
Jarvis Moss is the Florida player who had a bone infection that went undiagnosed for years. As I said, it is a long shot, but a 34 pound weight loss is catastrophic:

quote:

That goal was almost derailed several times by a mystery illness that first showed up midway through his senior year of high school and persisted for nearly three years.

“To this day I don’t really know what happened,” Moss said. “I went to sleep, and when I woke up I was sick. I was hurting — my legs, my abdomen, my groin. Moss’ high school coach, Joey Florence, took him to the emergency room, then to a series of doctors throughout north Texas, none able to find what was wrong. All the while Moss, who was then a blue-chip recruit, couldn’t eat. He could hardly walk, and he certainly couldn’t play football.

Off to a slow start

“This is one of the best athletes in the country, and we can’t figure out why he can’t walk,” Florence said. “It was the oddest thing in my coaching career I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen a lot of kids get injured. I’ve been doing this 20 years, but that was the dang-dest thing. It was scary, just watching him shrivel up like that.”

The pain persisted through Moss’ first two seasons at the University of Florida. He received a medical redshirt one season and played in only one game his second year in Gainesville. It wasn’t until the summer of 2005, when his weight had dipped to 220 pounds, that he was diagnosed with a bacterial infection in his pelvic bone and prescribed seven weeks worth of intravenous antibiotics
.

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This post was edited on 8/5/19 at 10:24 am
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