Lindros diagnosed with Grade II concussion ESPN.com news services
PHILADELPHIA -- Eric Lindros' comeback plans are in
jeopardy.
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| Lindros |
Lindros sustained another concussion -- his third since January -- after a collision during a practice drill Thursday. He was hoping
to return to the Philadelphia Flyers for the Eastern Conference
finals.
It appears Lindros might be out for the season, though his
doctor, James Kelly of Chicago, did not confirm it in a report sent
to the team Friday.
Kelly diagnosed Lindros with a Grade II concussion after a phone
interview and submitted his report to Flyers management. Team
chairman Ed Snider said the report had "no mention whatsoever of
him being out for the season."
A Grade II concussion means Lindros would have to be
symptom-free for at least two weeks before he can be cleared to
skate. That would rule him out of the Eastern Conference finals
should the Flyers advance.
"We haven't been told by anyone that he is out for the
season," Flyers spokesman Zack Hill said after Philadelphia's 6-3
victory over Pittsburgh on Sunday in Game 5 of the Eastern
Conference semifinals.
The Flyers lead Pittsburgh 3-2 in the best-of-seven series.
"I am very saddened for Eric and certainly disappointed from
the point of view of our team because we obviously felt that Eric
would be a big help to us if we were able to go further in the
playoffs," Snider said, reacting to an earlier report in The
Toronto Star that Lindros would be out for the season.
Lindros has been recovering from a Grade II concussion that had
sidelined him since March 13. The latest concussion is his fifth in
two years.
"It's a shame to see a player get hurt again," Flyers interim
coach Craig Ramsay said. "It's very upsetting to Eric because he
had visions of coming back."
Carl Lindros, Eric's father and agent, called the injury "a
significant setback." Brett Lindros, Eric's younger brother,
retired from hockey in May 1996 because of concussion-related
health problems.
Snider said he was informed of the severity of the injury prior
to Sunday's game.
"I'm surprised to hear it secondhand and I'm surprised that the
organization was not informed first," Snider said.
Snider appeared to be having a heated discussion with team
physician Dr. Gary Dorshimer after the game. Neither would comment.
Lindros had planned to visit Kelly in Chicago on Thursday before
being injured in a collision with Francis Lessard of the AHL's
Philadelphia Phantoms during what was supposed to be a non-contact
scrimmage. Lindros needed 20 stitches to close a cut on his lip.
He was bothered by headaches once again and returned to Toronto
to resume therapy.
Lindros missed 27 games in the regular season with injuries
ranging from a viral infection to back spasms to two concussions.
He sustained his second concussion on a hit from Boston's Hal
Gill on March 4. After criticizing the team's medical staff for
failing to immediately diagnose the injury, Lindros was stripped of
his captaincy.
Ramsay said the team is focused on its next game.
"We realized the fact a long time ago that Eric wasn't going to
be available for us and if he did, it was going to be a bonus,"
Flyers forward Mark Recchi said. "And if he didn't, we had a team
here that was prepared to go out and play hard and do what we've
been doing without him."
Lindros is in the final year of a one-year, $8.5 million
contract. He becomes an unrestricted free agent unless the Flyers
tender him a qualifying offer.
General manager Bob Clarke has said the team will make the offer
-- which assures it will receive five first-round draft picks if
Lindros signs elsewhere. But it is not known what the team will do
now considering the latest injury.
Snider would not address the subject following Sunday's game. |