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Return to play, performance, and value of National Basketball Association players following Achilles tendon rupture

Avinash Chauhan, Jeff Stotts, Olufemi R. Ayeni, Moin Khan

2021The Physician and Sportsmedicine17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: Achilles tendon ruptures are devastating injuries for National Basketball Association (NBA) players: prior studies have demonstrated decreased performance following return-to-play, but none have evaluated the effect of injury on rate-adjusted contextual statistics to assess the true change in performance. Additionally, there exists a paucity of data on the independent impact on defensive performance following return.Hypothesis: Compared to both control-matched peers and preoperative careers, we hypothesize that player production based on rate-adjusted contextual statistics will significantly decline following Achilles tendon rupture.Study design: Retrospective Cohort StudyMethods: Publicly available NBA injury data on Achilles tendon rupture were reviewed from the 1996 –1997 to the 2016–2017 seasons. Controls were matched based on height, position, age, and rate-adjusted statistics. Extracted data included Value over Replacement Player Rating, Box Plus–Minus, Win Shares, offensive rating, defensive rating, and time to return-to-play, and was collected for the season before and two seasons following injury.Results: Twenty-five NBA players with surgically treated complete Achilles ruptures met inclusion and exclusion criteria. The return-to-play rate from Achilles tendon ruptures from 1996–1997 to 2016–2017 was 80%, with a mean recovery period of 311.0 ± 100.9 days. After 2 years, performance significantly declined for Value over Replacement Player Rating, Box Plus–Minus, and offensive rating compared to controls and cases. However, there was no significant effect on defensive rating (P = 0.38). After two seasons, returning players had a Value over Replacement Player Rating that was 24.1% below pre-injury levels, contributed 1.4 fewer points per 100 possessions by Box Plus–Minus, and yielded 2.4 fewer wins by Win Shares.Conclusions: Achilles tendon rupture results in significant decreases in offensive production and career longevity. The injury does not have a significant impact on defensive production.Clinical relevance: Achilles tendon ruptures significantly affect basketball players ability to return-to-play, and their in-game performance.Level of evidence: 3

Topics & Concepts

BasketballAchilles tendonAchilles tendon ruptureMedicineOffensivePhysical therapyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationTendonSurgeryMathematicsArchaeologyOperations researchHistoryTendon Structure and TreatmentSports injuries and preventionTurfgrass Adaptation and Management
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