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Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Mysterious Rise of Major Injuries in Professional Sports

Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Ringer

News Commentary, News

4.81.8K Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2025

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sign up for the Derek Thompson newsletter. In Game 7 of this year's NBA Finals, Indiana Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his Achilles in the first quarter while attempting to drive to the basket on an injured calf. It was the third major Achilles injury of the 2025 NBA playoffs. Curiously, Achilles tears are typically an older-dude injury, as they're most common in middle-aged men, according to a 2018 study published in the Journal of Biomechanics. So the sudden clustering of this injury among star athletes in their prime has inspired a lot of head-scratching among NBA fans and even the league itself. “We had already convened a panel of experts before Tyrese’s most recent Achilles rupture,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said. When you zoom out from basketball and consider the broader landscape of sports, the injury surge seems quite real. In baseball, we’ve seen a huge increase in the so-called "Tommy John surgery," which repairs a torn UCL in a pitcher’s elbow. In soccer, ACL injuries have been rising, particularly in women's soccer. And that's before we get to the huge amount of media attention that’s been paid to concussions in football. What's going on here? Vern Gambetta, a conditioning coach, trainer, and adviser to professional soccer, baseball, basketball, and Olympics teams, explains why major injuries might be surging across sports—and what it tells us about the risks of pushing the human body to its physical limit. If you have questions, observations, or ideas for future episodes, email us at [email protected]. Host: Derek Thompson Guest: Vern Gambetta Producer: Devon Baroldi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

When you hear the word Seattle Supersonics, what comes to mind?

0:05.0

Maybe it's Sean Kemp, The Rain Man, or Gary Payton, the glove, or maybe an image of a tall and skinny 19-year-old rookie, Kevin Durant.

0:14.0

For fans in Seattle, it's something else. It's tragedy, it's theft, an iconic team with an incredible fan base that packed its bags

0:22.5

and shipped off for Oklahoma City.

0:24.9

From Spotify and the Ringer, I'm Jordan Ritter-Con, and in my podcast, Sonic Boom, I talk

0:30.3

to players, politicians, owners, and fans about how Seattle lost the Sonics.

0:36.4

You can listen to it on the Book of Basketball feed, on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

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setup. I had the absolute pleasure of speaking to Pamela Anderson. All thanks to the Dove

1:21.0

Self-Esteen project. We speak about the impact Y2K has had on women's body confidence and how Pamela

1:27.0

has regained control. The Dove's

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self-esteem project is an amazing initiative supported by science-backed methodology to help us

1:34.1

improve our relationship with our bodies. To find more body confidence building exercises,

1:38.5

go to Dove.com forward slash Y2K. That's Y2K spelt W.H.Y2K.

1:46.1

Before today show a casual reminder that my full-time writing has moved to Substack,

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