A knee plug procedure, which involves replacing bone and cartilage tissue in damaged areas, has excellent long-term outcomes (10-15 years) when the plug diameter is 1 cm or smaller, with autografts performing slightly better than donor tissue; athletes who demonstrate full-speed performance and mobility after the procedure are strong candidates for successful recovery.
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1 Hour ago: Medical Expert Reveals SHOCKING Truth About Raiders Rookie Knee Situation追加:
Half the teams in the NFL looked at this rookie quarterback and walked away. Now, a world-class surgeon is saying they all made the biggest mistake of the entire draft. And that is just the opening act of what we are covering today. Before we dive in, smash that subscribe button if you want the fastest Raiders updates on the planet. Doctor's verdict on Jode McCoy. Let's get one thing straight.
When Gerode McCoy came off the board in the fourth round, more than half the league had already erased his name from their draft boards entirely. not moved him down, erased him. Why? Two words that no fan ever wants to hear next to their rookie quarterback's name, degenerative knee. But here is where the story flips completely on its head. A reporter who covers the Raiders closely track down Dr. Lanni Johnson. And this is not just any doctor. This man is one of the most decorated orthopedic surgeons on the planet. He has spent his entire career specializing in the exact type of microscopic knee procedure that McCoy had done. And what he said publicly about this situation changes everything. Now before we go any further, Dr. Johnson was crystal clear that he has not personally examined McCoy. He has not seen the scans or the X-rays. So we are working from his professional read of the publicly available information. But even with that disclaimer, his opinion carries enormous weight because this is a guy who has seen thousands of these cases.
So what exactly did McCoy have done?
About 15 months ago, he went through what is called a knee plug procedure.
And look, I have been doing my homework on this because I know most of us are not sitting around reading orthopedic surgery journals in our spare time. This is not a torn ACL. This is not a routine meniscus fix. A knee plug involves replacing actual bone and cartilage tissue in the damaged area. It is a more complex procedure and because it is less common in football players, there are fewer clear comparisons to point to, which is part of why so many opinions are flying around right now. Here is what Dr. Johnson said that really stopped me cold. The long-term risk with this type of procedure is directly tied to the physical size of the plug itself, specifically the diameter. And he said that plugs measuring around 1 cm, about/ an inch or smaller, carry an excellent long-term outlook. we are talking 10 to 15 years of strong results based on the medical literature assuming no existing arthritis, a stable ACL and a serious commitment to rehab. He also pointed out that plugs sourced from the patients own body tend to perform slightly better over time compared to donor tissue.
Though donor plugs have also produced strong outcomes, we do not know publicly which type McCoy received, but that detail matters when thinking about the bigger picture. And then Dr. Johnson said something that every single person in Raider Nation needs to hear directly.
When asked whether McCoy already being out on the field at Rookie Minamp is a good sign, his answer was essentially absolutely yes. His exact point was this. A young man with that level of personal motivation, that level of belief in himself, that massive drive to perform in the NFL, if his MRI shows the repair held and the knee is stable with no new damage, he could very well turn out to be a genuine steal at that pick.
When a surgeon of that reputation uses the word steel, you pay attention and the evidence on the field backs it up.
McCoy ran a 4-33 at his proday. He was out there at mini camp returning kicks and covering guys and drills. You do not do that if your knee is a ticking time bomb. The fact that he is moving freely and competing at full speed is exactly the kind of signal medical professionals look for after this procedure. Now, and I'm going to keep it real with you here.
There is no denying that some caution played a role in where McCoy landed on draft night. If this front office had zero concerns about that nay, there is a legitimate argument he goes in the third round or possibly even the second. They traded up one spot to grab him, but it was still the fourth round. That tells you there was calculated risk involved.
And honestly, that is smart. That is not a front office panicking. That is a front office managing uncertainty intelligently. You only have to look at how aggressively they built up the secondary in this draft to see the contingency planning at work. They are clearly prepared for multiple scenarios.
And right now, the signs are pointing toward this pick being something really special. But wait until you hear what is quietly brewing around one of their offensive linemen because this conversation is only just getting started. The JPJ trade question nobody is talking about. All right, real talk.
has Jackson P Johnson's name come up in trade discussions because it absolutely should be on your radar right now. A writer from a major national outlet recently floated the idea that JPJ could be a legitimate trade candidate this off season. The reasoning makes sense when you think about it. He has been shuffled around positions. His relationship with the previous coaching staff was rocky at best. And now there is a completely new front office running the show. New regime, clean slate, no emotional attachment to the picks made by the people who came before them. This front office has made it publicly known that they are always open to listening on any player. That is just how they operate.
But do I actually think JPJ gets moved?
Honestly, not right now. And here is why. The Raiders just brought in Spencer Burford. They drafted Trees. They have Caleb Rogers, Antonio Mafy, and Charles Grant. The offensive line depth has genuinely improved this off season.
Colton Miller is locked in. Tyler Linderbalam level depth is building.
There is real competition across that line. Here is the thing though, and this is the part people are glossing over.
This front office did not draft JPJ.
They have no loyalty to him built on personal investment. That does not mean they are going to recklessly trade him away for scraps. But it does mean they are evaluating him purely on what he brings to this team going forward. No sentiment, no fabitism. And part of the reason JPJ lost the center position, a job everyone, including him expected to be his, came down to mental preparedness. Running the line calls at center in an NFL offense is a completely different challenge from playing guard.
He was not ready for that role when it mattered. The previous coaching staff did not exactly help those linemen either, so there is context. But the gap was real. If a reasonable offer comes in and if trades were shows he can handle the role with the depth already built around him, a JPJ trade is more realistic than most fans are giving it credit for. Keep watching this situation closely. Who do you think should start on the Raiders offensive line this season? Drop your lineup in the comments right now. ESPN got it wrong. Here is the real biggest need. ESPN just published a full breakdown of the biggest roster weaknesses for every NFL team after the draft. For the Raiders, they pointed to outside wide receiver as the number one problem area, and I cannot just let that slide without pushing back. Is wide receiver a need?
Yes, absolutely. I am not going to sit here and pretend it is not. But the single biggest hole on this entire roster. I strongly disagree with that framing. And here is exactly why. ESPN ran through names like Tread Tucker, Jack Beck, Dantonio Thornton, and rookie Malik Benson. They gave Tucker a receiver rating of 29 out of 100 using some internal metric that I genuinely do not think captures what is actually happening in that room. And here is the part that completely baffled me. They somehow left out Jaylen Naylor who just signed a three-year $35 million deal and is arguably the number one receiver on this roster right now. You cannot review this receiving core and skip the guy who just got $35 million. That is not analysis. That is an oversight. And let us not forget about Brock Bowers. Bowers is a genuine weapon. You can line him up outside. You can use two tight end sets and defensive coordinators have to account for him on every single play.
That changes everything for whoever is lined up at outside receiver next to him. Factor in Naylor Tucker Bowers and Michael Meer as a legitimate pass catcher. And this room is not the disaster ESPN is making it out to be.
The real number one need on this roster right now is defensive tackle. That is where the real gap lives. Getting pressure from the inside is what unlocks everything else on that defense. And right now, that is the position group that needs the most attention before training camp opens. That said, the receiver room can still get better. And there are real options still sitting in free agency. DeAndre Hopkins is older, no question, but he has AFC West experience, and the assistant head coach has a direct connection to him from their time working together in Tennessee. A cheap one-year deal gets you a veteran presence and a reliable red zone option. He is not a number one anymore, but as a third or fourth receiver, the value is there. Stefan Diggs is another name that will not go away. After putting up 85 catches, over 1,000 yards, and four touchdowns last season, the talent is undeniable. The off-field concerns are real, and if you do not want that energy in the building, that is a completely fair position. But the production speaks for itself. After those two, the names that genuinely excite me most are Debo Samuel, Keenan Allen, and John Jennings. Debo has a real working relationship with this offensive coordinator, going back to their time together in San Francisco.
That connection does not happen by accident. Keenan Allen grew up as a Raiders fan, has topped 700 receiving yards every single season since 2017, and his root running fits perfectly with what Kirk Cousins does well. on a projected one-year deal around $5 million. The value argument is almost impossible to argue against, but the name I keep coming back to is John Jennings. The offensive coordinator connection is there. Jennings has been the primary receiving option in San Francisco for back-to-back seasons. He wins contested catches, which matters both for Cousins and Fernando Mendoza, and he is the best blocker in that entire free agent group. In this offensive system, if you cannot block, your role on the field is going to be extremely limited. Jennings checks every single box. The bottom line is simple.
ESPN is not wrong that wide receiver is a need. They are just wrong about it being the biggest one. Fix the defensive trenches first. Everything else builds from there.
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