Athletes We Wish Could've Stayed Healthy
When athletic brilliance is interrupted by injury.
1 / 10
Athletes We Wish Could've Stayed Healthy - Derrick Rose has been through a lot, yet he keeps pushing. After playing only 10 games the past two NBA seasons because of a torn ACL in his left knee and torn meniscus in his right knee, the Chicago Bulls point guard showed no signs of wear and tear, aggressively slashing to the hoop and pulling up for jumpers during Team USA training camp in Las Vegas on Monday. Rose's convincing performance marked his highly-anticipated comeback from knee injuries and makes us optimistically think that he can be a force in the NBA once again. Whether Rose can put together a full NBA season without injury remains to be seen, but at least we're hopeful. So many sports stars of the past had their careers dashed by injury. Here's a look at those stars who have that dreadful "if they stayed healthy" asterisk lingering over their legacy.(...
2 / 10
Bo Jackson - If there ever was an athlete we wish could've avoided injury, it was Bo Jackson.The two-sport phenom played for the MLB's Kansas City Royals and NFL's Los Angeles Raiders from 1987-1990 before a relatively routine tackle in January 1991 caused a serious-enough hip injury to end his football career. Jackson wound up playing four more seasons of MLB baseball before retiring from sports for good. However, his mark on sports remains an athletic blur of brilliance with many moments to remember. There was the now iconic moment when he ran over Seattle Seahawks linebacker Brian Bosworth in 1987. Awesome stuff. But unfortunately, Bo knows injuries. (Photo: PCN/Corbis)
3 / 10
Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway - A 6-foot-7 point guard with Magic Johnson-type handle, Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway hit the NBA with the Orlando Magic in 1993 to instant fanfare. "Penny" had an arsenal of inside/outside moves and he was putting his full repertoire on display alongside Shaquille O'Neal. The duo instantly made the Magic a threat in the East, reaching the 1994-95 NBA Finals. When O'Neal left town for the Los Angeles Lakers in 1996, the Magic were on Hardaway's shoulders. His shoulders held up fine...his knees, however, didn't. That 1996-97 season was the start of "Penny" never playing a full season again due to nagging injuries. And that's a damn shame considering the four-time All-Star had serious game.(Photo: Tim DeFrisco/Allsport)
4 / 10
Grant Hill - Grant Hill splashed onto the NBA scene with the Detroit Pistons in 1994, winning the NBA's co-Rookie of the Year with Jason Kidd. Hill kept pouring in buckets through the years, averaging 25.8 points per game in the 1999-2000 season. But after Hill's first six seasons in the NBA, injuries set in, leaving the All-Star looking like a shell of his former self. Hill only played 47 games from 2000-03 with the Orlando Magic due to severe ankle injuries. Hill would battle everything from a hernia to more ankle issues through the years. Still, he managed to be a seven-time NBA All-Star and average 10 points per game for the Phoenix Suns at 39 years old in the 2011-12 season. (Photo: Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images)
Photo By Photo: Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images
5 / 10
Antonio McDyess - Antonio McDyess thundered his way into becoming a 20-point-plus scorer for the Denver Nuggets in 1998-2000, but recurring knee injuries robbed the 6-foot-9 power forward of his explosiveness through the years. And although he was still serviceable, he just wasn't the same player with that high ceiling anymore. (Photo: Brian Bahr /Allsport/Getty Images)
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