OK, Al Bundy. You played football at Polk High so that qualifies you to comment on LT's health status and threshold for pain. I'll take your word for it.
Actually, I played college level athletics and had an invite to a pro camp before getting a career ending injury while trying to keep in shape. However, your stupidity in commenting as if the level of play has a required minimum when it comes to understanding playing through pain is noted.
And you're also right that LT should have lobbied his coach for more playing time, even if Michael Turner was the better option for the team. Seeing how LT ran on his two carries and one reception, he certainly didn't move any piles like Michael Turner did. But again, the big concern for the Chargers coaches was 'How is LT going to be portrayed after the game?', right? It had nothing to do with the best interest of the team.
You have no idea whether or not Turner was the better option for the team, and neither does anyone else. In fact, given that Turner had a whopping 4 catches this season, he's very likely NOT a better option in the passing game as long as LdT can draw breath. Furthermore, it was abundantly clear to every human being who watched the game (except you, apparently) that LdT was missed in the red zone. Just the threat of him would have made New England defend differently.
But you go on and criticize me for speculating as if you actually know something when you're just speculating yourself.
At this point, I can't argue with ignorance and incompetence. Despite having no evidence other than speculation to support your claim, I concede because in the end, any non-biased football fan that reads this thread knows what the right move was.
Yes, hyperextending your knee one week, having it heal 90% and then spraining your MCL on the very first play from scrimmage happens all the time. For the record, as I was noting, the Chargers staff isn't exactly on the 'up and up' regarding injury status from this past week, even on other players:
http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=3207105
Did this ever end up in the reports that you saw prior to the game?
As for the 'bias' argument, give it a rest. I'm not the only one pointing out the LdT situation, and it's not been all Patriots fans, either. ESPN was talking about it last night, for example, and PFT (rag that it is) is on it today.
So, to sum up your opinion:
Hyperextension = MCL sprain
OR
The law of averages was so mean to LdT that a "90%" healed hyperextension somehow was a separate injury from an MCL sprain stunningly happening to the exact same knee on the first play of a game after two complete practices "without restriction".
AND
Lies/ommissions on injury reports ? evidence about possible lies/ommissions on injury reports.
Great logic.