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You get a grade 1 ACL you will have surgery. Because it is torn. Other tissue might regenerate by themselves but a tear is a tear. Words have meaning.
Players come back from grade 1 MCL sprains without surgical intervention all the time, because it's not necessary for minor damage. To the extent that a grade 1 tear is a tear at all, that's purely a technicality that has nothing to do with how the term is commonly used, and the distinction you drew in this post has no bearing on any of it. The case that you're making is purely semantic to the point that it basically doesn't mean anything, which is why I find it strange that you're accusing others of making semantic arguments. I don't like taking AndyJohnson's side in any debate since I agree he's basically the king of stupid, meaningless, semantic arguments, but it is what it is I guess.
The semantics of it are the only reason why this is even a debate. Because some sources use 'tear' in purely semantic terms, and classify grade 1 sprains as such, while others go with the commonly understood meaning of 'tear' and classify grade 1 as a non-tear sprain, grade 2 as a partial tear and grade 3 as a complete tear. Yes, words have meanings. Lots of words have multiple and/or ambiguous meanings, even. And the purely semantic argument that you're making here ignores the most commonly used meanings of the word in favor of an unintuitive technicality.
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