Not that they were missed in the sweep.
CHN has them both listed as "questionable" for this weekend...
I'd be very surprised if Pokuluk didnt play. He dressed for warmups on Saturday night so he was very close even then to returning. O'Byrne was close to returning last weekend as well but I'm much less sure about him. You can PM me for more details regarding both of them.
Why PM you instead of just posting whatever you know?
if it were meant for the public we'd see it on the cornell website :) competitive advantage if the other team doesnt know whose injured/not
i have seen their injury reports, as well as all other players and teams on the web. its common knowlage.
At one point during the 2002-03 season, one of our players was injured but the exact nature extent of the injury wasn't public knowledge. ("Public knowledge" in this context means posted on the school's official athletic website" or "described by Schafer in a postgame interview for USCHO" or something like that. "Everybody knows anyway" doesn't count.) I and some other fans found out more specifics during a postgame conversation with that player's father, who also asked us not to publicize that information further. That information was not spread further, out of respect and courtesy towards that player and his father.
I don't know the specifics of laws prohibiting spreading confidential medical information that Hayes might bring up when he sees this thread, or whether people actually think there's a risk that the information might "fall into the wrong hands" if it gets posted here. I just feel like that same respect and courtesy should be extended to information that might not necessarily come with the same explicit request for confidentiality.
Just one man's opinion.
I think Schafer should follow Belichick and list everybody as "questionable" every week. Or list McKee as "severed head," and then have him magically appear at the pregame skate, demoralizing the opponent.
Are we headed for another discussion on privacy vs. right to know vs. most everyone probably knows so everyone ought to know discussion?
Students including student athletes are entitled to quite a bit of privacy about their medical conditions (far more than a generation ago) ... but at the same time it's hard for word not to spread around campus and at that point, it's hard to believe some of that information doesn't get back to opponent colleges.
Cornell as an official body may not be able to report on it, thus the limited information on cornellbigred.com.
Pros have to - they're supposed to - fully disclose injuries so gamblers with inside information don't have an unfair advantage. (Insert Janet Jones joke here.) Even if it means a mean-spirited opponent might try to take a run at the hobbled player early on in the match. Probably makes sense to disclose for college football and basketball, but Caesar's Sports Book most likely doesn't have a line on Cornell at Clarkson hockey. (If there were, bet Clarkson to beat the 2-goal spread (USCHO pdediction) because backing a home underdog is the closest thing there is to a safe bet in gamblinlg.)
What we want to talk about, or gossip about here, doesn't fall under any HIPAA laws because we're not the people in possession of the medical records.
[quote jmh30]
I don't know the specifics of laws prohibiting spreading confidential medical information that Hayes might bring up when he sees this thread, or whether people actually think there's a risk that the information might "fall into the wrong hands" if it gets posted here. I just feel like that same respect and courtesy should be extended to information that might not necessarily come with the same explicit request for confidentiality.
Just one man's opinion.[/quote]
which is why I did not disclose the nature or extent of the injurys, or where I saw the information. that thread should be retired.
and we could all just not be so nosey...
(and on a side note, billhoward, re: HIPAA comment...good point)
HIPAA only applies to health professionals to begin with. However, I am sure a good point could be made in a civil court regarding this issue.
[quote canuck89]HIPAA only applies to health professionals to begin with. However, I am sure a good point could be made in a civil court regarding this issue.[/quote]Oh god, not (http://elf.elynah.com/read.php?1,3207,3207#msg-3207) again (http://elf.elynah.com/read.php?1,52967)!