Obviously, has never played the game.
I've played plenty, thank you. I can't say I've played well, but I've played and still do, although I've switched mainly to racquetball now.
I've even had to deal with coming back from a major injury (ruptured Achilles tendon). Because the injury was improperly diagnosed for six weeks, I've built up a lot of scar tissue, and I know that my left ankle/lower calf will never again be "100%." But if something happens later on and I suffer a different injury to the same general area, I'm not going to blame the first injury.
He stretched the same knee twice within 3 weeks, wake up.
Different parts of the knee. Besides, how does having a healthy knee prevent you from slipping on a slick floor? Everyone says -- now -- that Barbosa was favoring the knee before the second injury, but I was watching the game and I didn't see it. If Stoudemire comes back, then gets into an automobile accident that crushes his repaired knee, will that prove that he came back too soon?
It's always the player who wants to come back too soon and the medical staff that holds him back. Trainers have all sorts of tests they can do to make sure that the injured area has close to its full proper range of strength and flexibility. They have diagnostic tests that go far beyond anything most of us will ever be exposed to or need to know about. And they know that tens of millions of dollars are on the line if they get impatient while clearing someone to play. I think that the chances that they were wrong in Barbosa's case are very, very low.
However, one good thing about consipracy theories is that they cannot be disproved. So if you want to argue that the entire Suns organization is involved in a massive cover-up about Barbosa's knee, that is your right.
And finally, even if there is a cover-up, and Barbosa was somehow allowed to come back too soon, and that put him at elevated risk for a second injury ... it's not Ginobili's fault. Like I say, I don't like Ginobili either, but I'd prefer that we not cheapen our position by blaming him for things that are completely out of his control or influence. (Oh, I heard he was behind 9/11.)
Anyway, I'll drop it.