Report: Saints fear Payton Turner will require surgery after turf toe injury

Report: Saints fear Payton Turner will require surgery after turf toe injury

This is tough. NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reports that the New Orleans Saints believe third-year defensive end Payton Turner suffered a turf toe injury on Sunday “that should require surgery,” potentially sidelining one of the more impressive players from this year’s training camp.

Turner’s right foot caught in the Caesars Superdome turf while pressuring Tennessee Titans quarterback Ryan Tannehill into throwing an incomplete pass, though he was able to walk himself off the field and into the locker room for further evaluation. But this is the latest serious injury in what’s become a frustrating trend for the Saints.

Last year Trevor Penning, Deonte Harty, and Michael Thomas were just some of the players who suffered turf toe injuries on their home turf. Studies have found that artificial turf like the kind used at the Superdome (and, bizarrely, at some outdoor NFL venues) correlates with greater injury risk compared to natural grass. For all the work the Saints have done to proactively approach injury risk, continuing to play home games on a dangerous surface feels like a massive blind spot.

But let’s keep focus on Turner. Last year Penning went down in late August and needed turf toe surgery to repair damaged ligaments in his foot, and Rapoport’s reporting suggests a similar scenario for Turner. Penning wasn’t able to return until Week 12 which may be the timetable Turner could be headed for. Stay tuned for updates.

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Trevor Penning suffered Lisfranc injury in season-ending loss to Panthers

Saints coach Dennis Allen says Trevor Penning suffered a Lisfranc injury in their season-ending loss to Panthers:

Trevor Penning exited Sunday’s season-ending loss to the Carolina Panthers with a foot injury, and now we’ve got some details from New Orleans Saints head coach Dennis Allen. Allen says Penning suffered a Lisfranc injury to his right foot, which NewOrleans.Football’s Nick Underhill reports should sideline him for five or six months. That puts Penning’s return in the middle of June, just in time for organized team activities during the summer. He should be good to go for training camp.

Still, that’s brutal. Penning started his rookie year with turf toe surgery on his left foot. He’s ending his rookie year with Lisfranc surgery on his right foot. It’s a really tough break for an inexperienced player who needs all the reps he can get after making the jump from a lower level of competition.

Penning’s lone start this year came in that regular season finale with the Panthers, and he put a lot of quality reps on tape as a run blocker — though he got beat here and there in pass protection, which makes sense given his skill set and strengths and weaknesses.

Hopefully his body responds well to treatment and he’s able to return to form and compete for a starting job over the summer. That’s not what you want to be saying about a player the Saints effectively traded the tenth overall pick in this year’s draft to acquire, but it is what it is. Let’s hope Penning plays well enough in the future to justify that move.

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Latest injury update on Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes’ turf toe

After mulling the decision, Mahomes is set to have toe surgery tomorrow by a renowned foot specialist according to a new report.

Ahead of Super Bowl LV, it was reported that Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes was expected to have offseason surgery to repair his turf toe injury. Following the game, Mahomes refused to blame any part of the Chiefs’ poor performance on his injury.

“Yeah, I can’t say the toe was a problem when I played last week or two weeks ago and I played well on it,” Mahomes said. “It’s something you battle through. You’re playing football you have to battle through injuries. We’ll look at it tomorrow and we’ll make a final decision on if we’re going to have to have surgery on it or not.”

Well, he certainly battled through the injury and now the final decision has been made. According to a new report from NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Mahomes plans to have surgery tomorrow to repair his turf toe injury.

According to the report, Mahomes will have surgery to repair turf toe by NFL’s renowned foot specialist, Dr. Robert Anderson. He was the surgeon who handled both Chad Henne’s ankle fracture last year and Taco Charlton’s ankle injury earlier this year.

The rehab from the injury is expected to take several months per Rapoport, but this isn’t something that should linger beyond this offseason. The injury will likely keep him sidelined throughout, but he’s expected to be ready to get back out on the field with his teammates to start the 2021 season. With a little luck, Mahomes could be good to go by training camp, whatever that happens to look like this year.

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Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes’ toe injury reported as ‘turf toe’

We now have a name to go with Kansas City Chiefs QB Patrick Mahomes’ toe injury.

A footnote from the aftermath of the Kansas City Chiefs’ divisional-round win over the Cleveland Browns was a toe injury suffered by QB Patrick Mahomes. This happened prior to his exit from the game via the NFL’s concussion protocol. He’s spent the entire week of practice listed with the toe injury on the team’s injury report but carried no game status heading into the AFC title game. He still might not be 100%, though.

According to a report from NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, Mahomes has been diagnosed with “turf toe,” which is a fairly common football injury involving the plantar plate and ligaments in the big toe. Mahomes is dealing with this issue in his left foot, but it doesn’t appear to be as severe as it possibly could be. This can be a super painful injury and depending on the severity, it can even sideline players or require surgery.

According to Rapoport, the injury did “limit his effectiveness” during the practice week, but he also took almost all of the first-team practice repetitions for Kansas City. The Chiefs’ practices this week were on the lighter side in general as they tend to be this time of year. Rapoport described them as a “slew of walkthroughs.”

Rapoport says that Mahomes will be reevaluated in the offseason for surgery, but there isn’t a belief that the injury currently needs it. That’s a good sign, but these injuries can also flare up and intensify at any time. It’ll be worth monitoring during the game.

“It’s feeling a lot better,” Mahomes said of his toe on Friday. “I mean the next day it was very sore and then every single day since then it has gotten a lot better. It’s stuff you deal with being a football player, you deal with injures and luckily enough for me, this wasn’t as bad as it looked and felt the day of and the day after.”

Mahomes says the injury won’t be an issue and there’s a video from the practice week to support that theory.

Even if Mahomes is feeling the injury, he’s been effective while dealing with injuries to his lower body in the past. Mahomes suffered an ankle sprain in Week 1 of the 2019 season. The following week he played through the injury and threw for over 400 yards and four touchdowns.

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Antonio Gibson diagnosed with turf toe; status in doubt vs. 49ers on Sunday

Antonio Gibson has a painful case of turf toe that kept him out for most of the game on Monday, and he is now doubtful to play vs. 49ers.

The initial evaluation for Washington’s rookie running back Antonio Gibson has come back after he went down with an injury on Monday has come back, and it appears that the young and budding star has a case of turf toe, which is one of the more painful and nagging injuries that you can have as a running back.

Gibson ran the ball only two times against the Steelers on Monday before limping off the field in a considerable amount of pain. He had his foot wrapped on the sideline, but was quickly ruled doubtful to return and didn’t return to the sideline after halftime.

Going forward, we will see if Gibson can return for Sunday’s game against the 49ers, but there isn’t much belief that he will, as turf toe is a nagging injury that has been known to keep running backs out for several weeks, if not more.

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