quote:
Strasbug
Boras has a hand in this...
Boras had insisted the insurance policy for Strasburg’s contract could be voided if he pitches against medical advice and injured himself. Representatives from multiple specialty insurance companies backed the claim.
“Absolutely, it does” sound feasible, said Colin Fairlie, a vice president at Sutton Special Risk. “And frankly, I wouldn’t think that that would happen very often. What do you have a medical staff for if you’re not going to depend on their advice?
“There may be circumstances where maybe you really need him to pitch, if you’re in a pennant race or something, maybe you gamble. If a guy is coming back from serious surgery and the doc says he shouldn’t pitch – I’m talking from the insurance companies. If the doctor says he can’t pitch, you better not pitch him, because you’re on your own if something happens to him.”
Burns said players almost never play against the advice of medical personnel. The most famous example came from football, when Terrell Owens returned from a fractured fibula against doctor’s advice to play for the Eagles in Super Bowl ***IX. If he had re-injured himself and missed the next season, “the disability insurance would not have covered that,” Burns said. “You have to be cleared medically to play.”
The issues surrounding the Nationals’ insurance policy on Strasburg’s contract would seem to be a tad murkier. He is not returning from an acute injury, and the medical science on Tommy John recovery is less concrete than, say, healing a broken bone. Still, while both Fairlie and Burns had not studied the Strasburg case intently, they said an insurance company would probably have the legal ground to void the Nationals’ policy if he continued pitching this fall.
Boras had insisted the insurance policy for Strasburg’s contract could be voided if he pitches against medical advice and injured himself. Representatives from multiple specialty insurance companies backed the claim.
"Absolutely, it does" sound feasible, said Colin Fairlie, a vice president at Sutton Special Risk. "And frankly, I wouldn’t think that that would happen very often. What do you have a medical staff for if you’re not going to depend on their advice?
http://mlb.sbnation.com/2012/9...asburg-and-insurance