Yao Ming seeks Chinese cure to heal foot injury
By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
Associated Press Writer
BEIJING — Yao Ming will seek traditional Chinese medicine to help heal a stress fracture following surgery last month.
The Houston Rockets center was back in China to consult with traditional medicine practitioners about his NBA season-ending foot injury. Yao said Friday he also plans to see players on the Chinese national team and talk with coach Jonas Kazlauskas about strategy for the Beijing Olympics in August.
He hasn't decided on a treatment to heal the stress fracture in his left foot, but said he would probably meet with the country's top traditional doctors early next week. Traditional Chinese medicine can range from acupuncture to herbal teas, and is usually less invasive and slower acting than Western medicine.
"Traditional Chinese medicine has a history of thousands of years in our country, so there must be something to it," Yao said.
Yao, who arrived in Beijing late Thursday, hobbled into a news conference on crutches, his injured foot sheathed in a protective guard. He said his recovery was going "pretty well," but he wasn't likely to be back at his best until late June or early July.
Yao underwent surgery in Houston on March 3. Rockets team doctor Tom Clanton and Dr. Bill McGarvey performed the surgery.
His injury had sparked a near panic in China, where huge hopes are riding on the Olympics. China's other big man, former Dallas Mavericks center Wang Zhizhi, also recently had knee surgery and Milwaukee Bucks rookie forward Yi Jianlian was scheduled for a scan on his sprained left knee.
Despite the setbacks, Yao warned against counting China out, saying the team would finish 12th in a worst-case scenario, but was poised for a "historic breakthrough."
"It's a testimony to how much these games mean to us players that we're not just saying, 'I'm injured, that's it,' and throwing in the towel," Yao said. "The games are in our own country and that's special.
"The Olympics is a big competition with big pressure. If the pressure wasn't there, you wouldn't have so many athletes trying to get in."
Yao heard rumors he would be selected as an Olympic torch bearer — perhaps even carrying it at the opening ceremony — but didn't know anything for sure.
"Of course it would be a huge honor to carry the torch, but in my present state, in my present condition I can't even run 200 meters," Yao said.