I doubt very seriously that a 20 some odd year old man has a greenstick fracture. The real question is how much, if any, displacement, if any soft tissue structures were damaged, and whether it will require surgery.
My wife had a green stick (spiral) from a skiing accident. I was really surprised by how little torque it took to case as much damage as there was. It was hell getting her ski boot off. That said, while not load bearing she could not put any weight on it. For her, not a well conditioned college aged athlete, it took a plate, 5 screws and about 6 months to be close to normal.There are different degrees of fractures. I suspect he has a "green stick" fracture where the bone is splintered but not half in two.
That's why you can never have "too many" running backs. For the individual player it isn't ideal because they want to play and get all the snaps. There are players who simply stay injured. Some with some all world talent that never gets realized. I hope Bo isn't one of those. Because if he can stay healthy we are going to be heck on wheels with the stable of RB's we have.I've seen a lot of pessimistic articles about Bo's inability to stay healthy. One even predicted him to be a bust. It reminds me so much of the injury problems that Eddie Lacy had early in his collegiate career. I sincerely hope Bo's injury luck turns like Eddie's did.
This injury was different. When one of the big ugglies land on your lower leg, breaks like this can happen to anyone.I've seen a lot of pessimistic articles about Bo's inability to stay healthy. One even predicted him to be a bust. It reminds me so much of the injury problems that Eddie Lacy had early in his collegiate career. I sincerely hope Bo's injury luck turns like Eddie's did.