When it comes to Lions edge rusher Aidan Hutchinson's recovery, it's time to stop listening to people on the internet

In Week 6 of the Detroit Lions season, they lost one of thier very best players to gruseome injury. Aidan Hutchinson broke his leg that day and it's so tough to watch that I don't blame anyone if they don't watch that moment again.  Initially, there was some hope that if the Lions were to […]

Mike Payton Detroit Lions Beat Writer
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In Week 6 of the Detroit Lions season, they lost one of thier very best players to gruseome injury. Aidan Hutchinson broke his leg that day and it's so tough to watch that I don't blame anyone if they don't watch that moment again. 

Initially, there was some hope that if the Lions were to make the Super Bowl, maybe Hutchinson could be back. That might have been all that ever was, just hope. 

Since the injury, Hutchinson has sort of taken Lions fans on a ride with him through his recovery. He's posted videos along the way, and fans get to see where he is. We just got a new video from him last week. 

Looks like he's getting back into shape and is expected to be back with the Lions at training camp. That's about all I can say because I'm not a doctor. But that hasn't stopped a lot of outlets from writing about their thoughts on how Hutchinson looks, and it seems like a lot of negativity is being put out there on purpose to rage-bait Lions fans. 

One outlet that was once very well respected used the opinion of Dov Klieman as its source for why there are concerns about the Lions' edge rusher's leg. This is the tweet they used. 

That's it. An entire article based on that tweet. Klieman has absolutely no inside sources, is blocked by pretty much every reporter alive since he steals from all of us, and isn't even a real person. It's believed that someone bought his Twitter account just to use to make money. 

Another outlet didn't use a source for anything. They titled their article based on the words of just some guy on Twitter. The first word of their article is "That leg is fried." An incredibly misleading title. '

Lastly, there seems to be an overreliance on guys who are Twitter doctors. We often see these guys on there who watch the video of the injury and make a diagnosis. We've also seen these guys make diagnoses based on the video that Hutchinson just shared and because of those tweets, now there's people thinking Hutchinson isn't going to be ready to go Week 1. 

I get that fans are looking for any kind of insight they can get, but we don't know if these guys are actually doctors, and if they are, we don't know if they specialize in the injury that Hutchinson has.

On top of that, we know that these doctors have not treated Hutchinson. They haven't looked over his injury, they didn't do his surgery, they haven't prescribed him anything, they haven't overseen his rehab, looked at his X-rays, his chart, or anything. They're making an educated guess based on a 30-second video that they weren't even in the building to see filmed. 

At the end of the day, it's cool to get a tiny bit of insight into how the injury works, but every person is different and every injury is different. 

The best thing that Lions fans can do right now is listen to Hutchinson and listen to the team. Those are the only places that you're going to get real updates on him.