Devil's advocate then, if he did have COVID and was feeling tired from it, being his age, couldn't he have lost his balance and fell backwards and hit his head on something? That could certainly be an option.
That was the original story, but the amount of damage to the skull is just so bad it doesn't make sense, that's what's got people doing a double take.
Even if he did the nastiest slip in a wet shower and fell full force into the hardest object in his hotel room it shouldn't be this bad. That's what... at most a 6 foot fall depending how tall Bob was? This damage is what you would see from a 20 to 30 foot fall.
Oh gotcha. I didn't read this partucal article, but several others earlier in the day and none of them mentioned anything as specific as 20 to 30 foot fall just that it was a really bad head injury, so I imagined a six foot tall guy falling straight backwards and hitting his head on tile, which to me would seem like it would cause a really bad injury. Everyone else only mentioned "significant blow to the head" so it's still possible this one doctor is over exaggerating.
The article covers this. The doctor claimed this injury couldn't happen from a simple fall, it was like he took a bat to the head or fell head first from 20-30 feet high.
Devil's advocate then, if he did have COVID and was feeling tired from it, being his age, couldn't he have lost his balance and fell backwards and hit his head on something? That could certainly be an option.
That was the original story, but the amount of damage to the skull is just so bad it doesn't make sense, that's what's got people doing a double take.
Even if he did the nastiest slip in a wet shower and fell full force into the hardest object in his hotel room it shouldn't be this bad. That's what... at most a 6 foot fall depending how tall Bob was? This damage is what you would see from a 20 to 30 foot fall.
Oh gotcha. I didn't read this partucal article, but several others earlier in the day and none of them mentioned anything as specific as 20 to 30 foot fall just that it was a really bad head injury, so I imagined a six foot tall guy falling straight backwards and hitting his head on tile, which to me would seem like it would cause a really bad injury. Everyone else only mentioned "significant blow to the head" so it's still possible this one doctor is over exaggerating.
The article covers this. The doctor claimed this injury couldn't happen from a simple fall, it was like he took a bat to the head or fell head first from 20-30 feet high.