Since joining the NBA in 2008, Chicago Bulls point guard Derrick Rose has lived up to his last name. On the court, his skill and determined play are beautiful to admire.

Unfortunately, he also seems as fragile as his namesake’s petals, and he’s spent almost as much time on the bench as he has playing in games thanks to a variety of major and minor injuries.

Rose has never played a full 82-game regular season in the NBA. He even missed 27 games in the strike-shortened 2011-12 season, which only had 66. Out of 621 regular and postseason games, Rose has missed 240 due to a variety of maladies, many of them minor, such as a stiff neck or the flu.

The following graphic by Li-Anne Dias illustrates some of the bumps and bruises doctors have had to fix— and how much court time Rose lost because of it (click to enlarge):

Despite Rose’s unfortunate injury track record—something that hasn’t helped his stats—fans remain optimistic. Reddit user shuab15, who posted in the NBA community, thinks Rose’s talent and work ethic are strong enough that the 2015-16 season could be big for the Bulls point guard, even if his latest “Never Break” Adidas ad campaign seems to be tempting fate:

“Derrick Rose’s decline in production is more so a result of a lack of rhythm and repetition rather than a decline in athleticism. Rose is still as athletic and as talented as ever.”

In the meantime, Rose—who earns around $20 million a season and will become a free agent in 2017—has become the NBA’s version of the board game Operation, “Milton Bradley’s Goofy Game for Dopey Doctors.” For the Chicago Bulls, though, it’s turned into a Grueling Gamble Using Persistent Physicians.

Although he only missed six games in his first three seasons, the serious injuries began piling up in the 2011-12 season. It started with a hurt groin that benched Rose for a stretch. Then, in that season’s first playoff game, he suffered a torn anterior cruciate ligament that sidelined him for the rest of the postseason, as well as the entire 2012-13 season. In his return season, he tore his right meniscus, which he went on to tear again a little more than a year later.

In September, a teammate accidentally elbowed Rose in the face during the first day of training camp, fracturing Rose’s left orbital. Although he’s been practicing with the team after surgery, it’s still unknown if he’ll play in Chicago’s home season-opener against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday, Oct. 27.

When he does return to the court, he’ll have to do so wearing a protective mask, which isn’t the best—or most comfortable—look Rose has sported.