You have a very interesting point for all Schumacher athletes (Tegenkamp, Bairu, etc.) except Solinsky. Solinsky had a catastrophic injury which forever destroyed the natural efficiency/system of his body. End of discussion!
Surgery and all the money in the world isn't going to change it back. That's my opinion, anyways. If you're gonna have all the amenities, money, facilities and professionals/expertise money can by, then it better go into intelligent training and injury prevention. Of course, some minor injuries might slip through the cracks. But such a threshold of injury as he experienced, was, in my opinion, from the very first moment I learned the details, a career ender--when we mean by career, a career of the highest aspirations, dreams, etc. of competition and achievement. I think it's still remarkable that he has managed to return and run as fast as he has, and he can make a "career" (or something) out of that, but not what he was doing and aiming for before.
Apply this section to all Schumacher athletes except Solinsky, and to Solinsky BEFORE his injury, and I think you're talking good sense. What happened to Bairu? That guy was an amazing talent--2-time consecutive NCAA XC champion, 13th place finish at World XC. I know Tegenkamp has always had trouble with injuries and maybe not being competitive in mid-distance/distance was inevitable with age and injury problems, but it certainly raises questions, all things considered with the other athletes. And then, we can say Solinsky's situation was a tragedy and freak accident, but in retrospect, questions of intelligent oversight, biomechanics, etc. of the Schumacher training group and its resources, should be raised, by fans (if Nike and staff are not doing some sort of internal evaluation). I mean, what was lost there...