It is indeed satisfying to see the growth of the Journal of Arthroscopic Surgery and Sports Medicine (JASSM), since its launch in April 2020. In lesser than 2 years, we are publishing the 5 th issue, without any break. We have been publishing all article types, related to Arthroscopy and Sports Medicine and have published 56 articles so far. Some of these articles have been published by top-notch people in this field globally. We also have seen its growing readership, with more than 200,000 downloads and it has started receiving an increasing number of citations of its publications in a short span of time. The JASSM is registered with several International abstracting partners such as Google Scholar, Crossref, Scilit, Index Copernicus, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wang Fung, and ReadCube. We plan to apply for more abstracting partners such as Directory of Open Access Journal and PubMed Central. This issue contains several interesting Original and Review articles, apart from some useful case reports and surgical arthroscopic techniques. "Kabaddi" is a commonly played sport in Asia and is associated with several musculoskeletal injuries. Gupta et al. have attempted to define standard definitions related to "Kabaddi"-related injuries so that uniform reporting can be done. [1] Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction is now a commonly done procedure for sports injuries of the knee. However, it may be associated with failure due to incorrect placement of the femoral tunnel. Thapa et al. have found in the study 50 cases that a combination of eyeballing and the use of femoral offset aimer help in achieving an accurate placement of the femoral tunnel. [2] High-velocity injuries are being seen more often due to road traffic accidents and contact sports leading to multiple knee ligament injuries, involving injury to two or more (of the four) major knee ligaments. These serious injuries are commonlyThis is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.