I wouldn't say it was a "nothing study".
People have long wondered about the habits of Smilodon and the marsupial lion.
Particularly how they hunted.
Heres the abstract if that helps:
I don't know how much you know about these things, but at least for others, here are pictures to give an idea of uniqueness compared to modern predators:
Smilodon:
Marsupial lion:
Weird teeth (compared to most other predators).
There were much better skull pictures posted on a forum, although, I'd have to do some digging before I can find them, and somehow I doubt the effort is worth the reward, with no one being overwhelmingly interested.
They were well aware that T.carnifex-the marsupial lion-was not at all a phylogenetic linkage between any of these animals. It was a marsupial. The rest are placentals. Marsupials diverged from placentals long before the dinosaurs died out, back when the elephant's ancestors were tiny mole-like critters.
Why would you expect mustilidae to be different? None were included within the study, but from other studies that included olecranon relative to ulna lengths (mechanical advantage of forearm extention) they performed just as anyone would expect: average considering their lifestyle. Brown bears (who dig regularly) came out similar to the fossorial badgers. The likes of predatory fishers similarly to lynxes.
Mechanical advantage comes at the cost of reducing speed. Being simple levers, the trade off is directly proportionate.
I just figured bears could sacrafice some speed so that they could more efficiently (as in, need less muscle mass, and expend less energy) flip rocks.
...back to the question of the marsupial lion and Smilodon, their method of predation has long been one of great interest. The study demonstrated that the Smilodon and marsupial lion were built much more like the omnivorous, foraging, bears then they were any of the modern predatory animals.
This suggests that there must have been a great difference (along with their unusual cranial morphology).
There are a lot more studies on this subject that I've read.
The study concluded that the heavy build-apparently much more robust then modern predators, was so that the Smilodon and marsupial lion could predate and grapple with large and powerful prey animals.
-I'd basically be summarising the discussion, so I could stop.
If you simply aren't interested, there is no point trying to convince you to read it. =)