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Footballers really are working harder and getting injured more often

Football players cover 30 per cent more ground during a match than they used to and they get injured more often too
 Ronan Curtis (11) of Portsmouth receives medical attention
Injuries in football are on the rise
èƵ Images / Alamy

English Premier League footballers will enjoy a mid-season break next winter, partly in an attempt to reduce injuries. Some say footballers have never had it so easy, but a study of player injuries confirms the modern game is increasingly taking its toll.

Ashley Jones at Leeds Beckett University in the UK and his colleagues tracked 243 players from 10 clubs across four of the divisions below the English Premier League in the 2015/16 season. They found players had an average of 1.9 injuries per player per season, compared to 1.3 in the 1997/98 and 1998/99 seasons combined – the last time a similar study was conducted.

“It’s a different game now,” says Jones. “Twenty years ago you had footballers trying to be athletes. Now we have athletes who can play football.”

Today’s players run around , but recovery time has not increased. Lower league teams play a 46-game season, with additional cup competition matches.

It is no surprise that old injuries flare up more often, says Jones. Of the injuries the group tracked, 17 per cent were reoccurrences of an existing problem, up from 7 per cent in 1997-9. And 40 per cent of modern injuries were the result of repetitive stress and strain placed on players’ bodies over time.

Some things haven’t changed. The most common injury remains a hamstring strain. And problems tend to peak twice in the year: during winter and in the first few weeks of the season.

Coaches could be pushing players too hard and too early, says Jones. “It’s not needed. These players don’t lose fitness in the summer like they used to.”

Physical Therapy in Sport

Topics: Sport