Sports & Fitness

Football injuries up 20% in Europe top leagues: study

Clubs pay record-high price for such incidents, amounting to £513 million last season

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 29 Sep 2022 6:58PM

Football injuries up 20% in Europe top leagues: study
World football players’ union FifPro has requested for structures to be put in place to limit player workloads after a published study sees injuries across Europe’s top five leagues rose by 20% in the 2021/22 season. – AFP pic, September 29, 2022

LONDON – Injuries across Europe’s top five leagues rose by 20% in the 2021/22 season, according to a study published yesterday, as arguments intensify over football’s congested calendar ahead of the World Cup.

The study by insurance brokers Howden found clubs paid a record-high price for injuries of £513 million (RM2.58 billion) last season.

Injury cost was calculated by multiplying the cost per day of a player by the number of days they were unavailable because of an injury.

World players’ union FifPro says structures must be put in place to limit player workloads.

For the first time this year, a European campaign will be interrupted by a mid-season World Cup, causing further fixture congestion on either side of the tournament in Qatar, which starts on November 20.

European governing body UEFA has increased the number of competitive games with the addition of the Nations League to the international schedule and is expanding European club competitions from 2024.

World governing body FIFA is set to follow suit, with the World Cup expanded to 48 teams from 2026.

The Premier League had the highest injury cost of any of the top five divisions at nearly £185 million, with La Liga in Spain a distant second at £109 million.

French champions Paris Saint-Germain had the highest injury cost of any club in Europe at £34 million.

Injuries in the Premier League were up to 1,231 in 2021/22, compared to 938 the season before.

The permanent adoption of five substitutions per side by football lawmakers IFAB is designed to lessen the load on players.

But FifPro is urging FIFA to go further by mandating minimum rest periods of four weeks in the off-season and a mid-season break of two weeks for each player. – AFP, September 29, 2022

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