That injury that everyone was saying would happen sooner or later...
That injury that everyone was saying would happen sooner or later...
Yep. My thoughts too. Best wishes to himProbably ruptured his spleen or something along those lines. Sounds like it's under control so that's good news at least.
That's unfair. Internal injuries are frequently difficult to diagnose. He hits the post, he says it hurts, but then gets up and says he'll run it off. It's not like a broken leg where your foot's pointing the wrong way or a big cut that's bleeding all over the place. They'll go to some extent with how the player says he feels, and 99% of the time, impact injuries result in nothing but bruising.Slightly gobsmacked that the medical staff cleared him to play on. He's gone from "He'll be fine" to a life threatening injury. Sometimes I think medical diagnosis is just a massive guess up.
It's not like a broken leg..
Duffy lacerated his liver in training (at Everton as an 18 year old) and almost bled to death. Then of course we had Jimmy McNulty at Withdean, that was a pretty grim one, too.That's unfair. Internal injuries are frequently difficult to diagnose. He hits the post, he says it hurts, but then gets up and says he'll run it off. It's not like a broken leg where your foot's pointing the wrong way or a big cut that's bleeding all over the place. They'll go to some extent with how the player says he feels, and 99% of the time, impact injuries result in nothing but bruising.
If it's his spleen, or a lacerated liver, say then it will become more of an issue as time passes and it bleeds internally, whereby the pain will become worse, which is the point where they will start to go "hang on, this isn't normal" and start looking into it a bit deeper.
Didn't Shane Duffy have some sort of internal injury from football that left him requiring surgery? It vaguely rings a bell.
Leicester physios once let a player stay on after treatment at the Withdean. He took about two steps and went down injured before being helped off the pitch. Turned out he’d broken his leg and they’d try to let him “run it off”.
McNulty ruptured a kidney, and was stretchered off the pitch.Duffy lacerated his liver in training (at Everton as an 18 year old) and almost bled to death. Then of course we had Jimmy McNulty at Withdean, that was a pretty grim one, too.
Exactly. If he'd been onside, this thread wouldn't exist despite the injury.good luck to Awoniyi but this is all being wise after the event for me
there would be chaos if we conceded a goal because all our defenders stopped playing, as is natural after seeing the flag go up (like the one Shelvey scored for someone in a recent season)
Agree. It was clearly offside.Watching the game live, it was very clearly offside and should have been flagged straightaway. PGMOL need to own this and change their "protocol".
This with bells on. It’s a really nasty injury, but this is just an unfortunate part of sport at any level. It wasn’t more likely to happen just because the player was in an offside position.I don't quite see what the injury has to do with the flag not going up... no other rule gets changed to make the injury more likely than if he had actually been onside
All you are saying is that injuries won't occur when football isn't being played - so if that's the aim then stop playing football altogether![]()
Yes please, bin it.I'm going to go against the grain here and say that, if you have VAR, then you have to delay the flag if there is any doubt otherwise there's no point having it. If you are 100% sure then of course flag. In this particular case although it was fairly obvious, because (if i remember rightly) it was one of those where attacker and defender run in opposite directions there is only a split second difference between on and off even if the still image looks really clear. Of course we could do away with VAR and solve the problem.