Thank you so much for watching! I can include some swimming injuries but they usually do not have a clear cut video as to when they have injured themselves.
Its content is very good, it should be more focused on the injuries of footballers and explain them in time, that was very informative and very entertaining, I hope to see it higher, you have a subscriber more, blessing big men🙌
Looks like he did hs ACL and all his ligaments here. Full impact. Season done for him. That's like 9 months minimum for a full recovery with this one. Good thing he's still young enough and in good shape; meaning he never put so much weight on his landing. But he's gonna lose a lot of his explosiveness after this injury here. Good breakdown, Doc.
Last year on January 31st I had the exact same injury. I had a dynamic knee Valgus which resulted in complete rupture of ACL, 2nd grade MCL tear on my left knee. Luckily, the meniscus was not damaged. But I have a particular question. Is it safe to undergo surgery few days after picking up the injury and the getting MRI scans and results? In my case I lost my full range of motion of my knee so it took me 4-6 physio sessions to regain bending and extension functions and it looks like Real Madrid and Alaba forced to do the surgery shortly after picking the injury up.
He’s done. Since he’s not a goalkeeper, and his position is very demanding physically and he is left footed. He is pretty much retired. By the time he’s back he’ll be 32. Hope he has saved money for his retirement because there’s no coming back from this one at that age!
@@Hunnn7 I’m not miserable. I’m realistic. Successful people are realistic and plan for every possible outcome! I’m sorry you are sensible like fruity person from California. You probably do pilates and eat Keto diet!
Dr how much can playing with Soft ground cleats contribute to this ? Soft ground cleats are made out of aluminum and are typically longer and sharper since they’re made for wet fields. That would mean his bottom portion of his leg would stay locked into the floor as his upper part of his leg rotates.
I would have to look into specific cleat types and if there is any research looking at their effect on injury. If I come across anything I can let you know. Thank you for watching!
Just from a physics standpoint alone that is logical, which is why they shouldn't go for maximum traction. Maximum traction on a shoe seems like a good idea from all sorts of perspectives, however, if they were smart they would put in a safety where the traction is below the force needed to damage the knee - tradeoffs. I tore my meniscus doing martial arts because I was in a training camp and the sports hall had a plastic floor and we were only allowed in with shoes on. So I wore the sneakers, we normally would train barefoot. I did a strong roundhouse kick, except my other foot was planted solid on the ground, and the sneakers stuck to that plastic floor with more traction than my knee rotational stability and so instead of that foot moving, my knee moved all the wrong ways. I was out for 4 weeks, surgery and all that - it's not as serious as ACL but still pretty bad. That being said I was actually walking again on day 2 after surgery, and that contributed to a fast recovery.