Injuries cost top leagues €732 million last season, Bundesliga the worst hit

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Manchester City's Rodri reacts after sustaining an injury on Sept 22.

Manchester City's Rodri reacting after sustaining an injury on Sept 22 which has likely ruled him out for the rest of the season. Before the injury, he had warned that footballers were ready to down tools in protest if the ever-expanding football calendar was not addressed by football authorities.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Players in Germany’s Bundesliga are most likely to be injured among Europe’s top five domestic leagues, but the English Premier League bears the most injury-related costs, according to a report published on Oct 16.

The fourth edition of insurance firm Howden’s Men’s European Football Injury Index charts the upward trend in injuries recorded in the Premier League, Bundesliga, Spanish La Liga, French Ligue 1 and Italy’s Serie A, with a combined 4,123 during the 2023-24 season – a 4 per cent rise on 2022-23 and 37 per cent more than in 2020-21.

Injuries cost clubs a combined €732 million (S$1.04 billion) last season in wages paid to players while out of action. Since the report’s first edition in 2020-21, there have been 14,292 injuries in Europe’s top leagues, costing clubs €2.3 billion in players’ salaries.

The report comes with player welfare, including injuries, an increasingly hot topic with Fifa’s expanded Club World Cup and Uefa’s revamped club competitions adding to the workload of already packed domestic schedules.

On Oct 14, players’ union Fifpro Europe and the domestic leagues warned that players could be pushed to strike action.

James Burrows, head of sport at Howden, said the data underlines the ever-increasing physical demands on players.

“As fixture congestion intensifies with expanded competitions domestically and internationally, we are seeing more players sidelined for longer periods, with a notable 5 per cent rise in injury costs this season alone,” he said.

The report highlights a worrying increase in the severity of injuries to Premier League players aged under 21, with each injury equating to an average 44-day layoff – up from 26.5 in 2022-23.

Knee injuries across all age groups reached a new high with 367 across the top leagues last season, costing clubs a combined €141 million.

Overall last season, an injury occurred every 92 minutes across the five leagues, costing teams an average of €172,975 per game. Bundesliga clubs had an injury every 52 minutes, with Darmstadt enduring one every 33 minutes.

Borussia Monchengladbach became only the second team to record more than 100 injuries in a season since the first publication of the report.

The Premier League’s total number of injuries actually fell from 944 in 2022-23 to 915 in 2023-24, although the English top flight made up 44 per cent of injury costs for the five leagues. Injuries last season cost Premier League clubs a combined €318 million, compared to La Liga’s €142 million.

Manchester United had the highest injury cost figure in the Premier League last season with €47 million being paid to players unavailable because of 75 injuries. Newcastle United were the most injured team with 76.

Bayern Munich’s 96 injuries during last season’s Bundesliga campaign cost them €39 million, while champions Bayer Leverkusen sustained only 36 injuries, costing €3.4 million. REUTERS

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