Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries 13:05 - Apr 25 with 4137 views | numptydumpty | Apparently this season, more than any other sports science has been utilised consistently ie so players returning or those with a higher chance of recurring troubles, the odds against them being on sidelines once more is greatly lessened. Am sure also we got whole team of sports scientists who highlight the data and communicate the correct way back for a player or clever use of player without over playing. Players have been taken off when playing really well after 60 minutes for this exact reason. Although often this has been a turning point the game as it has often greatly affected the rhythm and momentum of several games but if it prevents unnecessary injuries going forwards, then fair enough. BUT THIS SEASON HAS BEEN THE WORST FOR INJURIES IN LIVING MEMORY !!! Could this over reliance on technology and statistics be communicated to myself as I don't get it !!!! Given statement above. And whoever is our goalkeeping fitness guru, could you please apply for a job at a club nearby who are also currently recruiting for new owners. There you go.. Be a good chap.. ðŸ˜ðŸ˜ [Post edited 25 Apr 2022 13:09]
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 13:09 - Apr 25 with 3611 views | wombat | been saying this for a few weeks , last season was shorted with more back to back games yet we had a lot less of these injuires than we are getting this season , when the club have the ned of season meeting with the management team this has to be made a major talking point as its beyond mad this season with the long term hamstirng inuires we have had | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:20 - Apr 25 with 3505 views | PinnerPaul | Marshall did his shoulder saving a pen and Dieng got kicked in the thigh - it would take some 'fitness' coach to stop those, as I'm sure is the case with plenty of our injuries! | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:52 - Apr 25 with 3406 views | OldPedro |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:20 - Apr 25 by PinnerPaul | Marshall did his shoulder saving a pen and Dieng got kicked in the thigh - it would take some 'fitness' coach to stop those, as I'm sure is the case with plenty of our injuries! |
Think it was Archer who did his shoulder saving a pen - Marshall was hamstring on very wet & heavy pitch at Forest, probably aggravated by staying on as we didn't have any subs left. Walsh is a hand injury sustained during training - occupational hazard for a goalkeeper | |
| Extra mature cheddar......a simple cheese for a simple man |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 16:04 - Apr 25 with 3383 views | TacticalR | Isn't this yet another example of the very thing that we were hailing as a stroke of genius a few months ago is now considered to be the problem? | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 16:48 - Apr 25 with 3338 views | PlanetHonneywood |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 16:04 - Apr 25 by TacticalR | Isn't this yet another example of the very thing that we were hailing as a stroke of genius a few months ago is now considered to be the problem? |
The 'very thing' you refer to: is it playing football? | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 17:37 - Apr 25 with 3270 views | numptydumpty |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:20 - Apr 25 by PinnerPaul | Marshall did his shoulder saving a pen and Dieng got kicked in the thigh - it would take some 'fitness' coach to stop those, as I'm sure is the case with plenty of our injuries! |
The comment with regards goalkeepers was flippant tongue in cheek remark, not a serious comment. Sorry my sense humour bit shite. But in general just highlighting all this so called reliance on data and we have had our worst season ever for injuries.. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 17:43 - Apr 25 with 3255 views | numptydumpty |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:20 - Apr 25 by PinnerPaul | Marshall did his shoulder saving a pen and Dieng got kicked in the thigh - it would take some 'fitness' coach to stop those, as I'm sure is the case with plenty of our injuries! |
Was really just highlighting inconsistencies between this sport science thing ie Taking off form players because they would get injured , according to stats, due to sports science advice. And all I am trying to say is , we have still had the worst run of injuries in a season in my memory banks, but we have all technology to hand, followed all recommendations and it has been spectacularly unsuccessful in keeping our squad injury free. Is it spectacular bad luck or if we hadn't followed the science would we have been in a spectacularly worse scenario. My view is - I DOUBT IT !!!!! [Post edited 25 Apr 2022 17:44]
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 18:09 - Apr 25 with 3224 views | R_from_afar |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:20 - Apr 25 by PinnerPaul | Marshall did his shoulder saving a pen and Dieng got kicked in the thigh - it would take some 'fitness' coach to stop those, as I'm sure is the case with plenty of our injuries! |
Exactly. Not all injuries fall into the same category. I am no expert but an injury which results from overuse of a slightly strained muscle probably can be predicted and prevented but it falls into a different category to impact injuries, e.g. when some runs into a post, gets kicked, stood on etc. | |
| "Things had started becoming increasingly desperate at Loftus Road but QPR have been handed a massive lifeline and the place has absolutely erupted. it's carnage. It's bedlam. It's 1-1." |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 21:44 - Apr 25 with 3067 views | wombat |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 18:09 - Apr 25 by R_from_afar | Exactly. Not all injuries fall into the same category. I am no expert but an injury which results from overuse of a slightly strained muscle probably can be predicted and prevented but it falls into a different category to impact injuries, e.g. when some runs into a post, gets kicked, stood on etc. |
Ps dieng is rumoured to have done his thigh before the forest game and hid it it from the management team , | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 07:24 - Apr 26 with 2975 views | slmrstid | Ultimately, whilst it has its benefits in modern day load management, its not a magic bullet and isn't going to prevent every injury going. It also isn't going to prevent injuries from players being kicked up into the air every thirty seconds without punishment such as poor Willock suffered. | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:34 - Apr 26 with 2932 views | TheChef | Well it will prevent injuries to a certain extent - but you can't legislate for opposition players kicking your players and putting them out of action. As in the cases of Dieng and Willock. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:36 - Apr 26 with 2931 views | davman |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 21:44 - Apr 25 by wombat | Ps dieng is rumoured to have done his thigh before the forest game and hid it it from the management team , |
This would make some sense because I have always been puzzled how Gallagher's challenge would have resulted in the injury Seny took... | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:41 - Apr 26 with 2920 views | daveB |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:36 - Apr 26 by davman | This would make some sense because I have always been puzzled how Gallagher's challenge would have resulted in the injury Seny took... |
He took a high kick to his groin, was a nasty tackle. I don't think there is anything else to it | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:42 - Apr 26 with 2918 views | TheChef |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:36 - Apr 26 by davman | This would make some sense because I have always been puzzled how Gallagher's challenge would have resulted in the injury Seny took... |
Ha - yes intriguing as I thought Gallagher caught Dieng around his lower shin/ankle, hence not sufficient for him to go off unless it was a really bad impact. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 08:57 - Apr 26 with 2888 views | bosh67 | I think next season we should go down the Monty Python "It's just a flesh wound" route. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 11:20 - Apr 26 with 2797 views | olderR | I know an injury would result in a longer absence but it makes me chuckle that to avoid an injury that might not happen the player misses a game anyway. | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 11:56 - Apr 26 with 2736 views | daveB | Warburton has done this from day 1, he is very keen on data and sports science. Marc Pugh used to go off on 60 mins every week. Last season Austin and Johansen used to go off around the 60 minute mark, idea was better to get an hour of them at their best than risk losing them for 2/3 games. When you go off data it is always about how you use that information and when you have a team with 4/5 over 30's in your team where the data says they should only play an hour that does limit the number of subs you can make and has had an impact on us this season. I think at times we've been guilty of watching the numbers rather than the matches to make decisions. It's quite interesting though this is all now something the manager is doing wrong, when you look at the previous manager he was slated for over playing players and never changing anything. I'm sure whatever approach the next fella does will receive similar criticisms if it goes wrong, there isn't really a right or perfect way to do things. | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 12:36 - Apr 26 with 2703 views | TheChef |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 11:56 - Apr 26 by daveB | Warburton has done this from day 1, he is very keen on data and sports science. Marc Pugh used to go off on 60 mins every week. Last season Austin and Johansen used to go off around the 60 minute mark, idea was better to get an hour of them at their best than risk losing them for 2/3 games. When you go off data it is always about how you use that information and when you have a team with 4/5 over 30's in your team where the data says they should only play an hour that does limit the number of subs you can make and has had an impact on us this season. I think at times we've been guilty of watching the numbers rather than the matches to make decisions. It's quite interesting though this is all now something the manager is doing wrong, when you look at the previous manager he was slated for over playing players and never changing anything. I'm sure whatever approach the next fella does will receive similar criticisms if it goes wrong, there isn't really a right or perfect way to do things. |
Whoever the next manager is, should be sacked now to save time. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 14:58 - Apr 26 with 2574 views | Antti_Heinola |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 12:36 - Apr 26 by TheChef | Whoever the next manager is, should be sacked now to save time. |
And not before time. Too many of his changes have been baffling, and it's a relief that we're rid of him before we fall off that cliff he would have taken us over. Plus, I'm pretty sure he already lost the dressing room, even before he found it. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:05 - Apr 26 with 2558 views | davman |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 11:56 - Apr 26 by daveB | Warburton has done this from day 1, he is very keen on data and sports science. Marc Pugh used to go off on 60 mins every week. Last season Austin and Johansen used to go off around the 60 minute mark, idea was better to get an hour of them at their best than risk losing them for 2/3 games. When you go off data it is always about how you use that information and when you have a team with 4/5 over 30's in your team where the data says they should only play an hour that does limit the number of subs you can make and has had an impact on us this season. I think at times we've been guilty of watching the numbers rather than the matches to make decisions. It's quite interesting though this is all now something the manager is doing wrong, when you look at the previous manager he was slated for over playing players and never changing anything. I'm sure whatever approach the next fella does will receive similar criticisms if it goes wrong, there isn't really a right or perfect way to do things. |
You are right. Amazing in hindsight that what you say about Johansen and Austin was so true - neither trusted to last more than 60 minutes and yet we gave them 3 and 2 year deals. Even if they found some form this season, with that fitness it'd only be the equivalent of 30 games. And to think we loaned out De Wijs for that sort of injury record. | |
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:08 - Apr 26 with 2552 views | PinnerPaul |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:52 - Apr 25 by OldPedro | Think it was Archer who did his shoulder saving a pen - Marshall was hamstring on very wet & heavy pitch at Forest, probably aggravated by staying on as we didn't have any subs left. Walsh is a hand injury sustained during training - occupational hazard for a goalkeeper |
Fool! - Sorry of course it was! | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:31 - Apr 26 with 2518 views | francisbowles |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:05 - Apr 26 by davman | You are right. Amazing in hindsight that what you say about Johansen and Austin was so true - neither trusted to last more than 60 minutes and yet we gave them 3 and 2 year deals. Even if they found some form this season, with that fitness it'd only be the equivalent of 30 games. And to think we loaned out De Wijs for that sort of injury record. |
Johansen wouldn't have signed if we hadn't and the same is probably true of Austin. De Wijs, imho, was loaned out because he had been injured and we wanted to get him regular games. If he stayed here he wasn't going to get enough minutes as Dickie and Dunne were doing well. We go again with Jordi next season, he seems to have done well at Fortuna Dusseldorf. He has made 10 appearances, only subbed in 3 and all around the 75-80 minute mark. Only missed one game and that is reportedly down to CV. Still has two years on his contract and most likely a one year option as well. | | | |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 16:34 - Apr 26 with 2452 views | davman |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 15:31 - Apr 26 by francisbowles | Johansen wouldn't have signed if we hadn't and the same is probably true of Austin. De Wijs, imho, was loaned out because he had been injured and we wanted to get him regular games. If he stayed here he wasn't going to get enough minutes as Dickie and Dunne were doing well. We go again with Jordi next season, he seems to have done well at Fortuna Dusseldorf. He has made 10 appearances, only subbed in 3 and all around the 75-80 minute mark. Only missed one game and that is reportedly down to CV. Still has two years on his contract and most likely a one year option as well. |
I bloody hope so. Not only do I think he is our best centre back, he bought a degree of calm and organisation that we really miss when he's not been playing... And just as I posted this, my son has just told me that De Wijs fractured a rib in his last game for Dusseldorf... We are cursed. [Post edited 26 Apr 2022 16:37]
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Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 18:18 - Apr 26 with 2338 views | KeithW |
Sports Science Use to Prevent Injuries on 11:56 - Apr 26 by daveB | Warburton has done this from day 1, he is very keen on data and sports science. Marc Pugh used to go off on 60 mins every week. Last season Austin and Johansen used to go off around the 60 minute mark, idea was better to get an hour of them at their best than risk losing them for 2/3 games. When you go off data it is always about how you use that information and when you have a team with 4/5 over 30's in your team where the data says they should only play an hour that does limit the number of subs you can make and has had an impact on us this season. I think at times we've been guilty of watching the numbers rather than the matches to make decisions. It's quite interesting though this is all now something the manager is doing wrong, when you look at the previous manager he was slated for over playing players and never changing anything. I'm sure whatever approach the next fella does will receive similar criticisms if it goes wrong, there isn't really a right or perfect way to do things. |
" I think at times we've been guilty of watching the numbers rather than the matches to make decisions." Nail firmly hit on head. | | | |
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