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Doubling in proportion of male footballers’ hamstring injuries

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Doubling in proportion of male footballers’ hamstring injuries

Doubling in proportion of male professional footballers’ hamstring injuries and lay-off days over past 20 years

Nearly a fifth are recurrences; over two-thirds of these occur within 2 months of return to play

The proportion of hamstring injuries and associated days away from match play among male professional European footballers has doubled over the past 20 years, finds research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.

Nearly one in five of these injuries were recurrences, over two thirds of which occurred within 2 months of return to play, the findings show.

A hamstring injury happens when the tendons (strong bands of tissue) or large muscles at the back of the thigh are strained or torn.

The numbers of hamstring injuries in men’s professional football sustained during match play remained stable between 2001 and 2014, after which they increased, prompting various initiatives to reduce the risk. But whether men’s professional football clubs have flattened the curve of hamstring injuries since 2014 isn’t known.  

To try and find out, the researchers set out to explore trends in the number and types of hamstring injuries over the past 2 decades (2001/02 to 2021/22), with a particular focus on the most recent 8 seasons (2014/15 to 2021/22).

They included 3909 players from 54 teams in 20 European countries who competed in 21 consecutive seasons. 

The players were all part of the Elite Club Injury Study (ECIS), which the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) started in 1999, with the aim of reducing football injuries and boosting player safety. 

The researchers analysed data collected by the medical teams on the amount of time players spent in training and match play; periods of absence due to injury, illness or other reasons; and type of injury (structural or functional).

Injury severity was classified according to the number of days laid off between injury occurrence and return to match play: slight (none); minimal (1–3); mild (4–7); moderate (8–28); and severe (28+ days). 

Over 21 seasons, 2636 hamstring injuries were reported during a total of 2,131,561 hours of training and match play: 922 (34%) during 1,787,823 training hours, and 1714 (66%) during 343,738 match play hours. 

The proportion of these injuries doubled between the first and last seasons, increasing from 12% of total injuries in the first, to 24% in the last, and comprising nearly a fifth (19%) of all 14057 injuries registered during the study period. 

Similarly, lay-off days caused by hamstring injuries doubled, rising from 10% to 20% between the first and last seasons, and comprising 14% of the total number of lay-off days  during the study period.

The risk of a hamstring injury was 10 times higher during match play than during training, while the average lay-off period was 13 days.

In general, 1 in 5 players missed training or match play because of a hamstring injury in any given season, and a 25-player squad can expect about 8 hamstring injuries every season, say the researchers. 

Of all the hamstring injuries, nearly a fifth (475;18%) were recurrences, and early recurrences (325)—within 2 months of return to play—made up more than two thirds (69%) of these. All recurrences were 9 times more likely to occur in match play than in training. 

Between 2014/15 and 2021/22, time trend analysis revealed a significant increase in the number and severity of hamstring injuries during training. 

Over the entire study period, most (71%) hamstring injuries were structural, and these were associated with more lay-off days than those for functional injuries, averaging 17 vs 6. 

This is an observational study, and the researchers freely acknowledge that they didn’t set out to explore the reasons for their findings. But, based on 21 years of observations, they suggest this might be a combination of more intensive match play and a crowded fixtures calendar.

“The intensity of elite men’s football has increased over at least a period of the years that are included in the current study. Current football practice includes a large volume of high intensity football actions. Professional players now undertake more high-intensity activities per match than they did previously and they also run faster than their predecessors,” they explain.

“Professional players now work year-round apart from a 4–6 week break between seasons. Even during the traditional break between seasons, players are often required to undertake pre-season tours which require intercontinental travel.”

Notes for editors

Research: Hamstring injury rates have increased during recent seasons and now constitute 24% of all injuries in men’s professional football: the UEFA Elite Club Injury Study from 2001/02 to 2021/22 doi 10.1136/bjsports-2021-105407

Journal: British Journal of Sports Medicine

Funding: UEFA

Link to Academy of Medical Sciences labelling system

https://press.psprings.co.uk/AMSlabels.pdf