Even if the situation has improved in recent seasons, it’s a fear that Arsenal fans still struggle to shake.
Looking at these five injuries, it’s no wonder we all carry the scars
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5 worst Arsenal injuries
By DailyCannon -Oct 18, 2022
Thankfully, Arsenal haven’t suffered a really bad injury in a while, but there was a time when we couldn’t escape them.
Arsenal’s French midfielder Abou Diaby (C) vies with Leyton Orient’s Republic of Ireland midfielder Stephen Dawson (L) during their FA Cup fifth round replay football match against Leyton Orient at the Emirates Stadium, London, England, on March 2, 2011. AFP PHOTO/ GLYN KIRK
Remember when there seemed to be an injury crisis every season at Arsenal, and at least one player would go from three weeks out to three months or longer.
Even if the situation has improved in recent seasons, it’s a fear that Arsenal fans still struggle to shake.
Looking at these five injuries, it’s no wonder we all carry the scars
Worst Arsenal injuries
1
Cazorla’s ankle. Photo by Pablo GarcÃa / MARCA
Santi Cazorla
It wasn’t until November 2017 that we discovered the true extent of Cazorla’s injury. “He [the doctor] saw that I had a tremendous infection, that I had damaged part of the calcaneus bone and it had eaten the Achilles tendon,” Cazorla told Marca. “There was eight centimetres of it missing.”
An Achilles injury picked up against Ludogorets in October 2016 was initially meant to keep the Spaniard out for three weeks. Surgery ended up being required, but he was still expected to return during that season. He didn’t.
Weeks turned into months, and news of his struggles gradually emerged. Gangrene, nine surgeries, skin grafts, and the very real threat that he might never play again, Cazorla had an exceptionally difficult couple of years.
It’s really not fair that such a happy and wonderful player has to suffer in this way.
You could write a whole book on Diaby’s injuries alone.
The French midfielder endured a long and difficult career at Arsenal due to recurring injuries, and they can all be traced back to one afternoon against Sunderland in 2006.
Defender Dan Smith made what the media described as a “horrendous” tackle that left Diaby, then only 19, with a severe ankle fracture.
He underwent three operations and was warned he might never play again before making his comeback in 2007.
From that point, it was a story of setbacks and recoveries. Diaby kept getting injured and hit with atrocious tackles that went unpunished, but he kept trying to come back.
He refused to let his career be ended by injuries for longer than most, and hung on to his Arsenal career until 2015, when he was released by the club.
He eventually gave up the fight when he announced his retirement at the start of 2019 but Diaby had been without a club since July 2017 when he was released by Marseille. He made six appearances for them in two years, amassing just 335 minutes of football after leaving Arsenal.
The last anyone heard, Dan Smith was working in a call centre.
Eduardo
As a football fan, there were few things more horrifying than seeing a player’s ankle hang off at an odd angle, held on by only his sock.
The players felt the same way when they saw Eduardo’s leg broken by Martin Taylor of Birmingham City in 2008. You knew it was bad when the commentators on the day said they wouldn’t show any replays of the incident because the injury was too gruesome.
The Croatian was in hot form and firing Arsenal to their first title challenge in years, but his season, and Arsenal’s, was brought to an abrupt end.
Eduardo was out for a whole year with a broken left fibula and an open dislocation of his left ankle.
He fought his way back to fitness, and returned in February 2009 against Cardiff. His Arsenal career was able to continue, if only briefly, but he was never able to reach the heights he was so clearly destined for before he met Martin Taylor.
Now 37, Eduardo has been without a club since 1 January 2019.
Tomas Rosicky
In January 2008, Rosicky picked up what he would later describe as a “rare” tendon injury.
The Czech thought his career was over as the injury kept him out for the remainder of the season and the entirety of 2008/09.
He did return for the start of the 2009 season, but struggled with several minor injuries.
Unfortunately, while Rosicky did go on to become a valuable player at the club, the end of his Arsenal career was hit by more serious injuries.
A 10-year-stint at the club came to an end in 2016, having made just a single appearance that season.
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