The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Something has to give, and it cannot be health of players

- Bobby Barnes

Everyone is jostling for a place in a very busy internatio­nal calendar and the concern is the welfare of the players is becoming secondary, or even further down the list, as we try to accommodat­e all these matches.

If you have got tired players playing in elite competitio­n, we are at risk of short-changing those who pay to watch the game. You do not run racehorses every two or three days. We are flogging players when we need to start putting their needs and their health first.

Fifpro launched our “At The Limit” report a few months ago in which we make a number of recommenda­tions about the need for a more holistic approach to the internatio­nal calendar, given the strains being put on players.

When players are playing with shortened rest periods, they are more prone to injuries and, in terms of performanc­es, there is a correlatio­n that results tend to be lower in those circumstan­ces.

We spoke to players as part of our research and asked them what they thought an optimum level of games should be. Eden Hazard, for example, suggested perhaps 50 games in a season would be an upper limit and yet, from May 2018 to June 2019, he played 73 games.

The one who stood out was Son Heung-min at Tottenham. Not only did he play more games than anybody else – 78 matches in that period, practicall­y a game every four days – he was also travelling huge distances – 70,000 miles to represent his country, South Korea.

I sit on the Fifa stakeholde­rs’ committee and the Uefa profession­al strategy council and the issue of players’ workload is something we have been raising consistent­ly in all the discussion­s.

I agree with managers such as Jurgen Klopp and Pep Guardiola, who have registered their concerns, but I used to have these conversati­ons with Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger, so it is not a new phenomenon.

If anything, it has got worse because of the expansion of some of the competitio­ns. We need to come together – all of the game’s stakeholde­rs – and have a sensible discussion around the football calendar because the burden on the top players is incredible.

Something has to give, and it cannot be the health of the players.

Bobby Barnes is deputy chief executive of the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n and European president of Fifpro, the world players’ union.

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