Arsenal
are the most injury-prone club in the Premier League – with Mesut
Ozil's knee ligament damage the 890th separate injury they have had
since 2002.
In research that won't surprise long-suffering
Gunners fans, specialist website premierinjuries.com have gone through
every pulled muscle and broken leg over the past dozen years and
revealed that Arsene Wenger's men have suffered an injury nearly every
five days and 100 more different knocks than their closest
'challengers', Manchester United.
Ozil, a World
Cup winner with Germany, has been ruled out for up to 12 weeks with a
partial knee ligament tear sustained in Sunday's 2-0 defeat against
Chelsea.
He is one of eight Arsenal players currently unavailable
for the first-team alongside Olivier Giroud, Mathieu Debuchy, Aaron
Ramsey, Theo Walcott, Serge Gnabry, Yaya Sanogo, Mikel Arteta and David
Ospina.
Laurent Koscielny was on Thursday sent home by France
following an injury scare and may also be unavailabe for Arsenal's game
against Hull on October.
Wenger has ordered an investigation
into the number of injuries his side have had recently. There was
particular bewilderment how influential midfielder Aaron Ramsey could
have sustained a hamstring problem after last month's draw with Spurs
having been trained lightly and rested from other games.
The
Arsenal manager revealed: 'We are getting things together, getting a
report on all the different opinions – what happened to him, because
it’s a real concern.'
But the underlying statistics hint at a
longer-term problem at the club. Since they won the Double in 2002,
Arsenal have picked up nearly two fresh injuries a week during
season-time with some of their stars particularly affected, notably
Walcott, Jack Wilshere, Tomas Rosicky and Abou Diaby.
Their total
number of injuries, 890, compares unfavourably to other clubs over the
same time period. Manchester United have had 794, Tottenham 788, Everton
666, Chelsea 622, Manchester City 596, Aston Villa 578 and Liverpool
553.
While Wenger is keen to improve the injury situation, he and
Arsenal would argue that some of the more serious problems have been
unavoidable.
Credit: Joe Bernstein/SportsMail
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