His nine-year career at Arsenal has been an emotional and physical roller coaster.
Often
showing glimpses that he is the perfect mix of power and guile his
manager craves before spending weeks, or even years, in the treatment
room, Arsene Wenger now looks set to release this French midfielder at
the end of his contract in June. The ride is coming to an end.
1554
days, 222 weeks, over four years out injured. The numbers aren't as
pretty as his playing style can be. This is the curious case of Abou
Vassiriki Diaby.
When Diaby arrived in the Premier League on
January 13, 2006, Arsenal beat off competition from Chelsea and Jose
Mourinho to sign the 19-year-old from Auxerre.
Comparisons were
already drawn to club legend and former captain Patrick Vieira because
of his height, intensity and technique on the ball.
'Diaby is a bit more offensive than Vieira but when he plays a more defensive role he is very similar,' Wenger said.
He
started off well, scoring his first goal for the Gunners in April
against Aston Villa, but his debut half-season in north London ended in
despair.
Diaby was the victim of an 'assassins tackle' from
Sunderland youngster Dan Smith - according to Wenger - his sickening
scream as he fractured his ankle at the Stadium of Light must still be
heard by the boss.
Put simply, the 28-year-old has never recovered.
Whether it be a calf muscle or a hamstring, an abdominal strain or a cruciate ligament, Diaby's talent looks set to be wasted.
He
has clocked up 42 injuries during his Arsenal career, according to data
from physioroom, averaging a new setback every 80 days. The Gunners
have played 350 league games since his arrival but Diaby has featured in
just 35 per cent of them.
Despite his struggles, his almost
constant spell on the sidelines hasn't been short of its positive
moments. In early 2012 Diaby came back into the Arsenal team to feature
alongside Mikel Arteta and Santi Cazorla and impressed, even scoring on
his return to the French national team.
He is the second
longest-serving player at the club behind Theo Walcott, and is a
much-loved figure in the dressing room. His emotional pull remains
strong with the fans, who would love for him to be the midfield
destroyer and box-to-box runner he has shown he can be.
Credit: Matt Morlidge/SportsMail
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