Uefa Euro 2020: Premier League players face test of endurance after long, hard season
- Published
It has been a season like no other, with matches squashed in to ensure the delayed Euro 2020 tournament could be held this summer.
Club sides have been forced to play three times a week on a regular basis and now national teams bidding to become European champions face the prospect of up to seven matches in 31 days.
But which countries will be feeling the strain of such a gruelling format, coming straight after a frantic and brutal 2020-21 season? We have looked at a few stats to try to find out.
'A risk to players' health'
The warning could not have been clearer.
"The intensive match calendar not only risks players' health, but also risks undermining their performance at the European Championship and 2022 World Cup," said global players' union Fifpro in November.
"Footballers are already experiencing fatigue due to the ongoing competition cycle, back-to-back matches and a lack of adequate rest and recovery during the summer - this is putting them at an elevated risk of stress and injury."
The coronavirus pandemic delayed the end of the 2019-20 season, and caused the 2020-21 campaign to be compressed - but, with the number of fixtures more or less unchanged, completing the season became an endurance race.
Such physical demands have undoubtedly played a part in causing a long list of players to miss this summer's showpiece.
Virgil van Dijk (Netherlands), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden), Sergio Ramos (Spain) and Marc-Andre ter Stegen (Germany) are among those injured, while Germany's Marco Reus made himself unavailable, saying his body needed a rest "after a complicated, exhausting season".
England's Trent Alexander-Arnold is out after picking up a thigh injury during Wednesday's warm-up game against Austria, while his international team-mates Jordan Henderson and Harry Maguire are doubts.
Those injury worries come at the end of a season in which Premier League teams have been kept busy, with 10 of the England squad featuring for their club on at least 46 occasions in 2020-21.
Both Manchester clubs played more than 60 times, with United having to play four matches in an eight-day spell in May, including one tie in Italy, while Chelsea were involved in 59 games, with Arsenal and Tottenham one behind.
Youth or experience?
No player in any of Europe's five biggest leagues - the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, the Bundesliga and Ligue 1 - played in more club matches during the season just finished than Manchester United midfielder Bruno Fernandes.
Of United's 61 games, he featured in 58 of them - as well as playing eight times for Portugal - but in January he dismissed any notion of being fatigued.
"Tired? At 26, I can't be tired," said Fernandes.
"If I'm tired now, when I get to 30 or 32 I won't be able to play or I'll play one game out of every five. No, I am not tired."
So, if the age of players could be used as a simplistic gauge of fitness, then it is good news for England and Wales as they have the second and third-youngest squads respectively.
Wales have eight players aged 22 or under, as did England until Alexander-Arnold's injury ruled him out, with Gareth Southgate not set to confirm a replacement until Sunday.
Turkey have the youngest squad at an average of 24.58 years per player, while Belgium, ranked number one in the world, have the oldest at 28.73. With 10 players aged 30 or over, this summer's championship could be the last chance for their golden generation to win a trophy.
Sweden's squad would have been the oldest if 39-year-old striker Ibrahimovic had not been injured, meaning Portugal defender Pepe, 38, is the oldest player at the tournament.
Poland defender Kacper Kozlowski is the youngest and one of two 17-year-olds selected, with England's Jude Bellingham the other.
Scotland have the ninth-youngest squad at 26.96, although they only have one outfield player in their 30s, with their average numbers skewed by the inclusion of goalkeepers David Marshall (36), Craig Gordon (38) and Jon McLaughlin (33).
Home comforts
One aspect in England's favour is the format itself.
The Euros are being played across 11 cities, yet Gareth Southgate's side could play six out of a maximum seven games at Wembley.
If they top their group and keep progressing, the furthest they will venture will be a Rome quarter-final, before returning to London.
Wales would love such a schedule. They are heading east, further east than Iraq, Syria and most of Saudi Arabia, to Azerbaijan for two matches, before taking on Italy in Rome. If they progress as runners-up then it could be a return to Baku in the last eight.
Switzerland face a similar energy-sapping haul of Baku-Rome-Baku and then potentially either London or Amsterdam.
Belgium will also be dreading long flights as they have two away matches to start off the tournament - versus Russia in St Petersburg and against Denmark in Copenhagen, before a return to Russia.
Topping Group B would mean Roberto Martinez's side would travel from north-west Russia to south-west Spain, a flight of more than five hours to get to Seville for their last-16 tie.
Manchester City and Belgium midfielder Kevin de Bruyne is one of those who does not see it as a fair tournament and in November criticised the draw process, where their opponents were known before it was staged.
"It's a scandal, it feels like a fake competition," said De Bruyne, himself facing a race to be fit after suffering a broken nose and damaged eye socket during the Champions League final on 29 May.
"This feels like competition distortion. Football is not really football any more - it's becoming a business."
Where next? (If countries finish in the top two of their group) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Country | Match 1 | Match 2 | Match 3 | Last 16 | Quarter-final | Semi-final / Final |
Wales (Group A) | Baku | Baku | Rome | London / Amsterdam | Munich / Baku | London |
England (D) | London | London | London | London / Copenhagen | Rome / St Petersburg | London |
Scotland (D) | Glasgow | London | Glasgow | London / Copenhagen | Rome / St Petersburg | London |
Switzerland (A) | Baku | Rome | Baku | London / Amsterdam | Munich / Baku | London |
Belgium (B) | St Petersburg | Copenhagen | St Petersburg | Seville / Amsterdam | Munich / Baku | London |
Four teams will advance by finishing third in their group. The last-16 matches would then be in either Seville, Bucharest, Glasgow or Budapest, with the quarter-finals in either Munich, St Petersburg, Rome or Baku. |
It's a squad game
Uefa has allowed each country to select 26 players, instead of the usual 23 for major tournaments, although Spain only chose 24.
And each country may well need every one of them.
Covid-19 restrictions could well mean players missing matches, just as seven Scotland players had to sit out their recent 2-2 draw with the Netherlands following a positive test in the squad, while the long-term effects of catching coronavirus are also still not fully known.
Newcastle were one of the teams badly affected by a Covid outbreak in their squad - and in May, boss Steve Bruce said: "Everywhere I looked, people were shattered, tired, sick. We've all experienced times we hope never happen again.
"A lot of people are running on empty because it's been non-stop, basically, for two years, especially the players. The players desperately need a break."
But that break will not be coming any time soon.
The players' bodies will continue to be pushed to the limit. The manager and squad who can cope best with the workload could well find themselves becoming European champions.