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Broadening our understanding of injury mechanisms to include at-risk situations: an overview of potential injuries at the FIFA men’s World Cup Qatar 2022TM

Aiello, Francesco; Avery, Lewis; Gardner, Tom; Rutherford, Harvey; McCall, Alan; Impellizzeri, Franco M.; Peek, Kerry; Della Villa, Francesco; Massey, Andrew; Serner, Andreas

Authors

Lewis Avery

Tom Gardner

Harvey Rutherford

Alan McCall

Franco M. Impellizzeri

Kerry Peek

Francesco Della Villa

Andrew Massey

Andreas Serner



Abstract

This study aims to examine and describe the characteristics of potential injury situations during a men’s professional international tournament quantified using the FIFA Football Language Medical Coding. A prospective study was conducted during the 64 matches of the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022™, during which five analysts recorded potential injury situations from video analysis. ”Potential injuries” were recorded when players stayed down > 5 s and/or requested medical attention. Characteristics were further recorded for variables such as opponent’s action and body location. In total, 720 potential injury situations were recorded of which 139 required medical assessment. The actions which resulted in most potential injuries were running while receiving a pass (74; 10%), while passing the ball (59; 8%), and while progressing with the ball (48; 7%). Duels and ball progression led to a potential injury in 3.0% and 2.1% of all similar actions in total. Both aerial duels and ball progression led to an potential injury that required medical assessment on 0.4% of occasions. Most potential injuries involved the head (149; 21%), foot (120; 17%), or lower leg (110; 15%) with most medical assessments of the head (35; 25%), lower leg (17; 12%), and knee (15; 11%) with a median duration of 47 seconds (IQR 28–61). This study provides a detailed overview of match circumstances that may have a higher injury risk. Although some variables within the coding system need improvement to increase reliability, its use will allow a more detailed comparison of differences between high-risk player actions leading to injury and those that do not, which can improve future prevention strategies.

Citation

Aiello, F., Avery, L., Gardner, T., Rutherford, H., McCall, A., Impellizzeri, F. M., Peek, K., Della Villa, F., Massey, A., & Serner, A. (online). Broadening our understanding of injury mechanisms to include at-risk situations: an overview of potential injuries at the FIFA men’s World Cup Qatar 2022TM. Science and Medicine in Football, https://doi.org/10.1080/24733938.2024.2372304

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jun 24, 2024
Online Publication Date Jul 27, 2024
Deposit Date Aug 7, 2024
Publicly Available Date Aug 7, 2024
Print ISSN 2473-3938
Electronic ISSN 2473-4446
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/24733938.2024.2372304
Keywords Soccer, mechanism, concussion, video-analysis, injury surveillance

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