UEFA have been accused of putting players’ lives at risk due to their lack of concussion substitute protocols.
England star Beth Mead suffered a head injury during Arsenal’s Champions League game at Ajax on Wednesday but the forward was unable to be substituted as Arsenal had already used all of their regulation subs.
Gunners boss Jonas Eidevall had readied Lina Hurtig as an 87th-minute concussion substitution but reacted angrily when informed that the replacement would not be possible, saying: ‘What do you mean, “no?!”.’
Mead (right) departed for her own safety but Arsenal were forced to finish the match with 10 players, seeing out a 1-0 victory and 3-2 on aggregate.
‘What an awful, treacherous, ignorant, potentially deadly decision it is for these competitions to not have any form of safety net to support those suspected of concussion,’ said Sportsmail columnist Chris Sutton, a vigorous campaigner on head injuries in football.
‘It’s in the Premier League, Women’s Super League and other competitions. But it isn’t in European football. Arsenal finished with 10 players as Mead departed and no one replaced her. The club did the right thing and yet they were effectively punished for it by finishing their fixture shy a body.
‘What if, the next time this happens in a Champions League game, that potentially concussed player doesn’t want to leave the pitch? What if they stay on? What if they hurt their already vulnerable head again?
‘I don’t necessarily think extra permanent concussion substitutes are the way forward — I prefer the temporary option, where a player is replaced for at least 10 minutes while he or she is assessed in private. But to have nothing at all? That’s just downright dangerous and UEFA should be ashamed.’
The trial of concussion substitutes will continue in the Premier League and Women’s Super League until the end of this season at least. But UEFA have no plans to introduce it to their tournaments, despite Wednesday’s controversy.
Eidevall said of head injuries: ‘It can have impact for the rest of your life, so that means the decisions need to be very good to not staying on.’
There was further controversy after it emerged that the goalposts at De Toekomst Stadium were 10cm too small, before being fixed during the pre-match warm-up.
In a statement, Ajax admitted there had been an error following maintenance work.
‘We obviously regret this and will adjust the procedure to avoid this kind of incident in the future,’ the club said.
feyabcilp
1
It's well documented that head injury policy is a "joke" Quite rightly the ref stops the games when a head injury as occurred the player then gets assessed by "team trainers" and deemed ok to resume the game. Surely it would be sensible to have a independent sideline Doctor assessing and monitoring the player for a period of time. Instead players are using the mandatory rule to stop the game as a time wasting ploy.
Boncoprsty
0
Uefa hate arsenal With passion from the men to the women
Fisayomi123
0
may God help us all.