June 13 – Professional footballers are being pushed beyond breaking point, with player union Fifpro’s latest findings a damning indictment of modern football’s relentless schedule.
The global players’ union has joined forces with Football Benchmark’s Player Workload Monitoring tool to again highlight the troubling trend across Europe’s big five leagues. Just 13% of players who featured in either Euro 2024 or Copa America received the recommended 28-day off-season break – a statistic that should alarm the games governing bodies.
Fifpro’s response is comprehensive: 12 proposed safeguards including mandatory 28-day breaks, mid-season respite periods, minimum four-week retraining phases, and specific work limits for academy prospects under 18.
“This study presents safety standards based on the considered and independent opinions of medical and performance experts working in professional football who understand the mental and physical strain placed on players,” explains Prof. Dr. Vincent Gouttebarge, Fifpro’s Medical Director. “If we can all agree that health comes first, then we should take steps to implement these safeguards.”
Dr. Darren Burgess, chair of Fifpro’s High-Performance Advisory Network, cuts through the complexity: “Decoding the human body, performance, and sport-related injuries will be a lifelong scientific exercise for all of us. However, the results of this study show that there are certain minimum standards such as adequate rest between matches, and proper off-season breaks, that are common sense, aligned with scientific evidence and, above all, required by global occupational health and safety standards.”
The upcoming FIFA Club World Cup crystallizes these concerns. Saturday’s Los Angeles opener between Atletico Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain features players fresh from UEFA Nations League duty and who played in the Nations League Spain-Portugal final in Munich, while also having been part of PSG’s squad for the Champions League final the week before that.
The Rose Bowl’s noon kickoff presents another layer of player welfare concerns – prime-time European viewing means high-80s temperatures with pitch-side readings hitting the 90s. Perfect for prime time television audiences in Italy and Spain, but potentially torturous for those actually playing.
Fifpro isn’t just complaining – they’re litigating. Their 2024 lawsuit against FIFA alleges abuse of position and violations of European competition law through calendar expansion. That legal battle continues, but the workload data provides damning evidence of an industry prioritising profit over player protection.
Something has to break and currently it looks like being the players.
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