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It's ok. Les will put the receipt in his top draw, probably in his cuff link box so he knows where it is.

We'll just take him back if he's broke.
 
How can he pass a medical then? I have no knowledge of what specifically takes place in a medical but I always imagined it would he would have a certain physical aspect.

Well if he's potentially back mid September, then we could at least be able to look at reports and scans of the knee. If the op was several weeks ago, he's well down the road of recovery and we should be able to take a judgement call on that. It's the risk Sotonsaint would be taking :)
 
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Well if he's potentially back mid September, then we could at least be able to look at reports and scans of the knee. If the op was several weeks ago, he's well down the road of recovery and we should be able to take a judgement call on that. It's the risk Sotonsaint would be taking :)

He's worth the risk, plus any doctor worth his wages can tell if the recovery is going well or not.
 
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Well if he's potentially back mid September, then we could at least be able to look at reports and scans of the knee. If the op was several weeks ago, he's well down the road of recovery and we should be able to take a judgement call on that. It's the risk Sotonsaint would be taking :)

Ok I see, I just always imagined there would be some sort of physical aspect where they work you quite hard and it would be almost impossible with a bad injury hence why players aren't keen to play for their own team if they are looking for a move. I should probably go and read up on medicals as I seemingly have no idea what I'm talking about <laugh>
 
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It's an odd one to buy someone not quite right, and I don't know how they work that through a medical. We need someone from a club to tell us.

Interesting article.
But this happens with other clubs as well. Andy Carroll springs to mind....he can't have passed a medical in his life. :) I do understand clubs taking a chance on a quantifiable risk though....a known op on the mend is a different matter from someone with a continuing fitness issue (which you may want to test). Other factors come in as well....is the player a bargain or one you desperately want (for example, a great goal scorer for a team facing relegation). My point being that nothing is set in stone...though I suspect there is some impact on insurance premiums.
 
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It's an odd one to buy someone not quite right, and I don't know how they work that through a medical. We need someone from a club to tell us.

Interesting article.

Maybe we only pay so much with the rest payable when he has played a certain amount of games. That way if his injury reoccurs we won't have paid so much.
 
I read an article a few years ago about the progress in medicals but I can't find it. The bit that stuck in my mind was that AC Milan had done work with looking how people moved. They stuck reflective blobs on knees, hips, shoulders, etc and looked at the way they interacted. Apparently a test where young players ran up and jumped over a bar set at 45cm off the ground then had their style of jumping analysed showed with 70% accuracy whether they would suffer serious injury in their career.

All from memory but it did rather stick as it was so odd.

Vin