<p>Very few top-level footballers have suffered from life-threatening bouts of Covid, but the longer-term effects of the virus are now being seen in the game, with one study suggesting even players' passing quality can suffer.</p>.<p>There have been several high-profile cases of Covid-19 effects preventing players returning to the pitch immediately after testing negative for the virus.</p>.<p>Bayern Munich midfielder Joshua Kimmich, who was not vaccinated, missed two months of action due to lung damage, while Juventus forward Paulo Dybala said he struggled with a "shortness of breath" when he returned in 2020 after testing positive.</p>.<p>Even seven-time Ballon d'Or winner Lionel Messi admitted that he needed "more time than expected to recover" after contracting Covid over the winter break.</p>.<p>There have been a handful of more serious cases in professional football.</p>.<p>Newcastle goalkeeper Karl Darlow spent three days on a hospital drip, Montpellier winger Junior Sambia was hospitalised in intensive care and Nantes' Jean-Kevin Augustin has not started a first-team game since 2019 due to long Covid.</p>.<p>But many coaches have also expressed fears in recent weeks about short and medium-term effects.</p>.<p>"When players have the virus and then come back, it's not done just by a click of the fingers. Even they feel it, it takes time," said France's World Cup-winning manager Didier Deschamps.</p>.<p>Researchers from the universities of Duesseldorf and Reading saw results from a study, into 257 Bundesliga and Serie A players who returned after suffering with Covid, that suggested performance levels also fell.</p>.<p>The study found that players' passing success rate fell by up to five per cent and that the virus affected footballers over the age of 30 more seriously.</p>.<p>It also suggested that teams with the most players who had recovered from Covid had worse results than their rivals.</p>.<p>"So far, the results suggest a permanent alteration in the player's abilities," said James Reade, director of the economics department at the University of Reading and co-author of the study, albeit with a caveat.</p>.<p>"The majority of players had not been vaccinated (at the time of the study) and this remains a complicating factor."</p>.<p>There have been reports of players struggling from cardiac inflammation, including Gabon duo Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Mario Lemina, who both left the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations to recover from Covid.</p>.<p>But French football federation medical director Emmanuel Orhant said there was no definite link between the virus and increased risk of cardiac problems for footballers.</p>.<p>He found, in December 2020, that 2.2 percent of 350 players who tested positive had a cardiac issue.</p>.<p>"All were mild and disappeared within a few weeks, and it is impossible to say that all were linked to Covid," Orhant told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>But he did say that players were taking longer to recover from Covid than they usually do from the flu.</p>.<p>"We know that the virus has an impact on short-term ventilation," Orhant said.</p>.<p>"With the flu, we can put the players back on the pitch as soon as they are better. This requires a longer rehabilitation time."</p>.<p>But with the vast majority of cases in European countries now being caused by the Omicron variant, it is expected that the effects will be far less severe.</p>.<p>"We can no longer talk about Omicron in the same way we talked about the first infections, which were much nastier," added Orhant. "Today, most players have almost no symptoms."</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>
<p>Very few top-level footballers have suffered from life-threatening bouts of Covid, but the longer-term effects of the virus are now being seen in the game, with one study suggesting even players' passing quality can suffer.</p>.<p>There have been several high-profile cases of Covid-19 effects preventing players returning to the pitch immediately after testing negative for the virus.</p>.<p>Bayern Munich midfielder Joshua Kimmich, who was not vaccinated, missed two months of action due to lung damage, while Juventus forward Paulo Dybala said he struggled with a "shortness of breath" when he returned in 2020 after testing positive.</p>.<p>Even seven-time Ballon d'Or winner Lionel Messi admitted that he needed "more time than expected to recover" after contracting Covid over the winter break.</p>.<p>There have been a handful of more serious cases in professional football.</p>.<p>Newcastle goalkeeper Karl Darlow spent three days on a hospital drip, Montpellier winger Junior Sambia was hospitalised in intensive care and Nantes' Jean-Kevin Augustin has not started a first-team game since 2019 due to long Covid.</p>.<p>But many coaches have also expressed fears in recent weeks about short and medium-term effects.</p>.<p>"When players have the virus and then come back, it's not done just by a click of the fingers. Even they feel it, it takes time," said France's World Cup-winning manager Didier Deschamps.</p>.<p>Researchers from the universities of Duesseldorf and Reading saw results from a study, into 257 Bundesliga and Serie A players who returned after suffering with Covid, that suggested performance levels also fell.</p>.<p>The study found that players' passing success rate fell by up to five per cent and that the virus affected footballers over the age of 30 more seriously.</p>.<p>It also suggested that teams with the most players who had recovered from Covid had worse results than their rivals.</p>.<p>"So far, the results suggest a permanent alteration in the player's abilities," said James Reade, director of the economics department at the University of Reading and co-author of the study, albeit with a caveat.</p>.<p>"The majority of players had not been vaccinated (at the time of the study) and this remains a complicating factor."</p>.<p>There have been reports of players struggling from cardiac inflammation, including Gabon duo Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Mario Lemina, who both left the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations to recover from Covid.</p>.<p>But French football federation medical director Emmanuel Orhant said there was no definite link between the virus and increased risk of cardiac problems for footballers.</p>.<p>He found, in December 2020, that 2.2 percent of 350 players who tested positive had a cardiac issue.</p>.<p>"All were mild and disappeared within a few weeks, and it is impossible to say that all were linked to Covid," Orhant told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>But he did say that players were taking longer to recover from Covid than they usually do from the flu.</p>.<p>"We know that the virus has an impact on short-term ventilation," Orhant said.</p>.<p>"With the flu, we can put the players back on the pitch as soon as they are better. This requires a longer rehabilitation time."</p>.<p>But with the vast majority of cases in European countries now being caused by the Omicron variant, it is expected that the effects will be far less severe.</p>.<p>"We can no longer talk about Omicron in the same way we talked about the first infections, which were much nastier," added Orhant. "Today, most players have almost no symptoms."</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>